From Publishers Weekly
British novelist Wesley ( A Sensible Life ; the YA fantasy Haphazard House ) brings a quirky and graceful sensibility to this tale set in the English countryside in the near future. An unspecified disaster has wiped out much of the world's population, and Miriam, her 13-year-old son, Paul, and his best friend, Henry, find that most of their human and animal neighbors have been reduced to fly-away piles of fur, wool, feathers and hair, occasionally accompanied by sets of dentures. These three establish contact with a nearby abbey and set up house with a motley gang of survivors (including two skating champions, the village grave-digger and an upholsterer with a soft spot for thieves). In cool, meticulous prose, the author imagines the nitty-gritty of daily life after the apocalypse. Travel, for example, is difficult but not impossible: rollerskating is one way of getting about, and so is a leap-frogging method of changing cars, finding a new vehicle whenever the road is blocked by wreckage. Though subject matter and setting call to mind Peter Dickinson's Changes trilogy, this quietly satisfying novel is not so much high adventure as it is a meditation on what it means to create one's own world. Ages 12-up.
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.
This text refers to an alternate
Hardcover
edition.
From Library Journal
This postapocalyptic novel is an unusual study in contrasts; set far enough in the future for the Beatles to be a distant memory but written before personal computing and other technology are commonplace. Unnatural global incidents end in a devastating storm that leaves only hair and false teeth in its wake. However, people and animals trapped underground emerge unharmed. Among those are Muriel Wake, her 13-year-old son, Paul, and Paul's friend Henry. Their search for other survivors nets them a motley crew including two Australian figure skaters, a local grave digger, and a Soviet submarine crew. Retaining some sense of normalcy is the grand goal. Carole Boyd, a popular BBC radio actress, admirably proves her skill with a variety of British, Australian, and Indian accents. Even the children are recognizably different from one another. Boyd paces the story well and allows the tension and foreboding to build. The ending is a true surprise. Highly recommended.
Jodi L. Israel, Westwood, Mass.Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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