Then

Then

by Julie Myerson

4.00 out of 5 (1 ratings)

Format:
Paperback 
Pages:
304 
Publisher:
Vintage 
Publication Date:
14 June 2012 
Category:
Modern & Contemporary 
ISBN:
9780099554721 

Description

It was 9.22, the moment when everything stopped. First there was the burning air, then came the darkness, the fire, and finally the frost. Now, in a frozen, wasted London, a woman - uncertain even of her own name - is fighting to stay alive. Along with a small group of fellow survivors, she takes refuge in an abandoned skyscraper in what was once the financial centre. But spectres stalk the empty offices and endless corridors, and soon visions of a forgotten world emerge, a world of broken love and betrayal, and horrific, shocking mercies - a world more traumatic even than the desolate present. "Then" is a novel of singular invention and bravery. With it, Julie Myerson has created an echo chamber of the heartbreaking and the terrifying, and an enduring apocalyptic vision.

Showing 1-1 out of 1 reviews.

  • London, and a curious apocalypse has befallen the city. One February day, the temperature soared. At first, Londoners basked in the unseasonal warmth, but as buildings began to erupt into flames, exuberance turned to panic. Then the temperature dropped again and snow began to fall, plunging Britain into a frozen permafrost. The tale is related by a narrator who struggles to remember what happened, or who she is. Holed up in an office building in the City with a small group of strangers, she experiences flashbacks and begins to catch small glimpses of her life as it was before. Eventually, the truth is unveiled and the collision of personal tragedy and collective disaster comes to light.I love a good disaster movie, and the meteorological catastrophe underpinning this story hit all the buttons for me. Myerson's descriptions of a familiar city in crisis were evocative and, at times, moving. The characters are excellent. Each earns their own place in the story, and Myerson has created a story with no more or no fewer characters than were required to carry out the plot. In particular, I thought the narrator's voice was very well-written, with stark confusion and misunderstanding pervasive throughout.My only gripe is that it takes a long time to get going. The first few chapters are entirely disjointed, which is vital to understanding the narrator's state of mind, but I felt this part of the book was longer than it needed to be. If you start to lose patience halfway through - don't! Persevere, and it gets much better towards the end. You'll be glad you did.

    4.00 out of 5

    pokarekareana

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