Title: California (Goodreads)
Author: Edan Lepucki
Narrator: Emma Galvin
Published: Hachette, 2014
Pages: 320
Genres: Speculative Fiction
My Copy: Audiobook
Buy: Amazon, Book Depository, Kindle (or visit your local Indie bookstore)
Cal and Frida is living in the middle of the 21st century, however it wasn’t the future we expected. Cities have crumbled, the internet has died and technology is worthless. Leaving city life behind, they now have to live in the wilderness, struggling to survive. Isolation and hardship are all new experiences; they live in fear of an uncertain future. A future that now consists of giving birth and raising a child in this post-apocalyptic world.
The post-apocalyptic back drop has been hugely popular lately and it isn’t just young adult fiction. Many literary fiction authors have tried their hand at the genre, giving them a unique world to explore real life issues. I’m thinking of great books like The Road by Cormac McCarthy, Super Sad True Love Story by Gary Shteyngart, The Passage by Justin Cronin and the Maddaddam series by Margaret Atwood. Edan Lepucki’s California sets out to join the ranks of the great with this overly ambitious first novel.
I will be honest, the only reason I picked up California was because of the promotion that appeared on The Colbert Report a while ago. The novel had enough to peak my interest but I had great difficulty getting a copy where I lived. Ironically I finally settled on getting the book through Audible to listen to. The premise of the novel was great; the idea of a world returning to the dark ages offered some interesting ideas. While we are never sure, the novel does allude to global warming as the underlining cause of this post-apocalyptic world.
I expected this novel to be the slow burn that The Road provided, building the characters and struggle while exploring the intended themes. However, I think this book burned a little too slowly, the flame went out halfway through and it turned into more of a chore to get through. Sure, the notions of communities, eco-terrorism and climate change were explored but for me it felt like I was being beaten over my head every chance they got. The book wanted to show off how smart and witty it was but, like many things that try to do this, the delivery never matched the intent.
California moved so slowly that as a reader, I was trapped in the wilderness of nothingness and I didn’t think I could escape. This was a real pity, everything seemed to start off so well; there was a plot arc and themes all set up and ready for execution. Somewhere on the way I feel like the author got a little lost and the readers were just following to her struggle to get back on track. I might come down hard on this novel; it isn’t too bad, there is a lot of potential and could have been a great book. For me it just didn’t work and wasn’t paced properly, I’m sure some people enjoyed it
The concept’s interesting, so it’s a shame it wasn’t more enjoyable!
The concept was great, execution needed work. It’s a real shame
Given the reason you were prompted to buy it–the same reason I did–it’s a bit ironic that your first three “buy” links are for the mega-monster that incited Colbert’s ire.
I didn’t find this a perfect book by any means, but I did enjoy reading it. It will be interesting to see how (or if) Lepucki’s writing gets better with her next book.
I think it is worse that I had to buy it from Audible (Amazon). I’m not getting involved in the fight but here in Australia it can be difficult to buy books without resorting to that big company. I’d be interested in seeing what she writes next.
Given the reason you were prompted to buy it–the same reason I did–it’s a bit ironic that your first three “buy” links are for the mega-monster that incited Colbert’s ire.
I didn’t find this a perfect book by any means, but I did enjoy reading it. It will be interesting to see how (or if) Lepucki’s writing gets better with her next book.
I think it is worse that I had to buy it from Audible (Amazon). I’m not getting involved in the fight but here in Australia it can be difficult to buy books without resorting to that big company. I’d be interested in seeing what she writes next.