Station Eleven follows a number of characters affected by
the disintegration of modern civilisation and society caused by a mutated flu
virus which wipes out around 99% of the world wide population. Flitting back
over a series of timelines, including the start of the pandemic to focus on the
lives these characters had before the virus, what happened to them after this
virus became apparent and beginning the destruction of the lives they knew. The
story also skips into the future to see how their lives changed and how they
had to adapt to their changing world. There are a number of characters to
follow and as the book progresses links form between some of them, but this is
not the focus of the story.
I won’t go overly into details about the characters it is
best to discover them yourselves. I was pleasantly surprised by how good this
book was. Receiving it as an advanced review, I didn’t really know much about
the story other than it being based in a post-apocalyptic world. Upon receiving
the book I was slightly put off by the blurb stating it was following a group
of traveling actors and musicians and that it was trying to show how art still
had a place in this post civilisation world. But don’t let this put you off, I’m
glad I didn’t. Whilst the story uses the actors and musicians in this ‘Traveling
Symphony’ as a point to allow cross country movement and show that some people
as trying to survive but also to enrich other people’s lives, that wasn’t
really what gripped me. It was the relationships this characters had made, the
stories about how they used to live and what they had been forced to do in this
changing world that kept me turning pages.
I would recommend this book, and I would probably re-read
again and possibly try some of the authors other works. The author wrote
beautifully and it never felt pretentious or like they were trying to over
moralise things. If like me, you like a good end of the world, dystopian story
but want something different from the general, zombies, vampires and hunger
games type read, give this ago. It may surprise you, like it did me.
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