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Walk the Vanished Earth
Walk the Vanished Earth: A Novel | Erin Swan
6 posts | 7 read | 8 to read
In the tradition of Station Eleven, Severance and The Dog Stars, a beautifully written and emotionally stirring dystopian novel about how our dreams of the future may shift as our environment changes rapidly, even as the earth continues to spin. The year is 1873, and a bison hunter named Samson travels the Kansas plains, full of hope for his new country. The year is 1975, and an adolescent girl named Bea walks those very same plains; pregnant, mute, and raised in extreme seclusion, she lands in an institution, where a well-meaning psychiatrist struggles to decipher the pictures she draws of her past. The year is 2027 and, after a series of devastating storms, a tenacious engineer named Paul has left behind his banal suburban existence to build a floating city above the drowned streets that were once New Orleans. There with his poet daughter he rules over a society of dreamers and vagabonds who salvage vintage dresses, ferment rotgut wine out of fruit, paint murals on the ceiling of the Superdome, and try to write the story of their existence. The year is 2073, and Moon has heard only stories of the blue planetEarth, as they once called it, now succumbed entirely to water. Now that Moon has come of age, she could become a mother if she wanted toif only she understood what a mother is. Alone on Mars with her two alien uncles, she must decide whether to continue her family line and repopulate humanity on a new planet. A sweeping family epic, told over seven generations, as America changes and so does its dream, Walk the Vanished Earth explores ancestry, legacy, motherhood, the trauma we inherit, and the power of connection in the face of our planets imminent collapse. This is a story about the end of the worldbut it is also about the beginning of something entirely new. Thoughtful, warm, and wildly prescient, this work of bright imagination promises that, no matter what the future looks like, there is always room for hope.
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Gleefulreader
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Mehso-so

Set in multiple time periods, this looks at the way we ravage the earth and the after effects. It hit a bit close to home as the environmental crisis that hits (a series of wild, hurricanes, mass flooding, tornadoes all striking rapidly and unexpectedly) with the collapse of society following comes on the heels of several weeks of similar storylines. That said, parts of this book were weaker and I think Emily St John Mandel did it better.

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Hooked_on_books
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Pickpick

I‘m perplexed as to how to describe this book. Both sweeping and intimate, it traverses 200 years of time across 2 planets, following connected characters and showing climate catastrophe and its aftermath. I found this compulsively readable.

64 likes2 stack adds
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rmaclean4
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Mehso-so

I am happy to have listened to this post apocalyptic novel. It is very similar to The Sea of Tranquility. It is not as tight of a narrative as the Emily St. John novel. 3 🌟

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Soubhiville
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Pickpick

I love a dystopia. No exception here. We see the beginning of the end of civilization brought on by climate crisis due to humanity‘s stubborn reluctance to admit it‘s happening and change lifestyles. Sound familiar? This part feels extremely realistic (and probable) to me.

The other storyline is bizarre- maybe aliens on Mars looking to repopulate mostly-empty of life Earth? Kind of #BananaPants but I was into it.

Sietje will pose for treats.

Soubhiville CW! Look it up before reading if you need trigger warnings. 2y
Kimzey 🐶❤️ 2y
UwannaPublishme Awww! How cute is Sietje! ❤️ 2y
65 likes2 stack adds3 comments
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Penny_LiteraryHoarders
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I feel sorry for any book that follows Horse by Geraldine Brooks, but today is overcast and dreary making it a perfect day to read! Here‘s to hoping it‘s a good read for me.

Penny_LiteraryHoarders It‘s not something I‘m getting into at the moment. Will return it to the library for now. 2y
23 likes1 comment
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Follow.my.read
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Love #WalkTheVanishedEarth so far!!!

45 likes1 stack add