Just after the wave

Book Cover
Average Rating
Publisher
Europa Editions
Publication Date
[2020]
Language
English

Description

A small boat, alone on the furious ocean. A family stranded on an island, battered by waves on all sides. A decision which looms, unavoidable, on the horizon.

When a volcano collapses in the ocean and generates a tidal wave of biblical proportions, the world disappears around Louie, his parents and his eight siblings. Their house, perched on a summit, stands firm. As far as the eye can see there is only silver water. It is shaken by violent storms, like jolts of rage.

A remarkable story of destruction, resilience, love, and the invisible but powerful links that bind a family together.

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Contributors
Anderson, Alison translator
ISBN
9781609455675

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Author Notes

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Floods of Biblical proportions threaten families in these compelling fables of climate change. Children become the adults in A Children's Bible, a study of alienation, while the family in the lyrical Just After the Wave makes heartwrenching choices to survive. -- Michael Shumate
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We recommend Harrow for readers who like Just After the Wave. Both are lyrical and issue-oriented literary fiction about climate change apocalypse. -- Ashley Lyons

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Published Reviews

Kirkus Book Review

In the aftermath of an environmental apocalypse, a family must make a terrible decision, the consequences of which will reverberate through the rest of their lives.In French author Collette's (Nothing but Dust, 2018) second book translated into English, half the world has been erased. For as far as 11-year-old Louie can see, the once-familiar valleys, towns, and even the closest neighbors have been inundated with water, the result of an apocalyptic tidal wave that has left him, his parents, and his eight siblings stranded on an island that used to be merely the top of a hill. At first the family's survival seems miraculous, but the waters are still rising, and, as the land they perch on shrinks and resources become scarce, the parents know they must seek higher ground or risk drowning. The father estimates that with 12 days of hard rowing they can reach an area likely to still be above water, but, with only one boat, there will not be enough room to carry all the children and all the supplies they will need to survive the dangerous passage. The parents must make the devastating choice of whom to leave behind and settle on the three middle children, Louie, Perrine, and Noah, intending to return for them as soon as they reach land. At this point the narrative splits. On the island, the three childrenages 11 to 8struggle with the implications of their abandonment as their supplies dwindle and the water continues to rise. On the boat, the siblings and the parents grapple with the consequences of their new identities as, alternatively, the ones who were chosen and the ones who were forced to choose. In tense, tightly controlled, and genuinely devastating prose, Collette explores the existential dilemma of pitting the good of the many against the good of the few with both nuance and great linguistic beauty. In a time when families across the globe are being forced to make very similar choices due to war, forced migration, and the depredations of climate change, Collette's evocation of the human reality of this philosophical logic puzzle is a timely and fiercely excoriating narrative.A wrenching exploration of the consequences of survival. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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