M. R. Carey
Publisher: Orbit
Pub. Date: May 2, 2017
Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
I should
mention I have not read M. R. Carey's previous novel The Girl with All the Gifts. I did see the movie and those who have
read the novel tell me it was fairly faithful to the book. This is important
since The Boy on the Bridge takes
place in the same universe as the previous book and is a sort of prequel. The tale
takes place twenty years before the events of the earlier book and ten years
after the start of the apocalypse that envelopes the earth but I am getting a
little ahead of my review. Most important for now is that The Boy on the Bridge can easily be read as a standalone. Yet those
who have read The Girl with all the Gifts
will have some knowledge that will add to the enjoyment as you connect the
action of this second book with what transpired in the first book.
But it is
essential to have a basic understanding of Carey’s post-apocalyptic world as
one begins to unravel the details of this current work. Earth has experienced a
devastating plague in the form of a fungus that attaches itself to the human
host and very quickly takes control of the brain. I am told the author
developed this idea from an actual parasite that exists in insects. The
infected are called Hungries and operate in an almost vegetative stage until
they sense their prey which is pretty much any living and moving thing then
attacks and devours it. What is left of the human race on the British Isles are
situated in a fortress called The Beacon and a few scavengers on the outside
called Junkers. In a desperate attempt to retrieve any knowledge that made lead
to a cure, and to search for a previous vehicle sent out and never returned a
few years earlier, a crew of twelve evenly divided between soldiers and scientists
board a large vehicle they call Rosie and head north toward Scotland.
What they
find and how it will turn everything they know on its head is the crux of the
book. Those who have read Carey's previous book or seen the film will have a
good idea of what that might be. But for me it is not so much the goal and
their discoveries that make this novel so fascinating but the interaction of
the crew with each other and especially two passengers, Epidemiologist Samrina
Khan and a young boy named Stephen Greaves whose purpose on the journey is not
known by the crew except for Khan. Stephen is a savant with distinctive
autistic traits. He is an odd genius whose discovery of “blockers” allow the crew
to walk undetected by the Hungries . Khan thinks he may become the catalyst to
discovering a cure while the others see him as indecipherable, childish, and
weird. Khan herself is pregnant,
something that is viewed as subordinate and unfortunate by Dr. Alan Fournier
and Colonel Isaac Carlisle, the civilian and military commanders of the
expedition. Stephen’s poor communication skills and his fear of exposing his
discoveries due to how they might be perceived becomes a significant issue of
tension throughout the novel.
The author
does an incredible job of presenting the claustrophobic environment of the vehicle
and the emotional tension that it creates in the twelve passengers. The split
between scientific and military personnel creates its
own conflict in mission but each member brings their own baggage. In fact, the perceptive reader can see the
tiny society in Rosie as a capsule of class conflict in a bigger society. This
is what I see as the strength of the book, melding these conflicts into the
more science fiction experience that is the bulk of the novel. What each person
sees as their priority become their reason for their behavior and doubly so for
Stephen who is unable to play the hypocritical games of adults and, as a form
of protection, drifts into isolation. Dr. Fournier isn’t all that different from
Stephen except he has enough of what we call “maturity” to disguise his ulterior
motives. Khan often finds herself the
mediator between Stephen and the crew, sometimes needing to excuse his odd and
sometimes dangerous actions. However she is caught up in her own dilemmas as
her child nears the point of delivery.
Then there
are the Hungries. Carey created a satisfactorily different form of zombie. They
are not zombies as much as diseased and it is that disease and how it develops
that moves much of the plot. The action between the crew of Rosie and the Hungries
becomes more complex as other players in the apocalypse arrive. All of this
lead to hope for a cure and, soon afterwards, fears on whether that cure is
worth what must be done. Place into that the expected power plays of members of
the expeditions and their superiors at The Beacon and you a novel of much
action and complexity. The author excels at both narratives of action and the
most psychological aspects of survival in the apocalypse and he rarely lets us
down in the excitement of either.
The best way
to describe The Boy on the Bridge is
that it is a rush of both visceral and psychological proportion. It moves on
both levels consistently to what I can only describe as a very satisfactory ending
that brings together both books yet treats them as their own stories. As said
before, while it is a standalone novel and should be enjoyed immensely by those
who are not familiar with the previous book or film, it is probably best to
read them in order. The one thing I can state for certain is The Boy on the Bridge will be an intense
and rewarding experience.
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