4.5/5
The Thinning explores the looming threat of extinction, the magnitude of which is discussed through events like a mining accident on the moon, and the introduction of fertility checks for girls in year 10 and above. They talk about the extinction of the koalas, the Great Barrier Reef, and the photo taken that shows “all the satellite activity in a single night, the stitching across the sky that was sewing it shut”. It’s a lot to take in, and all feels a bit hopeless.
We follow the journey of Fin who journeys alongside Terry, an Incomplete, as they make their way through the New South Wales wilderness. It lacks the action-packed scenes that usually keep me hooked, and replace them with beautiful symbolism and imagery, and couples it with theories and information about our cosmos.
Through the book we also explore Fin’s relationship with her mother, Dianella. Their relationship seems tense in the face of the world’s looming threat, evident with the way Fin hardly calls Dianella her mother. Almost as if trying to separate Dianella, the photographer and activist, from Dianella, the mother. It’s an interesting dynamic that we get more information about as Fin journeys.
I did feel at times that the dialogue felt stunted, short, especially at the beginning but as I read, I started to think that it reflects the dynamics between characters. Fin talking to Dianella, was way different to Fin talking to her mother. And when Fin beings speaking to Terry, it’s almost identical to Dianella’s own conversational patterns. Thankfully, Fin and Terry’s friendship shifts and changes as they journey together. They talk and share more with each other which allows them to hope more.
There are a lot of flashbacks in this book, but I noticed they subsided as we closed in on the final chapters. I would love to make some reference about how when we gaze at stars, we are looking into the past and make that connection to Fin and her own flashbacks, but oftentimes I like to keep the idea vague and feel it rather than explain it.
The finale, ‘True Night’, was the perfect ending to this book; Beautifully written, thoughtful and hopeful. Feeling every emotion in the face of an inevitable cosmic event, leading to this cataclysmic influx of hope and looking forward to the future? You can understand why I cried throughout that whole section.
Honestly, just an awesome book. Happy to have it on my shelf