In Madeleine Hessérus novel the biologist Katarina joins a research team at Chernobyl. It's been a few years since the catastrophy, and the team, consisting of a number of scientists from around the world, is trying to find out about the consequences in the area. With curiosity and Geiger Counter they enter the forbidden zone.
The reader is thrown into an abandoned world where time has stopped. Among other places, the team visits a cultural palace and en medical station invaded by vegetation and where remains reveal people’s final hour there. Perhaps the doctor was surrounded by radioactivity even when he wrote his last note in the medical journal. The book gives a melancholy feeling, anxiety about something ending and a reminder of what once was. The zone is a world of secrets.
The novel is about man's relationship with nature, which is the real main character of the book. The landscape and towns are deserted as in an apocalypse. There is a melancholy feeling about the emptiness and clocks that have stopped, but yet there is hope in the fact that nature continues to grow, in the middle of all decay, trying to recapture the city. The constant struggle between man and nature becomes clear.
Madeleine Hessérus has visited the forbidden zone before writing the book and describes eloquently how the vegetation finds its way through cracks in the asphalt and spreads its greenery unhindered. She also describes the catastrophy and the consequences. Following the disaster, people tried to save the situation. The dead forest was buried with several meters of sand. Then, chemicals were sprayed on the sand to prevent it from blowing away. Much of the book is about the decomposition and it might seem difficult to imagine Chernobyl as a romantic place, but the environment is perfect for the tension that arises between Katarina and Grigorij. The author uses science to describe the thoughts and emotions, which results in interesting poetic depictions. That and the descriptions are the best parts of the book.
A romance might also mean trouble. There is some decomposition, not only in the forbidden zone, but also in the research team in the laboratory. Nature mirrors the relationships. While the radioactivity affects nature, the relationship between Katarina and Grigorij has consequences for the whole team.
Unfortunately, I think the book was too long. It felt prolonged. The same problems concerning the romance between Katarina and Grigorij returned repeatedly, and I got tired of them after a while.