Trust me when I say that it takes one heck of an incredible writer to wrap a dystopian story around me so that it feels like a welcome comfort. I do not like dystopian books! Despite the intense suspense and strangeness here, there is humanity and nobleness in this story and its characters.
If you've read the previous book by this author called The Girl With All the Gifts, you'll know that - yup - zombies are on the prowl. I picked that book up having absolutely no idea that it was dystopian, yet alone with face-biters featured. Normally, Id bail out. But incredibly, I was hypnotized by the story line and could not stop from racing to the end. This story acts as a bit of a prequel, and its epilogue wraps up both timelines. It is not necessary for one to read The Girl book first. This one was better.
Here, the "hungries" are still on the hunt, and the home base of Beacon continues to send out sorties of scientists and soldiers in fat, rolling laboratories. The armored RVs are mobile units which presumably can keep their inhabitants safe while the personnel scour the field looking for environments or materials which might help inoculate what's left of mankind. The goal is a cure for the "hungry" virus or a preventative or a method to exterminate the mindless cannibals that have taken over the world.
In the previous book, a single girl was the focus of the story, and here we meet a teenaged boy who is an orphaned savant. He was found years before this book takes place, covered by the dead bodies of his parents, stabbed and bitten but protectively wrapped around his little body like a pair of parentheses. Stephen is housed in an orphanage-type setting in Beacon, but because he has autism, the volunteers trying to teach him are at a loss.
The young boy is taken under the wing of a microbiologist who becomes a surrogate mother and tutor to the boy. When years later she is sent into the field on one of the traveling laboratories, she argues that he - a brilliant but socially disabled savant - must come along. Stephen is a true genius beyond his years and has proven his skills in biochemistry, but his presence on the months long foray has repercussions.
If you've loved a child that others might not understand, so much the better for your enjoyment of this highly suspenseful and technically brilliant story. Coincidentally, I have a teenaged son with significant autism and I am a geoscientist. My boy cannot so much as tie his shoelaces or solve a 25 piece jigsaw puzzle, but unlike the boy in the story, mine can easily express his love for me, my husband, and our younger son. The description of the character Stephen's feelings seemed beautifully spot on, but...when you know one kid with autism, you know ONE (and only one) kid with autism. I'm not entirely certain that the autistic traits in the story would bear out in actuality - but they were well rendered. He deeply loves his adoptive mother - the only person in the world who cares for him - but is unable to show it or speak it or barely think it. A few seconds of a fingertip’s touch is the only way we readers know she is his cherished mommy. This was very moving.
Beyond my obvious connection there, this story examines what it means to be part of humanity. Yeah, there are still face-biters running around, so it's not like this is high literature. But when the boy on the bridge, Stephen, is able to allow another to look deeply into his eyes and feel comfort for the first time, the deeper meaning wrapped around me too. 4.5 rounded up