Summary:
Set in the very near future, this novel gives a post-apocalyptic vision of the UK, specifically Shipden up on the Norfolk coast.
It relates the story of an everyday working single mum-of-one, living with her partner of six years, before during and after the pathogen that has invaded the UK. Ostensibly from Central Africa, it has killed approximately 90% of the population, and we are in the early stages of the survivors trying to right themselves.
Main Characters:
Vicky: The main character. She is more emotional than her daughter, and not as strong in her character. She maybe suffers a little in self-esteem. She comes across as naïve, in the early stages, but this is lost very quickly. She develops more self-reliance as the book progresses.
Lotte: Sixteen years old, she is more pragmatic in dealing with things than her mother (e.g. a quick tear for her deadbeat dad, then never mentioned again), and more adaptable to the new world.
Travis: A somewhat flat character, he was a government employee, and also from a wealthy background. He becomes attached to Aria, more then she is to him, which you feel will lead to trouble ahead.
Wedge: Psychotic escaped prisoner, stereotypical physical giant Hells Angel type, taking what he needs by violence.
Minor Characters:
Dex: Conspiracy theorist who was proven right, unfaithful partner, and someone we only see in flashbacks. Came across as a patronising git, “being patient” with Vicky when explaining things to her, but did his best to provide before he disappeared.
Aria: A colleague of Travis's, she is somewhat manipulative, and thus dangerous in her own right.
Heath: A survivor, he and Vicky meet and over time become closer in their Jarrow hideaway, as part of a larger group.
Plot:
Private Life. This is a new social network site, set up by two everyday mums, that allows absolute privacy to its users, who remain in complete control of all their data, which is not used for any purpose whatsoever. Of course it's not.
The world signs up to this network in droves, leaving behind the Facebooks, etc. which are now viewed with deep suspicion. However, there are conspiracy theory groups out there like Unicorn, who harbour deep reservations about the service, and allege something more sinister is behind it.
In 2024, news of a virus in Central Africa breaks, and global tension heightens as it seems to be going out of control.
Vicky is living a comfortable middle-class life in Shipden, with her sixteen-year old daughter Lotte, and her partner of six years, Dex. (He is not Lotte's dad).
We open with a scene of her and her daughter trying to escape the town which is under military control, and learn more as Vicky has flashbacks to just a few months before, when all was normal.
We learn that Dex, a college lecturer by day, is part of an anti-government organisation called Unicorn which meet secretly and aim to call out the government on false reporting, etc. They do not believe the global nature of the virus, and have doubts about Private Life.
We watch as the virus breaks upon their little town, and the military move to cordon it off. Dex was away on a Unicorn trip, so cannot make it back, though he had secretly been laying in survival provisions for Vicky & Lotte, should the need arise. He tells her of his preparations in their last phone call, before he turns off the phone.
We see the rather rapid collapse of Shipden society, the run on the supermarkets, the fear that takes hold when it’s a them-or-us scenario, the fact that paper money becomes worthless. As people start dying, unless you can prove you had the “vaccination” (which Dex got for Vicky and Lotte), you are outcast and shunned.
Society turns on itself, and the military operates a shoot-to-kill policy on the infected.
Ultimately, Vicky realises to survive they need to escape, and breaking the curfew they just about make it out of town. Thus begins their long journey to Jarrow, a “safe house” that Dex had told them about, with a few robbings and a few kindnesses along the way. When they finally get there, wiser and more street-savvy than when they started out, they must integrate with the other residents, and find a way all can live together. Slowly over time, the trappings of the modern world are stripped away one by one, the internet, the television, the electricity, and finally the running water fails. The world really has regressed.
Finally, another survivor finds them, and reveals to them the truth behind the pathogen outbreak. No spoilers! The group decide to head to Lindisfarne, for a safer environment.
There are two other stories going on in parallel. Travis is a government employee, who was working on “Project Renova”, but became trapped and abandoned along with his colleagues when the pathogen hit. He and a couple of colleagues (including Aria) slip away from the imploding team, and escape the building. He and Aria then team up. He falls in love with her, an obsessive type of love, even though he realises she is just using him. Their next move, driven by Aria who is bored with Travis and suffering from cabin fever, is to head to Lindisfarne.
Wedge breaks out from a maximum security prison (no security anymore), and goes home to find everyone dead, or disappeared. He runs amok for a while, a little bit of killing and raping, then discovers his girlfriend has run off to Lindisfarne with his biker Lieutenant. Wedge follows them.
What I Liked:
- The world building is excellent. You can see the familiar little streets of this northern town, and how British it all is. This makes the societal collapse worse, as you can truly visualise the streets where it is happening.
- Characterisation is strong. These are just normal people, lucky enough to survive, as opposed to having an ex-SAS soldier teaching them all survival-in-the-wild skills.
- There is a good dynamic between mother and daughter, and within the group at large.
- The first person narrative works well, giving us a great insight into Vicky, but of course the downside is we don’t get to see inside the heads of the other characters, whom we see either as a Vicky recollection, or third-person in their own story.
What I Didn’t Like:
- Vicky began to irritate me after a while. She has so much going for her, for example the strength of having brought up her daughter from when only eighteen herself, holding down a job, etc. She has no belief in her own strength, effectively giving control of her life over to Dex, who seemingly made all the decisions thereafter. I would have liked her with a bit more spine. I could not see how her and Dex were a couple, given how completely different they were. She does show signs of growing up near the end, though, and really dealing with her new reality.
- I thought the “Am I abandoned? Does he love me?” aspect went on a bit long, especially when Vicky started “having feelings” for someone else. Despite all she knew, she still could not decide whether to act or not. It is a bugbear for me when I read this in an otherwise pacy book, as for me it just slows things down, as authors tend to dwell on it, to the detriment of the overall story. The decision to be made is clear – it doesn’t need to be dragged out.
Overall:
Tipping Point is the first in a trilogy, so there’s quite a bit of initial world-building and scene setting, as well as letting us get to know the characters.
It is very well paced overall, and the storylines converge well at the end, setting up what looks to be an excellent second book.
It is a very quick read, as the main story keeps the tension well-balanced, and the moving between time-periods and the other parallel events meshes well, and does not distract from the overall dynamic.
Tipping Point has a great twist on a standard premise, and the familiarity of the setting, and the closeness in time, gives it a real creepy, too close to home feel. The scenario does make you wonder (especially in light of the recent 2018 Facebook Cambridge Analytica scandal, which broke after this book was written) what really happens to our data, and what is it being used for. How prescient is Tipping Point??
Definitely an excellent read, and one I would fully recommend.
Acknowledgements:
I received a free Kindle copy of the book from the author, in return for an honest and objective review.
Full Disclosure:
I am part of Rosie Amber’s Book Review Team, along with Terry. This also did not influence my review.