(DNF 21% - rating based on the amount read)
I was very much looking forward to The New Wilderness having enjoyed a couple of Diane Cook’s stories. The premise is interesting, and who doesn’t want to read a bit of dystopia as the world continues to collapse? There are some promising moments early on, and hints at the potential for a building evocation of a believably fraught, chaotic America, a timely allegory, a new environmentally prescient slant on a familiar formula, as self-sabotaging dirty humans demolish their home and hasten their demise, or somehow save humanity and the planet, and so on.
Early on there’s a sensitively-wrought and powerful burial scene. Beyond that, very little of note.
(This particular scene ends with what felt like an unnecessarily odd, portentously clunky line: ‘The girl’s eyes clouded over with the clouds that rolled overhead.’ Later on, this further reference, which I had to read several times. ‘Even her belly, which had barely jutted with the baby, seemed to have immediately sunken.’ I confess: I still don’t understand it. Minutes earlier she’d delivered a stillborn child; now her belly, minus the dead child, is sunken. Why does this observation merit inclusion? But more importantly: Any reader might well thereafter justifiably start to worry about what other clunkers might be imminent.)
Trying to stay positive at this point: it’s reasonable that we can only appreciate the impossibility of fully understanding the mental state of the bereaved mother, or the world into which we’ve descended. Yet, soon enough, once other people become the focus – during scenes involving movement and interaction, as opposed to recollection and interiority – the book flounders.
Even as charitable readers assuming some kind of levelled-off catatonic state, we can’t for long ignore the glib carelessness of the author, who we begin to mistrust. Things simply happen, and we’re presumably meant to be either interested in them or disturbed by them, preferably both. Yet because nothing is done to achieve either state, we may start to wonder what’s in it for us, why we might want to spend further time reading on.
'“Maybe there will be some good packages at Post,” Glen murmured. “Maybe some good chocolate or something like that.”
Bea hmmed, but really she couldn’t eat things like that anymore without becoming ill, her body overwhelmed by what it used to crave in their old life. Instead of chocolate, she wished instead Glen would mention the child she’d just buried. Or she thought she wished for that. What would she say? What could she say that he didn’t already know? And did she really want to talk about it? No, she didn’t. And he knew that too.'
Rather than be unkind, I’ll just suggest that, during such passages as the latter, my mind began to wander, I began to find the characters muddled in a distracting way, and I didn’t understand the need for any of the words after ‘buried’, all of which seem not only superfluous but damaging to momentum.
Here’s the following paragraph:
'She looked at Glen, and in the firelight saw a look of hope play on his face. He knew chocolate couldn’t soothe such bewilderment, but maybe the suggestion could do what the chocolate was supposed to. She fit herself into his arms. “Yes, some chocolate would be nice,” she lied.’
Is it me or is this kind of inane? The New Wilderness is 416p long – would it have been much better pushed as a thriller with a lurid cover at 250?
I quickly hit a ceiling of tolerance with this kind of stuff, sadly. The events are dull, as though recounted uncertainly from a vantage that’s either hazy or matter of fact. If I’m meant to accept this as perspective, that’s one thing, but I just can’t read too much of it. The characters are ciphers. People perish, and you have to read back to make sure that’s what happened, but you feel no more second time around. It all feels increasingly farcical, happens so swiftly, and with so little purchase. People are story data deleted from the page, or tasked with further narrative use. Add to this prose that veers between decent and enjoyably terse – when there are no humans involved – and plodding exposition, unhappily mirroring a slow trek through the wilderness. If it’s going to be a slog for the reader, we have to care about the protagonist, and if the protagonist is passive and uninteresting, we can’t then care about her, and it’s going to be a struggle to feel anything about any of the unfolding events.
Of the fifth of the book I read I found it to be partly decent sentences and partly objectively bad and at times incomplete. It’s too often strangely blithe, passive, tentative and equivocal during moments ostensibly tense and dramatic. An attempt to ford a river that seems far fuller and stronger than on previous trips is recounted with apparent boredom, as though the stuff of negotiating life-threatening natural obstacles – a matter that would appear to be central to the book’s theme or themes – was something the author wanted to quickly pass over, and during which we meet for the first time characters whose fate we are then apparently meant to be invested in enough that their swift dispatch might be met with more than the shrug such scenes barely earn. Don’t we need at least one scene with Caroline, or Carl, or Juan, before they’re done for? Here is our introduction to Caroline (Carl and Juan are literally no more than names at this point, extras).
‘Caroline was their river-crossing scout. She was the most sure-footed. Had the lowest center of gravity. Her toes could grip like fingers. Beautiful toes wasted for years crammed into shoes in the City. She had learned the most about how water behaved. She was good at making sense of things that seemed erratic.
“Okay,” Caroline yelled over the rumble, her feet firm in the first foot of water, testing its pull, deciding whether to continue. “Rope.”’
We’re quickly told that Caroline is best equipped to lead the crossing with compressed, convenient attributions, but we have no idea who she is, and so we don’t care when things go wrong.
‘On this, the third spot, Caroline waded out halfway. From the bank, things looked promising. She paused, her head cocked slightly, like a coyote listening for the calls of the Wilderness—friend or foe, friend or foe. Her hands hovered over the whitewater, and it broke around her body and came together again behind her. Caroline turned her head toward them, her shoulders following, a hand turned palm up, about to signal something. She opened her mouth to speak just as the tip of a log surfaced where she stood, and with a terrible thwack and splash, Caroline was gone. Then the river, like an awakened bear, yanked the rope and Juan went down too. He tried to dig his heels in. He bellowed as the rope wrung his waist. Carl tried to pull on his rope section, not to help Juan but to slacken the rope to avoid the excruciating thing that was happening to Juan.
Bea stood back with the others, her hands crimped on Agnes’s shoulders. She thought about how, long ago, they always had someone stand by the rope holders with a knife to cut the rope in case something like this happened. But nothing like this ever happened, and Carl and Juan decided they were strong enough for a catastrophe like this. Besides, no one really wanted to be the one to cut the rope anyway. Still, at each river, they would have a lengthy discussion about whether to require a rope cutter or not. When they inevitably decided they needed one, no one would volunteer, so they would have to draw for it and the person who lost would shit themselves the whole time. And when nothing ever went wrong, they begrudged all that worry and work for nothing. So finally, they had decided, not that long ago, in fact, to stop mandating there be a rope cutter.
Clearly that had been the wrong decision.’
(There’s also a suddenly-apparent ‘Dr Harold’ whose ‘salves’ don’t work, but who nonetheless busies himself applying them to Juan’s wounds. When this happens, we barely know who Juan is, and we had no idea Dr Harold even existed. When did he turn up? Why didn’t we know about him? Where is he getting his salves from? Why is he applying them if they don’t work?)
Publishing the book in this form, when it really needed serious attention from even a mildly watchful editor, is a missed opportunity. There’s probably a really good much-shorter book in here, and Diane Cook is a decent writer. But I found it very unconvincing in part and even unfinished, too bogged-down by turgid, flippantly-derailing longueurs. The dialogue is often reminiscent of ‘Days of Our Lives’-esque melodrama. It’s a mess.
I certainly hope readers get more out of it than I did and can manage to overlook what I consider fatal problems. Whoever is responsible for its inclusion on the Booker Longlist (and you can only assume very few if any of the judges read all the books that make the initial cut) should be at least a little embarrassed. How could any self-respecting arbiter of literary judgement read the following without lamenting the too-hurried, perfunctory, affectless, almost meaninglessly freightless prose and conclude that it’s worthy of awards attention?
‘Debra and Val ran along the bank to see if Caroline resurfaced. She had, a few hundred feet downriver, her hair tangled in the branches of another log, her face submerged, her body limp. Her body and the log were snagged on something for a moment, and then were freed, speeding again down the river. There was no way to retrieve the rope. And not much to do for Caroline.
They took a moment to regroup, drink water, pass a pouch of jerky. Debra said a nice thing about Caroline and how being their river scout had been essential to their survival here and that she would be missed. “She taught me so much about water,” Debra said, looking quite shook. She and Caroline had been close. Bea looked around at the faces of the group, working their feelings out. Personally, Bea thought Caroline had been aloof, though she kept that feeling to herself. She chewed on a knuckle impatiently while she waited for the ritualized silent moment to end.
After all that, they argued about Caroline’s last intention. She’d turned and opened her mouth to tell them something about the crossing. But tell them what? Had her hand begun to signal a thumbs-up or thumbs-down before the log smacked her? What had her facial expression been before she’d grimaced in painful surprise? In the end they decided the spot was still the most promising place to cross, despite Caroline’s demise. Juan took over as the river scout and ventured in without a rope. Close to the middle, he turned and gave a thumbs-up. Single file they carefully shuffled out, children clinging to the backs of adults. It turned out to be quite a good spot to cross, and if it hadn’t been for that log, they all would have gotten to the opposite bank easily. Poor Caroline. She had bad luck, Bea decided.’
--
‘When they saw the box fly and open against a rock, they had gasped, though no one had gasped when Thomas had begun falling, or as he continued to fall. No one was that close to him, except Caroline, his wife. He’d never taken to the group. He wasn’t a joiner, he’d explained pleasantly when they all first met.
The teacup flew out into the air from its safe velvet bed, the gold rim glinting in the sun, and some of them who were close enough tried to reach out to catch it. Even Thomas reached for it mid-tumble rather than reaching for a handhold that might stop his fall. The cup came to rest in pieces, the porcelain dust settling like bone ash across the rock. Some gathered small shards and put them in a skin pouch as a new keepsake. But those shards cut them when they rummaged for anything, and eventually they were deposited discreetly across the landscape they walked, the shards small enough to disappear in the dirt.
Of course, poor Thomas had continued to fall, and presumably he had died. A couple of people climbed down partway, but they couldn’t see him and he didn’t respond to their shouts. So the Community took a moment to say some nice things about him and console Caroline, and then they walked on. They didn’t perform many rituals anymore, in large part because the teacup was gone. It was true that rituals took time and effort, and the more time they spent in the Wilderness, the less they wanted to celebrate. At first, every river crossing had been notable, but now they barely wanted to mark the first of the year. Regardless, Bea knew that without the teacup there was simply no ceremonial feeling. They were just drinking tea. But still, no one spoke ill of Thomas afterward. If he’d survived, they wouldn’t have given him the silent treatment around the fire. No one blamed him for losing the cup, at least not out loud. Bea wished they’d remember that now.’
--
‘“But . . . ?”
“I might have waited just a tad longer.”
“Well, fuck, Glen. Did I just murder Caroline?”
“Oh no, no, no,” he said patiently, pulling her down to their bedding. “Caroline was dead the second that log attacked her.”
“Then what does the timing matter?”
Glen shrugged. “I guess it doesn’t. But if she was already dead, then what was the rush?”
“But Juan.”
Glen waved his hand. “Juan was always going to be fine.”
She stamped her foot, and Glen put his hands back on her shoulders. “Look, Juan was fine. Caroline was lost. But that rope wasn’t. Not until you cut it. People just need a minute.” He paused, then shrugged. “It was a really good rope.”’
--
‘“Caroline. We lost her in River 9.”
“When?”
“Yesterday.”
His pen stopped. “Now you’re sure? Because she could just be zipping along not far from here.”
“We’re sure.”
“Because River 9’s fast right now but not too cold. And below here it gets slow again.”
“It was a log. She’s definitely gone.”
“Ah, that’s too bad. I liked her.”
Bea couldn’t believe she had to hear about Caroline again. She hit the counter angrily. “Seriously?”
Ranger Bob took a step back, startled. “What?”
“I’m so sick of hearing about Caroline,” she grunted.
Ranger Bob’s jaw dropped.
“I mean, why are we still talking about her?” She chewed on a finger distractedly. She shook her head in disgust. Caroline? Honestly, fuck Caroline.’