As always, Selznick's illustrations are stunning. You can easily read it in a sitting, but it may take a few more days to digest and chew through some of the worldviews presented here.
If this had been a Steven Spielberg movie like it was supposed to be..."until covid," my guess is that it wouldn't have stunned-- the plot follows two faceless seed siblings as they blast through billions of ages to find themselves saving the planet. Epic trajectory maybe, but...not earth-shattering. :)
The book contains a section in the back labeled "The Science" to explain the sprinkling of little science nuggets among the pages of what is probably an intellectually accepted creation account. In it, matter is preexisting (think: asteroids bring simple life to earth, and two planets collide and have a baby, the moon) The book is truthful in the sense that this view of how the world was created is just as 'religious' and mythical as they come. However, a world that comes through random exchanges of matter undermine the novel's effort to show the seeds' worth and purpose in existing to save the planet from certain demise. I wasn't moved.
Redemption? There is some sense of sacrifice as trees release seeds for future generations, but the seeds sent out through this book to the next generation merely communicate a design-less, faceless creation that must hope and long for the gentle oneness and release into...oblivion through Mother Earth?
It's my hope that the fruit of this book mirrors the parable of seeds that fall on rich soil, as readers feeling dissatisfied and hungry after this account, quest for the Truth that allows for all creation to have design, purpose, and telos.
“ Under the guise of teaching science, a philosophical battle is being waged. And if Christians do not frame the philosophical issues, someone else will do it, and they will not balk at preaching their message even to small children.” —Nancy Pearcey