Monday, July 8, 2013

The Age of Miracles

In The Age of Miracles, author Karen Thompson Walker takes on the logic problem that "If the sun has come up every day in known history until today, will it  rise tomorrow" and adds a twist.  The sun does continue to come up everyday, but now the days are getting longer as the earth's rotation slows.  What does this mean? What happens when a day/night cycle becomes so distorted that days and nights last 40 hours each?  Do people follow an artificial clock to maintain a 24-hour schedule or do they try to follow the circadian cycle of night and day no matter how long a day is?  How can these two very different choices affect society as a whole?  The narrator, a California teenager named Julia, who lives with her parents and two cats,  observes how life is changing, both for her personally and for her family and beyond. Responses to the official government announcement vary from panic and flight to resignation and calculation.  Within her own household there are extremes.  Julia's mother starts hoarding food while her father continues to go to work--or so she thinks.  Clearly there are tensions in her parents' marriage that are exacerbated by the crisis.  Julia also loses her best friend, when Hanna's Mormon family travels to Utah for the end of the world and leaves Julia to suffer  the cruelty often visited upon loners.  The novel juxtaposes the personal challenges that Julia faces as her parents fight and her grandfather disappears with the increasingly disrupted society forced into an artificial schedule that breaks down people mentally and physically.  She wants to find love and live the life of a normal teen, but cannot ignore the threats to her very existence, as plants and birds die and radiation from the sun becomes increasingly lethal.  Author Walker has written a thoughtful novel with an interesting premise. The narrative is full of descriptions of physical changes to the environment and humans, including  how strange it is to be awake and going to school in total darkness and then trying to sleep in full daylight.  Julia is a sympathetic character and one can't help but admire her resilience and faith that somehow mankind and science will find an answer. Recommended.

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