Reviewed by: BigAl
Genre: Dystopian
Approximate word count: 155-160,000 words
Availability
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Author:
After
spending time sailing, captaining yachts, and performing other boating jobs, Hugh
Howey settled in Boone, NC with his new wife, who had managed to lure him away
from his “vagabond ways.” He is the author of several books including the Molly
Fyde series. For more, visit Howey’s website.
Description:
“This is
the story of mankind clawing for survival, of mankind on the edge. The world
outside has grown unkind, the view of it limited, talk of it forbidden. But
there are always those who hope, who dream. These are the dangerous people, the
residents who infect others with their optimism. Their punishment is simple.
They are given the very thing they profess to want: They are allowed outside.”
Although
available as separate, progressively larger volumes, the first five books of
the Wool series are also available as
a combined (omnibus) edition, reviewed here.
Appraisal:
I’d been
hearing a lot of buzz about this series with virtually everyone who read it
having great things to say. Finally, I decided I needed to see the reason for
all the fuss. It didn’t take long for Wool
to sink its hooks in me. At the end of the short first volume (just called Wool), I wanted more. Although the story
comes to a reasonable conclusion, I wanted to find out what happened to the
characters next and learn more about the world they lived in. When I finished
and evaluated why Wool appealed so
much to me, I had a list of four main things: world building, characters, the
appeal of dystopian fiction, and some cautionary tales or potential lessons.
The story
takes place in the distant future in an underground “silo” that is almost 200
levels deep. Howey does a great job of quickly establishing the basics of his story
world, its culture, and history. Our knowledge of the world expands as the
series progresses (learning more about the world and wanting to know more is
part of the appeal). We learn about this world through normal, realistic
dialogue (both spoken and internal), actions of characters, and narrative that
is interspersed at appropriate times. The danger many authors fail to avoid in
describing a world as complex as this is to dump too much information too fast
and in ways that feel forced. That was never a problem for me with Wool.
Howey’s
characters are nuanced, neither totally good, nor completely bad. For example,
Juliette, who first appears in volume II and figures prominently from that
point on, is one of the “good guys,” yet she has some negative qualities. Another
major character, Bernard, appears bad, almost evil at times, yet as you
understand his motivations and history more clearly, our judgment of him gets
murkier.
According
to Wikipedia, a dystopia “is the idea of a society in a repressive and controlled
state, often under the guise of being utopian.” Dystopian fiction appeals to
readers with classics like 1984 or
more recent hits such as The Handmaid’s
Tale, Mockingjay, or the Divergent Trilogy being prime examples.
Although I’m sure there are many reasons, one obvious reason for their appeal
is that they typically depict the human spirit as strong enough to deal with
these less than ideal futures. The more it feels like the world is headed in
this direction, the more we may have the need to convince ourselves that we
could still survive.
Besides the
obvious lesson to take away from any dystopian fiction, that it would be better
to prevent the world from reaching this point, I think Wool has other lessons, or at least food for thought, about how it
is possible to become indoctrinated, and why questioning widely held beliefs
might be healthy.
FYI:
Some adult
language.
Format/Typo Issues:
No
significant issues.
Rating: ***** Five stars
4 comments:
Your review has done it's job! I definitely want to read this. Sounds just up my street!
Good to hear, Rachel. :)
I read/reviewed this earlier this year and, yes, as you said, there's a reason for the buzz. He does magnificent work and he's a great guy to boot.
His Molly Fyde series is good too. He does great female characters.
Love the book and your review
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