Reviewed by Kristin
After a long cold winter, what if spring never came? As March,
April, May, and even June rolled around, what if the sky stayed overcast and
the sun shone dimly? What if this continued and became known as the year with
no summer, but people held out hope for the next year? With such a poor growing
season, shortages would become obvious, food would become scarce, and people
would start to go hungry. And what would happen when the next year nothing changed?
Wylodine (Wil) is living alone on her family farm in southern
Ohio. Her mother and stepfather Lobo decided to head to California to see if
any better conditions exist. Lobo was always known in their small town for his
ability to grow weed. Wil has the green thumb required too, even though she
would rather that Lobo left them long ago. Like it or not, Wil is known as the
girl who can make things grow.
Wil’s best friend is Lisbeth, and she is all caught up in The
Church. Lisbeth’s parents have brought her up to believe, and now that the
summers are not returning, the religious fervor of The Church has created a
cult-like following. The Church decides they must leave Ohio to find a new
promised land, one with sun and hope and strict obedience to the leaders.
Wil tries to keep going—she really does. But as the days and
nights get colder and colder, she decides to attempt the trip to California to
find her mother. She has an address, and a tiny house that she can haul with
her truck. Wil sets out, picking up strays along the way. They hit many
obstacles, some figurative and some literal, but Wil and her little entourage
keep moving.
The tone of the novel could be called bleak, but there is
something about Wil which keeps hope alive. She is brutally honest, refusing to
loot convenience stores or to steal fuel from abandoned gas stations. She and
her little group take what they need, but she always leaves cash in exchange.
Wil hopes that she will see her mother again, and maintains a protective
attitude about those who need protecting. She knows that they will keep moving
until they reach California, or until they find a good place to be, a right
time to give up the increasingly difficult travel across a landscape frozen
into place. Wil may have at least temporarily lost contact with her mother, but
she builds a family with her traveling companions.
Alison Stine books are hard to recommend enthusiastically
because they are full of characters going through extreme hardships and they
don’t always (or ever?) end up with a bright, happy ending. I read and reviewed Trashlands
a
couple of months ago. While these are both hard books to talk up, I find
Stine’s take on the world to be both contemplative and well worth reading.
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