Thursday 14 September 2017

James, P.D. "The Children of Men"


James, P.D. "The Children of Men" - 1992


I love dystopian novels and am surprised that I never came across this one before. What a read!

We are in the year 2020 and all men are infertile. I believe every generation has their own fears of what might happen in future and this book was written in the aftermath of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster. Something like this seemed (and still seems) very possible.

What are we really going to do if there is no future? Are we going to take advantage of each other, try to get as much of the cake as we can before we are all dead and gone? We don't know? I suppose like with all situations, there will be people who still will help each other and others who exploit the situation.

Reading this novel makes you think about all the possibilities. I don't read crime novels as such but I am tempted to try one written by P.D. James. She seems like a very interesting and smart person who could write about anything.

From the back cover:
"The year is 2021, and the human race is - quite literally - coming to an end. Since 1995 no babies have been born, because in that year all males unexpectedly became infertile. Great Britain is ruled by a dictator, and the population is inexorably growing older. Theodore Faron, Oxford historian and, incidentally, cousin of the all-powerful Warden of England, watches in growing despair as society gradually crumbles around him, giving way to strange faiths and cruelties: prison camps, mass organized euthanasia, roving bands of thugs. Then, suddenly, Faron is drawn into the plans of an unlikely group of revolutionaries. His passivity is shattered, and the action begins.

The Children of Men will surprise - and enthrall - P. D. James fans. Written with the same rich blend of keen characterization, narrative drive and suspense as her great detective stories, it engages powerfully with new themes: conflicts of loyalty and duty, the corruption of power, redemption through love. Ingenious, original, irresistibly readable, it confirms once again P. D. James's standing as a major novelist."

4 comments:

  1. I really enjoyed this book too. Did you know they made a movie of it?
    I t came out in 2007.
    I like P.D. James, but then I love a good mystery, but her books are so much more than that.

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    1. I didn't watch the movie but I usually check whether there is a movie before I post my review. I then label it with "movie" so I can find it back if ever I want to watch a movie by one of my books. This is one that I might even consider.

      I'm glad you also liked the book. This was my first book by P.D. James but I don't think it was my last.

      Have a good day,
      Marianne

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  2. I too found this book great. I have only read a few books by P D James but I thought this was one of her best.

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    1. I have never read a book by P.D. James before, just came across this one as it is a dystopian novel. I think I will read more of her books.

      Have a good day,
      Marianne

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