Breakdown by Katherine Amt Hanna

I simply cannot resist an apocalypse story. Especially one grounded in real life, rather than fantasy / horror tropes. So Breakdown was a must!

It’s very different from the usual premise. A virus wipes out a critical portion of the world’s population, meaning that the survivors have to painstakingly reconstruct society (oh, how I loved the 70s TV series, Survivors!). But Hanna’s tale takes a slightly offbeat perspective.

Former rock star Chris is in America with his wife and child when the plague starts, and it takes him years to get back to England to see if his family have survived. Terrified that he will discover that they perished, he postpones the last lap of his journey, instead falling in with a family in Portsmouth, helping to run their smallholding. Chris is traumatised by his experiences, but through his new found friend Pauline, who was a therapist before the plague hit, he starts to process his memories and feelings and begin to feel like a human being again. But is their relationship just one of therapist and patient? And when it comes to the crunch, who will Chris choose?

Breakdown is a love story, albeit one in an extreme situation. What I enjoyed was that Hanna told the tale from Chris’s point of view in retrospect; we learn of the terrible things that he has endured, but we don’t experience them directly, so the horror of the situation remains containable. The breakdown of society is mirrored by Chris’s personal breakdown, and the novel charts the reconstruction of both community and self. For readers who enjoy psychology, this is fascinating, although it may disappoint those who want a brutal, survivalist narrative. Ultimately this story is about normal people, and the healing power of relationships, rather than dystopian gloom; I found that I cared about Chris and Pauline, and the final section where their happiness is thrown into doubt was very tense for me. It made me think about what really matters in life, and how the choices we make at every stage of our own journey impact on others. Breakdown is a thoughtful, poignant novel, and an intriguing one to add to my collection of apocalypse narratives.

Rating: ***

47North, 2012, ISBN 9781612184111

Sharp Objects by Gillian Flynn

Last year it seemed like everyone was reading Gone Girl, and I just never caught on. So I thought I’d try Sharp Objects, Flynn’s first novel, before catching up with the rest of the universe. It’s a disturbing read, both in subject matter and in the resonance to relationships many of us have experienced in the real world.

Camille is a journalist assigned to cover the case of a second missing girl in her home town in backwater Missouri, sent because her boss thinks her local knowledge will be useful. But Camille detests her home, and her relationship with her family is fractured beyond repair. On her return she realises that she is still the outsider – while everyone else closes ranks and turns blind eyes to the secrets that haunt the town. As Camille becomes embroiled in a complex relationship with the investigating detective, Richard, she discovers that to find justice for the missing (and murdered) girls she has to blow her own life apart.

The crux of this book is the potentially poisonous nature of relationships between women, and it doesn’t make for comfortable reading. From the insidious gossip that characterises peer groups, to the disturbed behaviour that can evolve between mothers and daughters, this is an unflinching expose of the worst aspects of female nature. I saw the twist coming but it was no less hard-hitting for that; this tortured narrator with her own faults is compulsively readable, and her tragedy lingers in the mind long after the book is finished. Excellent, and deservedly award-winning.

Rating:****

Phoenix, 2007, ISBN 9780753822210