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Floodland

door Marcus Sedgwick

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1897143,874 (3.31)9
After global warming causes the sea to rise until cities in England become islands, ten-year-old Zoe goes on a harrowing solitary boat journey to search for her parents.
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A middle-grade short novel about a post-global-warming world in which much of what was England is now under water. Ten-year-old Zoe and her parents struggle to survive in Norwich, now an island, until the last supply ship is set to take them away. But Zoe gets separated from her parents and misses the boat. Months later she finds a small boat and sets out to try to find them.

Meh. S’okay. It felt like it could have been fleshed out much more than it was; honestly it reads more like an outline of a story rather than the finished product. ( )
  electrascaife | Sep 8, 2023 |
Set in a future dystopia where rising sea levels have turned Britain into a chain of islands and isolated groups of children have formed themselves into barbaric tribes, the novel follows the travails of little Zoe as she braves the elements (and other people) in order to be reunited with her parents. Unfortunately, despite glaring allusions to "Lord of the Flies" and a couple of mystical references à la William Blake, the whole fails to equal the sum of its parts. An easy read nonetheless, some might say "rushed", and entertaining if viewed as an allegory aimed at young adults. ( )
  NurseBob | Dec 1, 2022 |
A kind of modern Global Warming meets Lord of the Flies. Land is shrinking; government, food, and organization have all disappeared; and one girl, left behind in the chaos, struggles to survive to find her family. ( )
  jegka | Oct 3, 2011 |
This is a satisfying read. Slim but carefully formed it feels a little like a fable, telling the story of Zoe who has been abandonned on the new island of Norwich in a world where rising sea levels have submerged civilisation along with land. Zoe is focussed on survival and on the hope that her parents are still alive somewhere. This could have been stretched into a full length novel but is satisfying in this form. I agree with other readers that the ending seems a little neat and rushed, however this adds to the fable like quality.
  bookhunger | Mar 29, 2011 |
Post-holocaust novels are now perhaps old hat, and the genre of the future will be post-climate-change novels. This is a worthy addition to the field, aimed at teenage readers. (Although I've tagged it "SF", the "science" label is scarcely apt for what is essentially a realistic novel set in an entirely mundane future England.)

As the eastern counties of England are slowly drowned by the encroaching sea, Zoe is separated from her parents as they attempt to board the last boat west out of Norwich. Making her own escape from the isolated and increasingly chaotic town in a rowing boat, she is washed up on a small island dominated by a cathedral. (This, though named etymologically as "Eel Island", is clearly Ely, perched on its tiny mound above the fens.) It is inhabited only by a band of feral children, the adults having perished of disease or conflict with other tribal groups, except for the semi-lucid William Blake, a mild-mannered and educated lunatic, who wanders around quoting gnomic fragments from the works of his great namesake. Ely's chaos is held back from complete anarchy by the brutal Dooby, an unpleasantly amoral teenager who has made himself into a gangster leader, but he is intelligent enough to realise that the shrinking island is doomed, and Zoe survives only because he hopes to force her to take him to safety in her boat.

Like much solid and readable speculative fiction, the book relies more on situation and atmosphere than character or personal relationships. Although comparisons of Sedgwick's Ely with Lord of the Flies are inevitable, little attempt is made to impede the flow of the story with detailed social or psychological analysis, and the characterization (like J. K. Rowling's) is sufficient to inform the reader, provide plausible motivations, and move the plot forward, without becoming a serious focus. There are moments of genuine pathos, and some realistic moral dilemmas. In a tale about flooding, I was relieved to find that the only biblical references were veiled allusions to large boats and the need for breeding pairs to sustain livestock, though Noah's ancient Near Eastern analogue Utnapishtim is unexpectedly named. The placing of the action in a claustrophobically tiny enclave of eastern England, out of touch with the rest of the world, is reminiscent of other post-catastrophic settings such as the Kent of Russell Hoban's Riddley Walker, the Oxfordshire of Brian Aldiss's Greybeard, or the "wherever it is" of Iain Banks's Song of Stone. The eventual ending is a slightly rushed resolution, but I don't think this is a major weakness, though most adult novels would probably have avoided it in favour of bleak pessimism. ( )
1 stem MyopicBookworm | Dec 7, 2008 |
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After global warming causes the sea to rise until cities in England become islands, ten-year-old Zoe goes on a harrowing solitary boat journey to search for her parents.

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