The last day A novel

Andy Murray

Book - 2019

"A visionary and powerful debut thriller set in a terrifyingly plausible dystopian near-future-with clear parallels to today's headlines--in which the future of humanity lies in the hands of one woman, a scientist who has stumbled upon a secret that the government will go to any lengths to keep hidden. A world half in darkness. A secret she must bring to light. It is 2059, and the world has crashed. Forty years ago, a solar catastrophe began to slow the planet's rotation to a stop. Now, one half of the globe is permanently sunlit, the other half trapped in an endless night. The United States has colonized the southern half of Great Britain--lucky enough to find itself in the narrow habitable region left between frozen darknes...s and scorching sunlight--where both nations have managed to survive the ensuing chaos by isolating themselves from the rest of the world. Ellen Hopper is a scientist living on a frostbitten rig in the cold Atlantic. She wants nothing more to do with her country after its slide into casual violence and brutal authoritarianism. Yet when two government officials arrive, demanding she return to London to see her dying college mentor, she accepts--and begins to unravel a secret that threatens not only the nation's fragile balance, but the future of the whole human race"--

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Subjects
Genres
Thrillers (Fiction)
Dystopian fiction
Apocalyptic fiction
Dystopias
Science fiction
Published
[New York] : Dutton [2019]
Language
English
Main Author
Andy Murray (author)
Physical Description
372 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781524745813
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Murray's impressive eye for detail compensates for the scientifically preposterous premise of his debut. When a "rogue" white dwarf star passed dangerously close to Earth, it left the planet half scorched in sunlight and half frozen in darkness, with humanity barely hanging on in the dim zone between the extremes. Forty years after the disaster, dubbed "the Stop," Britain, in the middle zone, has descended into fascism. Depressed scientist Dr. Ellen Hopper conducts oceanic research on a rig in the North Sea, despite feeling her work is pointless. When Hopper is summoned to the deathbed of her Oxford mentor, Edward Thorne, a government scientist responsible for the deaths of countless refugees after the Stop, she catches wind of a secret that could spell further disaster for humankind. To save what's left of the world, Hopper launches an investigation into the government secret, rediscovering her hope for humanity along the way. Murray's despairing characters are convincing and his descriptions of the broken Earth are vivid, but his apocalypse is too conceptually contrived to be believable. Readers will easily invest in Hopper's mission, but will struggle to buy into Murray's vision of the future. Agent: Kim Witherspoon, Inkwell. (Feb.)

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Review by Library Journal Review

DEBUT It has been 40 years since the Earth's rotation slowed to a stop, plunging half of the planet's population into permanent darkness, and half into endless day. Perched at the perfect halfway point, England exists in a continuing early morning, with enough sunlight to grow crops, but not so hot as to become unbearable. In those 40 years since the Slow, England's government has brutally closed its borders, increased rationing, and conscripted any dissenters into slave labor. Scientist Ellen Hopper has spent the years since her divorce on a naval rig in the bitter Atlantic, studying currents and avoiding politics, when she is contacted by a former mentor, from his deathbed. Against her wishes, government officials coerce Hopper back to the mainland to say her goodbyes, in the process embroiling her in a mystery someone will go to any lengths to protect. VERDICT Murray's debut novel depicts a thrilling future dystopia. The science of the Slow and the political breakdown that follows are alarmingly realistic, and Hopper's flight through London as she unravels what could be England's greatest secret is a ride not to be missed.--Jennifer Beach, Longwood Univ. Lib., Farmville, VA

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

One woman must discover what lies at the center of a government coverup in this near-future thriller.The year is 2059, and the Earth hasn't rotated in 39 years. The Stop plunged parts of the world into darkness and others into everlasting sunlight. Britain lies right in the middle of a habitable zone, and the government has scrambled to build up its defenses to help its people while keeping others out. Scientist Ellen Hopper has been working on a rig out on the Atlantic for the past few years, away from the overbearing government and her failing relationships with her brother and ex-husband. But when a group of government officials arrives by helicopter to tell her that her old mentor is dying and wishes to see her, she is once again whisked into a world full of citizens spying on each other, curfews, and oppression. With only her mentor's promise that she will figure out "the truth," Ellen must find what he has hidden away before the government can destroy it. In his fascinating debut, Murray has crafted something original out of the classic "one person against a totalitarian government" trope. The world after the Stop is completely fleshed out and lived in, with explanations of how people eat, farm, work. The breakneck pace of Ellen's trying to stay one step ahead of the authorities (and not always succeeding) makes for a fast read, with short chapters that propel the action forward. Ellen and David, her ex-husband, grew up post-Stop, so their interactions and personal issues grapple with what the world has become in interesting ways. Thorne, Ellen's mentor, shines in flashbacks. The open ending leaves room for more exploration in a potential sequel.An interesting new twist on a post-apocalyptic tale. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.