Eden Shows the Nasty Side of Nature

EdenI have had Tim Lebbon’s Eden on my “to be read” list for awhile and recently had a chance to check it out. The book is set in a future where the international community has decided to form several zones across the globe where humans will no longer be allowed, essentially giving back those areas to nature in an effort to save the planet. At the point where the book starts, this situation has been in place for around 50 years or so, and the thirteen zones have become destination points for adventure racers. We are introduced to a team of racers who are about to embark on a race through the oldest of the zones, Eden. Very little is known about the zones or who has actually made it through them, since it’s illegal for humans to enter them, but there are rumors of how tough Eden is to master.

The prominent characters are Jenn and her father Dylan, who leads the group. Jenn had been the one pushing for this particular zone, and it isn’t until the group is well into their trip that they find out it’s because the zone was the last-known whereabouts of Jenn’s mother, Kat – Dylan’s estranged wife. Accessing the area is much like being smuggled into a different country, and there is a danger of being caught and killed – the rules about no humans are serious. Tensions run high as the group deals with not only unfamiliar and rough terrain, but mistrust and old wounds between the members, and the possibility that there is something more malevolent waiting for them beneath the verdant branches of Eden. (Note: Spoilers start here.)

I enjoyed the way that this book was set up. It’s almost a slasher format with the actual natural world around the adventurers working as the killer. The further that the team progresses into the zone, the more worrisome things become. They find an abandoned camp that doesn’t look like it has been there for very long, and eventually are able to ascertain that it did belong to Kat’s group. (Other more macabre finds follow, which help to verify that this is so.) The extreme amount of physical endurance needed to survive lends to the stress of their situation, and the complete absence of other humans for miles and miles around them creates an isolated, eerie, and alien feeling. All of the humans living in the area were moved out and their houses, vehicles, and belongs left behind, creating an unsettling skeletal frame for the natural growth of trees, vines, and flowers. 

The story of the racers is alternated with that of Kat, who is in fact still in Eden, but who has come across a living organism unlike any that have been found before. As the organism infects and takes her over, she becomes something both more and less, her humanity fading away as the invader takes over use of her body and she becomes simply a passenger. From her status, she is able to join the invader as it speaks to the minds of other animals and plants in the zone, and the subsequent behaviors enacted truly reflect an amoral natural state – one that humans may not have been prepared for when considering giving the earth back over to its natural designs.

As the team works its way deeper into the zone, they are attacked by predators in an abnormal fashion. A wolf, coyote, and big cat form a pack and track them, taking them out one by one, all as Kat is forced to watch from a distance through the creature’s eyes. What started as an adventure that the racers all knew would be a test of their physical and mental endurance, becomes a desperate struggle for survival, as the team’s goal changes to simply getting back out of the zone that they worked so hard to access. As Kat in her new form stalks and eventually catches up with the group, Jenn and Dylan find that the reunion with her is not at all what they had hoped for.

This book was a chiller! I really enjoyed the juxtaposition of humans taking care of nature (by creating these zones) with nature not giving two hoots about humans once it had the opportunity to take over. The name, Eden, itself presents a mental idea to us of somewhere pleasant to be, but I think that we often forget that nature left to its own devices is not necessarily so pleasant. Blood, fangs, claws, choking vines, and poisonous plants are all part of nature, too, and Lebbon uses them to great advantage in this eco-thriller.

If you recognize the author’s name, it may be because he was also behind the fairly recent Netflix movie The Silence, which also has a plot featuring nature vs. humans. If you are looking for eco-horror, I encourage you to check both of these out!

July Short Reviews

Here are a few things that I’ve been reading:

Final Girls by Riley Sager

Quincy Carpenter is one of only three “final girls”, each of which survived a massacre in different areas of the country.  While Quincy survived her ordeal, her memory did not and she has no recollection of most of what happened that terrifying night. However, at the beginning of this book, she is not doing too badly. She has a fiance and a successful cooking blog. But when one of the final girls, Lisa, commits suicide, it seems so out of character that Quincy becomes determined to figure out what really happened. The appearance of the third final girl, Sam, further complicates matters, and soon Quincy is struggling to figure out not only who she can trust, but also the truth of what happened to her that night, and it soon becomes clear that her life is depending on her figuring out the answers.

This book has a great thriller pacing to it, and I found the story to be engaging. Sager drew me in quickly with the idea of playing with the final girl trope. I know it’s something that’s been done a lot at this point, but Sager works to keep this fresh and different. The story kept me guessing until the end and it was definitely a fun read!

What Should Be Wild by Julia Fine

Maisie Cothay grows up with an unusual curse: anything she touches dies – or is revived. She lives on an estate at the edge of a mysterious forest, isolated from the world around her because of her condition. Her father, and pretty much everyone, has warned her not to go into the forest, and there are many legends of local men who have gone missing over the years. What Maisie additionally learns, though, is that many of the women in her family – ancestors from years gone by – have also gone missing in that forest. However, when Maisie’s father goes missing, she dares to venture into the forest in search of him, and she finds much more than she had bargained for.

I love the fairy-tale feel of this book, but it is not soft and pretty, there is definitely an edginess to it. It is frightening in some areas, and the fantasy elements have a darkness that I always enjoy. The resolution of this book, is interesting, but I think I mostly enjoyed the telling of the story itself. Maisie has an interesting viewpoint and her struggles with her condition and those around her lend a loneliness that makes the story even more haunting. Recommended for those that like Neil Gaiman’s The Ocean at the End of the Lane.

Midnight Riot by Ben Aaronovitch

Constable Peter Grant is just starting his career and hoping that he won’t be assigned to what is basically desk duty. However, his fortune changes when while assisting with a murder investigation he is approached by a ghost – offering him information. This odd interaction leads to him being assigned to work with Detective Chief Inspector Thomas Nightengale, who works on those sorts of cases, and who also happens to be a wizard. Peter and Nightengale team up to investigate a mysterious string of murders. Along the way, they are assisted by a variety of water elementals, each of whom is a different river that flows through the city. Throughout it all, Peter struggles to master his own growing magical skills, and become acclimated to his new role.

I loved this book and will probably devour the series! This would probably fall more into the urban fantasy genre, and readers of Jim Butcher’s Dresden series will probably enjoy this, as well. As the story developed and I learned more about the case, I was pleasantly surprised at how very original this idea was!


Check back in for more posts soon! I’ve been reading and watching some great stuff, and there are some new releases that will be coming out soon that are going to make for some excellent reading!