Clay's Ark
Compelling
Surreal
Dark

Clay's Ark

In a violent near-future, Asa Elias Doyle and her companions encounter an alien life form so heinous and destructive, they exile themselves in the desert so as not to contaminate other humans. To resist the compulsion to infect others is mental agony, but to succumb is to relinquish humanity and free will. Desperate, they kidnap a doctor and his two daughters as they cross the wasteland--and endanger the world.
Sign up to use

Reviews

Photo of Jessica Smith
Jessica Smith@jayeless
2 stars
Sep 15, 2021

Well… this is definitely the weakest book in the Patternmaster series. Its main problem is an even worse version of the one that afflicted Mind of My Mind: it has too many characters getting too much page time who just aren't very engaging. But where Mind of My Mind at least has Mary and Doro, whose epic struggle carries the whole book, Clay's Ark has a bunch of weaker characters who are mostly just struggling against themselves – or at least, against an alien organism becoming symbiotically intertwined with their bodies. Not only are the characters unengaging, but this is also a very gruesome, violent book – especially the last part, but not only there. There are so many rapes and beatings and gunshots blowing out half someone's head and decapitations and throat-slittings and on and on… I won't say the other books are all sunshine and rainbows but this one is orders of magnitude more gory than the others, and it didn't feel purposeful. So the setting for this book is southern California, around 2021. Technologically, there are parts of this era that Butler predicted correctly (“screenphones”, cars with GPS navigation) and parts that she has not (faster-than-light travel to Alpha Centauri). It is also a vision of 2021 where there are small pockets of safety (i.e. gated communities) in the midst of vast swathes of lawless, ultraviolent country. The story starts with the Maslin family foolishly taking a cross-country drive, despite all the roads being ridiculously unsafe, and getting abducted and taken to a secluded ranch by a strange extended family. This family are all suffering from a disease, an alien disease brought to them by the only survivor of the Alpha Centauri mission, Eli. The disease basically makes them catlike in various ways: sharpened senses, eternally hungry, insatiably horny, and they only like unseasoned food now, preferably raw. They have an uncontrollable urge to spread their infection, but enough awareness to know they should probably not start a worldwide epidemic, so instead they periodically abduct people off the highway and induct them to life as an infected person on the ranch. Also, when they have kids, those kids are even more cat-like (described as sphinxes); if you've read Patternmaster, they will be recognisable as the antecedents of the Clayarks in that book. Indeed, the only relevance of Clay's Ark to the overall series is that it provides an origin story for the Clayarks in Patternmaster. There is also a brief reference to a very minor character from Mind of My Mind, and to the psychic powers people exhibit in the other three books, but no one in this book actually has any psychic powers and that story thread is not built on at all. You could posit that the security situation being so bad is a natural extension of the situation in Mind of My Mind, except the cause in that book (incompletely psychic “latents”) doesn't seem to be the cause here, so it'd be a bit of a stretch. Overall, the connection to the other books is weak. Honestly, nearly everything about this book is weak. The only character I could really get interested in was Eli; everyone else just acted against their own best interests all the time (the Maslins) or were just bland (the other ranchers) or one-dimensional ultraviolent maniacs (the “car rats”). It was kind of interesting to read about how infected people's sensory perceptions changed, but it was sandwiched between so much blargh stuff. I think I'd have preferred to read a book set a little later, with a Clayark society at least somewhat established, which could have given the important parts of this book as mere background information. This series could actually have done with one, because Patternmaster is told entirely from the Patternists' perspective and they have no real understanding of the Clayarks. I know there is one more book from this series – Survivor, which Butler disowned – and that it's set after this one, but I don't believe it fleshes out the Clayarks the way I'd really like to see. Such a shame.

Photo of Mahasin S Ameen
Mahasin S Ameen@fivefootsmall
3 stars
Sep 14, 2021

I call this one "the one with all the rape" because oh my god so much sexual assault.

Photo of Traci Wilbanks
Traci Wilbanks@traci
3.5 stars
Mar 26, 2025
+4
Photo of Rachel B
Rachel B@raebae
2 stars
May 15, 2022
Photo of Michael McBride
Michael McBride@hyggemcb
5 stars
Dec 18, 2023
Photo of Maya Johnson
Maya Johnson@sup3rn0va
4 stars
Feb 25, 2023
Photo of Janice Hopper
Janice Hopper@archergal
3 stars
Nov 2, 2022
Photo of Margaret McFarlane
Margaret McFarlane@margmcfarg
3 stars
Aug 25, 2022
Photo of Mahogany Skillings
Mahogany Skillings@bibliogeekgirl
4 stars
Mar 21, 2022
Photo of Athena Eloy
Athena Eloy@athenaeloy
3 stars
Jan 12, 2022
Photo of Phil James
Phil James@philjames
3 stars
Sep 3, 2021
Photo of Teshia Treuhaft
Teshia Treuhaft@teshia
4 stars
Aug 12, 2021
Photo of Jackie Luo
Jackie Luo@jackie
3 stars
Jun 11, 2021

This book appears on the shelf suspense

Scorpia
Scorpia by Anthony Horowitz
Ark Angel
Ark Angel by Anthony Horowitz
Stormbreaker
Stormbreaker by Anthony Horowitz
Crocodile Tears
Crocodile Tears by Anthony Horowitz
Point Blank
Point Blank by Anthony Horowitz
Skeleton Key
Skeleton Key by Anthony Horowitz

This book appears on the shelf Fiction tbr

A Man Called Ove
A Man Called Ove by Fredrik Backman
The Shadow of the Wind
The Shadow of the Wind by Carlos Ruiz Zafón
S.
S. by J. J. Abrams
My Year of Rest and Relaxation
My Year of Rest and Relaxation by Ottessa Moshfegh
The Starless Sea
The Starless Sea by Erin Morgenstern
The Familiar
The Familiar by Mark Z. Danielewski

This book appears on the shelf Kindle unlimited and prime

Good Intentions
Good Intentions by Elliott Kay
You Have Arrived at Your Destination
You Have Arrived at Your Destination by Amor Towles
Run Program
Run Program by Scott Meyer
Mystery Society
Mystery Society by Steve Niles
Andy Weir
Randomize
Randomize by Andy Weir
The Last Conversation
The Last Conversation by Paul Tremblay