Plague Year

Plague Year

Jeff Carlson2007
When the nanotechnology designed to fight cancer evolves into a machine plague, killing nearly five billion people, a group of survivors, struggling to stay alive, places their faith in a top nanotech researcher who has discovered the plague's one weakness. Original.
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Reviews

Photo of Bryan Alexander
Bryan Alexander@bryanalexander
3 stars
Jul 29, 2021

This is the first Jeff Carlson novel I've read. I have enjoyed some of his short stories, often in audio form. The first half of Plague Year grabbed my attention thoroughly. The plight of scattered survivors, barely eking out an existence on mountaintops after a plague has wiped out 99% of human civilization, fascinated me. Carlson described material and psychological conditions with great clarity. It was also a very disturbing, sometimes horrific first half of a book. The first line welcomes us to cannibalism, and we move on to a variety of privations, torments, and deaths. Shifting perspective from a California mountaintop to a clutch of astronauts in orbit only heightened the sense of agony. This is no cosy catastrophe. The setting alone would have been compelling, but Carlson adds hefty plot drivers to haul us along with even greater assurance. Our peak survivors learn of another group, and have to work out how to respond. The astronauts might be able to solve the plague, if only they could descend. And one survivor seems to know an awful lot about the end of the world... The second half advances these plots, yes, and knits them together. But then Plague Year becomes a different book. Things shade from horror into action, from survival to small unit tactics. A political plot arises, but never really receives its due. And then (view spoiler)[we have a series of gunfights, standoffs, and problem-solving scenes which end up far too optimistically for what I expected. (hide spoiler)] I did enjoy the expansion of the science plot, verging into hard science. But I missed the initial horror, and even the ongoing torment of one character, (view spoiler)[Sawyer the nano co-instigator (hide spoiler)], didn't slake my awful appetite. Heck, I like playing The Long Dark for pleasure. I listened to this book instead of reading it, and commend the reading by Jeffrey Kafer. He read the novel with mordant intensity, a splendid voice for bitter action. I'd be happy to hear Kafer read noir fiction or, well, anything bleak. So I recommend listening to this, if possible. If your tastes are as Grand Guignol as mine, focus on the first half. If you are gentler than I, dear reader, rest assured that things do get better. There are two sequels. How are they?