My Goodreads review: The Way
Dec. 9th, 2024 04:22 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
[Thanks to NetGalley for providing an ARC in exchange for an honest review. ]
Looking for post-apocalypse adventure with less bleakness and more inspired world-building? Cary Groner's The Way may be your ticket. Set in the American Southwest some years after a cascade of disasters called the Mayhem, this near-future road novel follows a man on a life-changing mission from New Mexico to California. Accompanied by an aging Maine Coon cat and a resourceful raven (both of whom he can apparently communicate with), Will Collins travels in the shell of an F-150 pulled by two mules. Though well-equipped with supplies and trail savvy, he struggles with his Buddhist vow to lead a harmless life -- even as both critters and human hunters keep trying to kill him.
Will's backstory as the last surviving resident of a Colorado dharma center lends a unique flavor to this novel -- questions of right conduct being rare in post-apocalyptic fiction -- but occasionally slows down the narrative. For this reader, at least, there were times when his spiritual detours were hard to follow. These never descend to the level of preachiness, however, and the pressure of his human pursuers soon gets things moving again.
As science fiction goes, The Way is definitely on the softer side without becoming squishy. The scientific aspects of Disease X (which ultimately created the Mayhem) are well worked out, and the post-human landscape Will and his companions travel through is frighteningly believable. Character remains at the heart of this novel, however. Will is haunted by the memory of a love he believes long dead, writing her letters he "sends" by placing them in his campfires. Excerpts from these provide the reader with more snippets of background, though not all are immediately relevant.
Though it offers plenty of action and a few moments of flinch-inducing violence, The Way may not appeal to those seeking a hardcore post-apocalypse read. Others may find its combination of scientific speculation, spirituality, and literary touches exactly what they were looking for -- even if they didn't know it when they picked up the book. Recommended.
Looking for post-apocalypse adventure with less bleakness and more inspired world-building? Cary Groner's The Way may be your ticket. Set in the American Southwest some years after a cascade of disasters called the Mayhem, this near-future road novel follows a man on a life-changing mission from New Mexico to California. Accompanied by an aging Maine Coon cat and a resourceful raven (both of whom he can apparently communicate with), Will Collins travels in the shell of an F-150 pulled by two mules. Though well-equipped with supplies and trail savvy, he struggles with his Buddhist vow to lead a harmless life -- even as both critters and human hunters keep trying to kill him.
Will's backstory as the last surviving resident of a Colorado dharma center lends a unique flavor to this novel -- questions of right conduct being rare in post-apocalyptic fiction -- but occasionally slows down the narrative. For this reader, at least, there were times when his spiritual detours were hard to follow. These never descend to the level of preachiness, however, and the pressure of his human pursuers soon gets things moving again.
As science fiction goes, The Way is definitely on the softer side without becoming squishy. The scientific aspects of Disease X (which ultimately created the Mayhem) are well worked out, and the post-human landscape Will and his companions travel through is frighteningly believable. Character remains at the heart of this novel, however. Will is haunted by the memory of a love he believes long dead, writing her letters he "sends" by placing them in his campfires. Excerpts from these provide the reader with more snippets of background, though not all are immediately relevant.
Though it offers plenty of action and a few moments of flinch-inducing violence, The Way may not appeal to those seeking a hardcore post-apocalypse read. Others may find its combination of scientific speculation, spirituality, and literary touches exactly what they were looking for -- even if they didn't know it when they picked up the book. Recommended.