*I received this book as an ARC through Netgalley in exchange for an honest review
'A history written in ashes, in bones. Before the blast, they say there'd been sermons about fire, about the end of the world. The fire itself gave the last sermon; after that there were no more.'
'A history written in ashes, in bones. Before the blast, they say there'd been sermons about fire, about the end of the world. The fire itself gave the last sermon; after that there were no more.'
The Fire Sermon is
the much anticipated first novel of a post-apocalyptic trilogy penned by poet
Francesca Haig.
Since the nuclear blast that separated the world into Before
and After, every person is born with a twin – an Omega (physically deformed in
some way and consequently branded and cast out) and an Alpha (a perfect, human
specimen). The antagonism between Alpha and Omega is complicated by a simple
fact: one twin’s death will always result in the other’s. Powerful Alphas
instead choose to lock their Omega counterpart away for safekeeping while
others are simply sent to live far away in towns of their own, rejected by
their families.
Cass and her twin Zach are unusual, having remained
unidentified until their early teens because Cass carries no physical
deformity. She is a Seer – plagued by psychic visions and dreams and a different
way of thinking. As a rare anomaly herself, she is valuable to both sides knows
only that she must inform the Omegas what the Alphas are planning before it’s
too late.
I think the premise for the
book has potential but I did feel this first one fell a bit flat. In The Hunger Games/Divergent climate, I
think this had to do more to distinguish itself - to push the boundaries and
conventions and really cement its world and characters. Instead there’s the reluctant
female protagonist boy fight over - but without a lot of depth or development,
and a hint at a love-triangle between characters who haven’t yet been
established strongly enough to feel for. The problem with Kip’s blank slate (a boy that Cass rescues) is
that there’s very little for the reader to identify with and see in him, it’s
hard to engage with him as more than a companion who occasionally makes amusing
quips. I really want Haig to give the reader more in the sequels. More insight,
more internal life, more complexity, more basis for how the world is, more
believability, more emotion. (I actually kept recalling Garth Nix and Sabriel while reading this, more than The Hunger Games and definitely more
than The Road (both of which are
referenced in the blurb) – I think it was the scenes of adventure and
travelling as well as the relationship between Kip and Cass.)
There is potential - The
Fire Sermon plants seeds which could really have blossomed into interesting and novel dystopian territory if they had been picked up and allowed to grow. Things such
as:
- Disability, illness and stigma – the treatment of the disabled as well as the way that Cass is an outsider to both Alphas and Omegas because she is not physically marked. The idea of people being blamed for their disabilities and misfortunes by those in power.
- Gender politics – Zach feeling afraid of Cass and that she’s taking away his rights by trying to remain entitled and equal
- Nuclear disaster– the chemical effects of some kind of disaster are a really interesting path to open up, considering things like the Bhopal disaster, events in Japan and throughout history. The Before is hopefully something Haig will explore in the sequels.
- Technology - the dangers of technology are hinted at but not explored in this one ('people in the Before asked too many questions, probed too far, and look what that got them.')
- Nazism and eugenics – there are a lot of similarities to the suffering of the Jews in the war – including imprisonment, branding and the idea of a superior race/biology.
I like it a lot more when I think about the book from the
perspective of disability and illness, maybe combined with nuclear disaster. The
Alphas believe the Omegas carry the effects of the poison – and have become
synonymous with it – they literally brand them as outcasts. Cass’s case could equally
be aligned with mental illness and stigma attached to it – the sense of having
no physical symptoms and the discomfort and mistrust in others that that
provokes. As a main character with a complex disposition, I would have liked to engage with her more - but there wasn't a great deal of interiority.
For me, Haig has created some great material but just hasn’t done
enough with it yet or gone deeply enough to really make it affect me
emotionally or intellectually. Perhaps too much happens too quickly, there is
too much telling and not enough showing – though it is difficult to fault Haig’s
prose itself. I would have liked to see Zach and Cass’s relationship explored
more deeply and the twin bond to really be probed. The final chapters were
action-packed and written well but did not have as much impact as they could
have, had things been more developed throughout. The love story was sadly cold
and unconvincing – as were many of the relationships – even parental.
Having said this, I do want to read on and I will read the next books because I think there
is something here which just needs to be drawn out and committed to, but I
currently have very mixed feelings about this one as a launching pad.
N.B. I do love, love, love the cover – if you want to see
how it was made go to (it’s a really special, interesting process): http://lexiesox.tumblr.com/ - she’s a
brilliant designer and has done some great book covers in the past (including
one of my favourites – The Shock of the
Fall).
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