The wild shore

, #1

Paperback, 377 pages

English language

Published April 14, 1995 by Orb Books.

ISBN:
978-0-312-89036-0
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4 stars (19 reviews)

2047: and for sixty years America has been quarantined after a devastating nuclear attack.

Seventeen-year-old Henry wants to help make America great again. Like it was before all the bombs went off. But for the people of Onofre Valley, on the coast of California, just surviving is challenge enough. Living simply on what the sea and land can provide, they strive to preserve what knowledge and skills they can in a society without mass communications. Then one day the world comes to Henry, in the shape of two men who say they represent the new American resistance. And Henry and his friends are drawn into an adventure that will make the end of their childhood...

The Wild Shore is the first novel in Kim Stanley Robinson's Three Californias Trilogy.

6 editions

reviewed The wild shore by Kim Stanley Robinson (Three Californias, #1)

Review of 'The wild shore' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

Strange. KSR is my ride or die. And while I'd easily say that I loved this book I don't know if it's a particularly good one. "Objectively." It's pretty clear that it's a novel he wrote much earlier in his career. But there are seeds. The exhaustive description of landscapes, etc. It's also a book much more heavy in plot that most of his work. A book with a much smaller narrative than in most of his "mature" work. The characters can be counted on one hand.. I'm not sure that it's better, for it.

There is a pretty classical narrative arc, which his later books don't have. But the resolution seems anti-climactic and happens too soon.

My copy has a blurb by Ursula K LeGuin, and I can see why she liked it so much. There is a focus on what can be exquisite in discrete gestures. And meaning …

reviewed The wild shore by Kim Stanley Robinson (Three Californias, #1)

Review of 'The wild shore' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

The Wild Shore it one of the best books I've read in years. Fantastic story, compelling characters, interesting issues, vivid writing - I just loved it.

It is set in America "after the bombing". The United States is no more. America has suffered a severe nuclear attack. Millions died in the initial attack, and millions more in the aftermath, struggling to survive in the new pre-industrial world. Getting food by growing and hunting it, avoiding the "scavengers" - the people who live from the looted ruins and hunt one another.

What is more, the outside world is actively preventing any kind of reconstruction, using their space age technology to destroy any attempts to build up an industrialised civilisation.

About sixty years after the bombing seventeen year old Henry is living in a coastal farming community. He has a rather strange view of history, learnt from old Tom, one of the …

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Subjects

  • Orange County (Calif.) -- Fiction

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