3.5 Stars
This is the last of The Forcing Trilogy which begins with The
Forcing
(https://schatjesshelves.blogspot.com/2023/02/review-of-forcing-by-paul-e-hardisty.html)
and continues with The Descent
(https://schatjesshelves.blogspot.com/2024/02/review-of-descent-by-paul-e-hardisty.html).
The novel is set in
2082 in Hobart on the island of Tasmania. It’s a dystopian world
where most live miserable, fear-filled lives with no freedom and
under constant surveillance. Sixteen-year-old Boo Ashworth, her
Uncle Kweku, and their friend Raphael collect whatever books they can
find and hide them in a secret library; their goal is to preserve
human knowledge in a world where information is heavily censored and
people are kept illiterate. Boo, who loves to read, has the ability
to instantly memorize entire texts. When the library is destroyed,
Boo manages to escape. She sets out to find her family and ends up
drawn into a plan to overthrow Eminence, the tyrant who maintains
absolute control through the use of AI and threats of extreme
punishment.
Interspersed
regularly throughout Boo’s narrative are extracts from Kweku’s
latest manuscript which documents his interviews with a man “at
least partially responsible for more deaths than almost any other
person in the history of the human race.” This manuscript, Kweku
writes, “would form the third part of our family story spanning
three generations, a tale of the perils of unconstrained greed, the
cost of cowardice, and, perhaps, the power of hope.”
The title of the
book, of course, points to its theme of the power of hope. This
message is repeated again and again: “’Even when things are
darkest, you can still care, and keep trying. As long as there is
hope, there is a chance’” and “’there is always a
pathway to a better future, even if you can’t see it. You have to
keep hope alive. It’s what keeps you going. But you have to have
courage in order to hope. You need to be brave. Because it’s a
lot easier not to hope.’”
Though these
comments are made to people of the future, there is no doubt that
they are also intended to those of us who have “spectacularly
wilful blindness.” Events of our time are described: “’The
confluence of conditions unlike humanity had ever seen before. The
rise of robotics and artificial intelligence, the largest population
of human beings the Earth had ever borne, the heaviest burden.
Technological prowess unmatched in our history, the ability to edit
and extend life, to plunder the planet like never before, to
fundamentally alter the climate. The rise of autocrats and strong
men, of fundamentalist religions, the use of social media and
disinformation to control minds and erode the
democratic dream.’”
Reading about the
aftermath of the election of President Bragg feels like reading a
current newspaper about life after the election of President Trump:
“’the civil service at every level in America had been
completely dismantled and replaced by a phalanx of Bragg loyalist
institutions. Everything – the courts, the senior military brass,
local law enforcement, government agencies, the CIA and the FBI –
everything was stacked with Bragg’s appointees. . . . Congress
became nothing more than a group of old men taking turns holding a
rubber stamp. The courts had long since been cowed, rendered
impotent. All the so-called guardrails had been removed. . . .
Environmental protections of all kinds had been wound back. The
National Parks service was dismantled and the major wildlife refuges
and areas protected for over a century were opened up for commercial
exploitation – lumber, mining, oil and gas. Science agencies that
studied climate change, the atmosphere and the oceans were gutted.
Foreign aid was suspended. The right to protest was eliminated.
Taxes on corporations and the rich who owned them were cut to the
point where most billionaires paid nothing.’”
I got goosebumps as
I read about Bragg suspending elections, citing the need for
stability in a time of crisis, around the time Trump “joked”
about cancelling midterm elections. And so many people feel
overwhelmed by Trump’s chaotic shock and awe approach to
governance: “’People walked around in a permanent state of
disbelief. We were literally stunned. Shell-shocked. It had
happened so fast, on so many fronts and with such ferocity, that
there was simply too much to process.’” Much in this novel
is unsettling because of its realistic depiction of our times; the
possible consequences hypothesized are certainly not far-fetched.
Boo is an
interesting character. Love for and loyalty to family define her.
She is intelligent and possesses a maturity beyond her years. She is
strong, yet at times is paralyzed by fear. Her relationship with Leo
bothered me; because we see little of Leo, for much of the book it is
difficult to understand the reason for the strength of her feelings.
I understand that her love serves as a motivation and is necessary
for the revelation in the last paragraph, a revelation not in the
least surprising.
Tension is not
lacking. Boo and various family members are often in danger. The
scenes in the palace are sometimes difficult to read. The only
light-hearted moment is the reference to “a plastic bag full of
novels from a publisher called Orenda.”
I’d advise readers
to begin with the first two books in the trilogy for a more complete
understanding of what happened. There are returning characters and
many references to earlier events. Unfortunately, the reader may end
up feeling overwhelmed. I understand the importance of imagining a
“just and fair future for humanity” and a pathway forward
is prescribed, but are there enough people brave enough to hope and
fight with love in their hearts?