Saturday, September 14, 2024

Leave The World Behind by Rumaan Alam

 

Amanda and Clay are a married couple who want to take a week's vacation out on Long Island.  Their son, Archie, is already a teenager and their daughter, Rose, is about to be.  This could be one of the last vacations they can take together.  They rent a house on Long Island, not on the water but a few miles back in the country which has a pool.  Everything is lovely.  They swim, lounge around and read, do puzzles and just relax.  

Then the television and the phones stop working.  They had heard a booming noise so their guess was that a substation had gone out although they still had lights.  A few hours later, after dark, a knock comes at the door and an African American couple are standing there.  They are G.H. and Ruth Washington and they own the house.  They told Amanda and Clay that the electricity was out in New York City and elsewhere and they had already been out of the city attending an event so decided to come to their house.  They ask if they can stay in the downstairs suite and offered to reimburse the family half their rent for the week.

Everyone tries to reassure everyone else that this is just something normal, but the fear is seeping in.  Rose sees hundreds of deer one morning on the move further north.  The adults see a flock of flamingos that night where flamingos should never be.  Amanda insists that they fill the bathtubs in case the water supply goes out and then Archie gets sick.  More loud noises occur, so loud they crack the windows in the house.  Is this the beginning or war?  A natural disaster?

This book got a lot of buzz when it was released.  It was a Best Book of the Year choice by multiple publications and a finalist for the National Book Award.  A movie has been made and is available to view.  Alam is a writer who lives in New York.  This book allows the reader to think about what they and their family would do in the event of a national emergency and how they would react to others.  Would they think only of their own family's safety?  How prepared would they be?  This book is recommended for literary fiction readers.  

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