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9 Reviews
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105 of 107 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Ground-breaking geopocalyptic masterpiece!,
This review is from: A Wrinkle in the Skin (Paperback)
John Christopher has written several novels of global catastrophe,of which this is certainly the best.The basic premise is that of extreme earthquakes on a worldwide scale, which reduce towns and cities to piles of rubble and plunge the survivors straight back into the Stone Age. Much of western Europe is drastically uplifted, transforming the English Channel into a muddy desert overnight - whist elsewhere, lands are thrown down and drowned under inrushing seas. The cataclysm and its aftermath are seen from the viewpoint of Matthew Cotter, a Gurnsey horticulturalist who finds himself one of a handful left alive on the former island. The future they face, attempting to begin life again with what they can scavenge amid the devastation, seems hard and uncertain enough. Matthew then treks across the empty seabed to England, in the faint hope that his student daughter has also survived. He finds the situation far worse in a wider land, with many competing bands of scavengers. Pillage, rape and murder are now the norm as mankind revets to utter barbarism. The actual scientific likelihood of such immense convulsions in the Earth is very doubtful, and the author's explanation - as a new mountain-building episode - is certainly nonsense, since such events take tens of millions of years. The sheer dramatic impact of a global earthquake, however, makes this book greatly entertaining for all but the most pedantic. Its central emphasis is on the reactions of people, totally unprepared, who see their world turned (almost literally) upside down and everyone they knew destroyed. While some find natural strength and determination, even leadership, others respond with violence, with apathy and despair, or retreat into lunacy. John Christopher displays a subtle and far-ranging mastery of characterisation. He has created a stark and very believable vision of human struggles to survive in a world made suddenly strange, lawless, primitive and hostile. It might have been even better to see Matthew Cotter and others ten or twenty years on, after the barbaric majority had mostly starved or slain each other and nature had begun to reclaim the shattered country. Would naval vessels have survived in mid-ocean and acted as nuclei for new communities? Or would the fallout from wrecked nuclear power stations have caused widespread cancers, sterility, mutations - and ultimately lethal new diseases, which would finish off the human race? This is, surely, the essence of "thought-provoking" literature. Regardless of unanswered questions, I would rate "A Wrinkle in the Skin" as being among the finest pieces of speculative fiction I have read.
50 of 50 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Breaking Ground,
This review is from: A Wrinkle in the Skin (Paperback)
I was nearly 13 years old the last time I saw this novel in the school library. It sounded like an exciting story but there was one problem: two pages were missing, including the last one. A short time later the out-of-print book disappeared. I spent the next thirteen years looking for it and have just read a brand new edition. It was worth waiting for.Similar in style to "The Death of Grass" (1956), "A Wrinkle In the Skin" (1965) reads like an after-the-bomb story without the radiation. In this book the collapse of civilization is quite literal. Massive earthquakes have brought a sudden end to modern society. Towns and cities have been completely destroyed, the twisted landscape strewn with rubble and unburied corpses. Very few made it through the devastation alive. The disaster has left its survivors reduced to the level of scavengers, digging among the ruins for food, wary of strangers, fearful of desperate marauders. Things are unstable in more ways than one. While earth tremors continue to shake the survivors, recent events have unhinged those who once lived normal lives in a world of law and order. Madness and violence are widespread. And these are only the early days of the aftermath. Nevertheless, a trace of decent behaviour still remains in some people. Against the rising tide of barbarism, they're determined to live and gain some form of security that will enable them to start again. Among all this horror, Matthew Cotter is trying to find his daughter Jane. As one would expect, it's a grim journey by foot across a ravaged land. It's tempting to think of "A Wrinkle In the Skin" as a prequel to "The Prince in Waiting Trilogy". (In that story England is medievalised once more due to the destruction of civilization through earthquakes.) We can guess that life will be more primitive and harsh after "A Wrinkle In the Skin" finishes. Descendents of the survivors will inherit legends of former glory; the so-called "lost civilization" with its mysteries and wonders. Only time will tell whether future generations will rediscover all that was destroyed.
29 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
This is the way the world ends...this time.,
By
This review is from: A Wrinkle in the Skin (Paperback)
John Christopher writes exciting sci fi novels about catastrophic shifts in the world order. He has tackled everything from mass starvation (The Death Of Grass) to epic changes in the earth's weather (The Long Winter) to alien invasions(The Tripod trilogy) to giant earthquakes, which is the central catastrophe of this book.
After an enormous series of cataclysmic earthquakes wipes out modern civilization, a group of survivors struggle to stay alive in the ruins of the British Isles. This is one of John Christophers most gripping adventure stories, filled with strange settings and memorable characters; I especially liked the image of the oil tanker beached on the bottom of the now dry English Channel, its sole occupant slowly going mad.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
I and my students loved the book.,
This review is from: A Wrinkle in the Skin (Paperback)
This novel is wonderful for teaching students to think about what could happen in a natural or man-made disaster. I think pairing this book with Alas, Babylon is a wonderful idea. I am also thinking of including in the unit Lord of the Flies. How do people handle natural disasters, man-made disasters, and war? Discussions will be great!
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Good Read,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: A Wrinkle in the Skin (Paperback)
My friend, Science Fiction writer K.D. Kragen recommended this to me when we were discussing what a seabed might look like were the water to suddenly disappear. This is a very good read by British author John Christopher. It may seem a little dated to some, given when it was written, and the very "British" style of writing, but make no mistake, it is tense and hard to put down. It leaves just enough for speculation that the imagination is indeed exercised. Which is good.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Timeless,
By Fool of a Took "Rock and Read" (Central Illinois) - See all my reviews
This review is from: A Wrinkle in the Skin (Paperback)
The age on this story doesn't show a bit, I find myself thinking about these characters and what happened to them. Did they survive the winter? Are they still dealing with bandits, rapists and thieves? What type of new world are they creating? This is the sign of a good book, continues to make you think and wonder. I'm off to buy another one from this great author.....
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Great story but needed a better ending,
By
This review is from: A Wrinkle in the Skin (Paperback)
To start let me say that the author is one of my favorites and that is why I purchased this book. I am also a fan of this genre too. I found the book very entertaining and interesting. The thought of earthquakes so bad that the world reverts back to it infancy is terrifying and believable. In this case the people do horrible things to survive because they know no better way to survive in such a bleak world were there are no more supermarkets and drive thru windows. The only weak part, I thought, was the end. Christopher usually has some very good endings that make you really take a step back and look at yourself and the world a little differently. This ending was a little more "happy" but also abrupt and i felt i needed a little more explanation or closure. Something explain what eventually happens to the main character and his boy companion.
Overall it was a good read, but also check out the Sword of the Spirits Trilogy and the Tripods Trilogy by the same author. Very good books, geared for young readers, but good at any age. You'll be glad you did.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Sci Fi at is Best,
By
This review is from: A Wrinkle in the Skin (Paperback)
This is a page turner and a classic. Written in 1965 this book is timeless. Highly Recommend!
1 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
A fair read with almost something more...,
This review is from: A Wrinkle in the Skin (Paperback)
To be fair this is a good book. On the other hand I did not find it action packed. I do want to however recommend this book to the reader looking for a more REALISTIC point of view of a great disaster or your Armageddon.
Set in modern times, a number of great earthquakes destroy modern earth and change the landscapes. Seas are gone, new lands appear, etc. The author does a good job of painting a picture of victums in the ruins of houses and buildings during the disaster and I liked this best about the story. If you are from the islands neer or on England you will really love this book as it describes the small islands near England and will probably move you more that someone land locked here in the middle of farm land USA. |
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A Wrinkle in the Skin by John Christopher (Paperback - December 1, 2000)
$15.00 $13.51
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