Enjoy fast, FREE delivery, exclusive deals and award-winning movies & TV shows with Prime
Try Prime
and start saving today with Fast, FREE Delivery
Amazon Prime includes:
Fast, FREE Delivery is available to Prime members. To join, select "Try Amazon Prime and start saving today with Fast, FREE Delivery" below the Add to Cart button.
Amazon Prime members enjoy:- Cardmembers earn 5% Back at Amazon.com with a Prime Credit Card.
- Unlimited Free Two-Day Delivery
- Instant streaming of thousands of movies and TV episodes with Prime Video
- A Kindle book to borrow for free each month - with no due dates
- Listen to over 2 million songs and hundreds of playlists
- Unlimited photo storage with anywhere access
Important: Your credit card will NOT be charged when you start your free trial or if you cancel during the trial period. If you're happy with Amazon Prime, do nothing. At the end of the free trial, your membership will automatically upgrade to a monthly membership.
Buy new:
$9.95$9.95
FREE delivery: Thursday, May 18 on orders over $25.00 shipped by Amazon.
Ships from: Amazon Sold by: LC HAWAII LLC
Buy used: $8.96
Other Sellers on Amazon
FREE Shipping
& FREE Shipping
90% positive over last 12 months
FREE Shipping
Download the free Kindle app and start reading Kindle books instantly on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required. Learn more
Read instantly on your browser with Kindle for Web.
Using your mobile phone camera - scan the code below and download the Kindle app.
The New Wilderness Hardcover – August 11, 2020
| Price | New from | Used from |
|
Audible Audiobook, Unabridged
"Please retry" |
$0.00
| Free with your Audible trial | |
|
Audio CD, Audiobook, MP3 Audio, Unabridged
"Please retry" | $21.99 | $15.24 |
Purchase options and add-ons
A Washington Post, NPR, and Buzzfeed Best Book of the Year • Shortlisted for the Booker Prize
“More than timely, the novel feels timeless, solid, like a forgotten classic recently resurfaced — a brutal, beguiling fairy tale about humanity. But at its core, The New Wilderness is really about motherhood, and about the world we make (or unmake) for our children.” — Washington Post
"5 of 5 stars. Gripping, fierce, terrifying examination of what people are capable of when they want to survive in both the best and worst ways. Loved this."— Roxane Gay via Twitter
Margaret Atwood meets Miranda July in this wildly imaginative debut novel of a mother's battle to save her daughter in a world ravaged by climate change; A prescient and suspenseful book from the author of the acclaimed story collection, Man V. Nature.
Bea’s five-year-old daughter, Agnes, is slowly wasting away, consumed by the smog and pollution of the overdeveloped metropolis that most of the population now calls home. If they stay in the city, Agnes will die. There is only one alternative: the Wilderness State, the last swath of untouched, protected land, where people have always been forbidden. Until now.
Bea, Agnes, and eighteen others volunteer to live in the Wilderness State, guinea pigs in an experiment to see if humans can exist in nature without destroying it. Living as nomadic hunter-gatherers, they slowly and painfully learn to survive in an unpredictable, dangerous land, bickering and battling for power and control as they betray and save one another. But as Agnes embraces the wild freedom of this new existence, Bea realizes that saving her daughter’s life means losing her in a different way. The farther they get from civilization, the more their bond is tested in astonishing and heartbreaking ways.
At once a blazing lament of our contempt for nature and a deeply humane portrayal of motherhood and what it means to be human, The New Wilderness is an extraordinary novel from a one-of-a-kind literary force.
- Print length416 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherHarper
- Publication dateAugust 11, 2020
- Dimensions6 x 1.29 x 9 inches
- ISBN-100062333135
- ISBN-13978-0062333131
"The Lobotomist's Wife: A Novel" by Samantha Greene Woodruff
An enthralling historical novel of a compassionate and relentless woman, a cutting-edge breakthrough in psychiatry, and a nightmare in the making. | Learn more
Frequently bought together

What do customers buy after viewing this item?
From the Publisher
|
|
|
|
|---|---|---|
|
|
|
|
Editorial Reviews
Review
“Could this be the great climate change novel of our time? Buzz is building fast for the epic debut novel of Diane Cook.” — Entertainment Weekly
“The emotional core of the story is the relationship between Bea and Agnes, whose perspectives drive the narrative. It’s a damning piece of horror cli-fi, but it’s also a gripping and profound examination of love and sacrifice.” — Buzzfeed
“Cook writes about desperate people in a world of ever shrinking livable space and increasingly questionable resources like air and water but also about the resilience of children who adapt, even enjoying circumstances that overwhelm the adults around them. Cook also raises uncomfortable questions: How far will a person go to survive, and what sacrifices will she or won’t she make for those she loves? This ecological horror story (particularly horrifying now) explores painful regions of the human heart.” — Kirkus Reviews (Starred Review)
“A wry, speculative debut novel. . .Cook’s unsettling, darkly humorous tale explores maternal love and man’s disdain for nature with impressive results.” — Publishers Weekly (Starred Review)
“Violence, death, tribalism, lust, love, betrayals, wonder, genius, and courage—all are enacted in this stunningly incisive and complexly suspenseful tale akin to dystopian novels by Margaret Atwood and Claire Vaye Watkins. When Cook finally widens the lens on her characters' increasingly desperate predicament, the exposure of malignant greed, deceit, and injustice resonates with devastating impact.” — Donna Seaman, Booklist (Starred Review)
“More than timely, the novel feels timeless, solid, like a forgotten classic recently resurfaced—a brutal, beguiling fairy tale about humanity. But at its core, The New Wilderness is really about motherhood, and about the world we make (or unmake) for our children.” — Washington Post
"A dazzling debut...Cook takes command of a fast-paced, thrilling story to ask stomach-turning questions in a moment when it would benefit every soul to have their stomach turned by the prospect of the future she envisions. I, for one, was grateful for the journey."
— Téa Obreht, The Guardian
“Humanity returns to nature in Diane Cook’s timely ecological tale. . . . A gripping adventure that denies its readers easy answers, The New Wilderness is an important debut, and an illuminating read in these times, when the stakes of humans’ relationship with nature have never felt higher.” — USA Weekend
"5 of 5 stars. Gripping, fierce, terrifying examination of what people are capable of when they want to survive in both the best and worst ways. Loved this." — Roxane Gay via Twitter
"The New Wilderness is a virtuosic debut, brutal and beautiful in equal measure." — Emily St. John Mandel, New York Times bestselling author of STATION ELEVEN and THE GLASS HOTEL
“Cook's writing is both a melodic ode to nature and a devastating eulogy to what has been lost…This is a gorgeous tale of motherhood and the will to live…Diane Cook builds a place so rich it feels like home, even as it frightens in its ferocity.” — Shelf Awareness
“The novel tackles the deepest of human emotions—as well as big ideas about the planet—in satisfying ways. Also, it’s a page-turner!” — LitHub
“A wonderfully imagined … tense future-shock novel.” — 2020 Booker Prize Judges
"An imaginative, dystopian look at what our world could become…I was gripped by how vivid the story was, how expertly Diane Cook got into the dynamics of a group of strangers surviving in the wild, and their relationship with those in power.” — Hey Alma—Favorite Books for Summer
“THE NEW WILDERNESS left me as stunned as a deer in headlights. Gut-wrenching and heart-wrecking, this is a book that demands to be read, and urgently. With beauty and compassion, Diane Cook writes about the precariousness of life on this planet, about the things that make us human — foremost the love between mothers and daughters, at once complex and elemental. Cook observes humanity as a zoologist might — seeing us exactly as the strange animals we really are.” — Rachel Khong, author of GOODBYE, VITAMIN
“Diane Cook upends old tropes of autonomy, survival, and civilization to reveal startling new life teeming beneath, giving a glimpse into the ways the world we think we know could come unstuck and come to life in the care of the women and girls of the future. This is not just a thrilling, curious, vibrant book--but an essential one, a compass to guide us into the future.” — Alexandra Kleeman, author of YOU TOO CAN HAVE A BODY LIKE MINE
"The New Wilderness strips us of our veneer of civilisation and exposes us for what we are: driven to survive, capable of shocking cruelty and profound, fierce love. This story of what a mother does to save her daughter is unflinching, horrifying, forgiving, deeply moving, and filled with truth that stayed with this mother long after the final page." — Helen Sedgwick, author of The Comet Seekers and When the Dead Come Calling
"An absolutely riveting and propulsive novel. Terrifying, and as real as can be. Epic in scale and story; granular and recognisable in people and place. The New Wilderness is surely an instant classic in our stories of survival, sovereignty and adaptation. Cook's writing is so sure-footed, prescient and trustworthy, it's all the reader can do to follow her. For fans of Ling Ma's Severance and Hernan Diaz's In the Distance, and many, many readers in between." — Caoilinn Hughes (Orchid & the Wasp/The Wild Laughter)
“As her characters navigate a changing terrain and their own emotional landscapes, Cook incorporates the whole of human experience. The New Wilderness examines our relationships to place and to others as the Community considers its right to be on the land and whether others have any business sharing the space.” --BookPage — BookPage
USA Today—5 Books Not to Miss: “The buzz: “A gripping adventure that denies its readers easy answers, ‘The New Wilderness’ is an important debut,” says a ???? (out of four) review for USA TODAY." — USA Today (four stars)
“The book manages to have a driving plot at the same time that it supports big themes, like the best speculative fiction can do. And now it's on the longlist for the Booker Prize. The New Wilderness deserves its place there.” — Amazon.com
“A soulful, urgent debut…The push-pull ambivalence of Bea and Agnes’s bond forms its beating heart…What lingers, beyond the awesome power of Bea and Agnes as heroines, is pure wonderment at all in this world of ours that is not human.” — The Guardian
“Cook captures not only the push-pull intimacy particular to a mother and child, but the way all relationships come with conflict and contradictions. Whatever the future holds, may Cook write some more books in it.” — San Francisco Chronicle
“Her writing is deceptively simple, beautifully corporeal . . . " — San Francisco Chronicle
"Expertly plotted . . . highly seductive writing . . . It is the anthropological acuity in Cook's writing that makes it so persuasive. She explores how our nature is informed by the land we inhabit, how our conception of civility is relative to the circumstances in which we find ourselves." — Times Literary Supplement (London)
“The emotional core of the novel—and its true source of brilliance—lies in the relationship between Bea and Agnes, the most intricate and morally arresting relationship Cook has conjured to date.” — Nation
“An absolutely breathtaking novel…captivating and engaging in the struggle for survival but also in the loss of one’s humanity in the fight for survival and what we try to hold onto when the world has changed forever…A poignant perspective on human survival when the world has made survival much harder.” — Girly Book Club
About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : Harper (August 11, 2020)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 416 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0062333135
- ISBN-13 : 978-0062333131
- Item Weight : 1.25 pounds
- Dimensions : 6 x 1.29 x 9 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #140,341 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #1,368 in Dystopian Fiction (Books)
- #4,959 in Family Life Fiction (Books)
- #9,301 in Literary Fiction (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
Videos
Videos for this product

0:41
Click to play video

The New Wilderness
Amazon Videos
About the author

Diane Cook is the author of the novel, THE NEW WILDERNESS, and the story collection, MAN V. NATURE, which was a finalist for the Guardian First Book Award, the Believer Book Award, and the Los Angeles Times Art Seidenbaum Award for First Fiction. Her writing has appeared in Harper’s, Tin House, Granta, and other publications, and her stories have been included in the anthologies Best American Short Stories and The O. Henry Prize Stories. She is a former producer for the radio program This American Life, and was the recipient of a 2016 fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts.
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonReviewed in the United States on August 12, 2021
-
Top reviews
Top reviews from the United States
There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later.
The New Wilderness by Diane Cook takes place in a dystopian, nearly apocalyptical future where civilisation, living in a giant city crumbles under climate change and pollution.
But a small group of people take part of an experiment to live in the last, vast wilderness, to demonstrate that people can live in nature without destroying it. Truly becoming nomadic hunters & gatherers, remotely monitored for any transgressions. The first half of the book follows Bea, who comes with her young daughter to the wilderness as a last chance for survival of the girl who is dying from an air pollution caused illness.
The novel is absolutely brilliant, terrifying, a study of motherly love, it is also heartbreaking with terrible betrayals, and suspenseful - all this following trekking people who have limited contact with the decaying civilisation. A story without compromise as you will notice during the hard hitting opening pages. The novel also shows how the young girl becomes more primal, raw and attuned to nature over time.
all this is not written as a survivalist pamphlet, it is much more literary in approach. In that sense it is more in the style of that great modern apocalyptic novel Station Eleven - the author of which wrote an enthusiastic blurb about The New Wilderness.
Apparently it is already being produced as a TV series, not sure if it can capture the intensity.
In short, absolutely recommend, a true discovery that will linger long in the mind.
There are points at which I read books because the author’s writing is beautiful, and I noted that some reviewers stated that the writing wasn’t done well, and that wasn’t my experience. I don’t know that I was captivated by beautiful sentences so much as I was captivated by a compelling story.
All said, it is something you should read.
Top reviews from other countries
Diane Cook’s 400-page book about people walking aimlessly around a wilderness has wandered onto the Booker Prize longlist and is on its way to being adapted by Warner Bros. Television. I do not envy the director who has to find some direction in what already felt like a protracted television series minus all the good bits.
The juiciest action takes place before the book starts: Bea flees the City with her poorly daughter Agnes and husband Glen, who, alongside 17 others, form the Community, a nomadic tribe fighting against the elements and wild animals in the Wilderness State. The limited action actually described within the time frame of the novel itself is comparatively sedate. Hundreds of paragraphs are devoted to walking: walking through rivers; walking through sage fields; walking through forests; walking up mountains; there might have been some sleepwalking, or that might have been me dropping off. The walking is tedious for the characters, but does that justify boring the reader? If The New Wilderness needed to be written at all, it should have started earlier in the timeline of events, when the characters first arrived in the Wilderness. Or it should have started at page 139, when one of the characters deserts the others, returning to the City, creating a vacuum that changes the relationships of the group and offers a glimmer of intrigue.
Thanks to the marketing hype, readers go into the novel expecting to discover a dystopian near-future with a landscape ravaged by climate change and pollution. Disappointingly, Cook’s world building is lazy. The novel is simply set in an uninhabited area of land in which the characters scoff at the quaint antiques of the old world, such as fireplaces. How droll! She hints that over-population is the cause of pollution that in turn threatens the ever-expanding City and causes characters to flee to the last Wilderness. She drops hints about a malign Administration controlling things, but I had difficulty believing that any government that allowed inner-city building to spin out of control would cherish a wild landmass enough to preserve it and limit its inhabitants to just 20 in number. Equally incongruous is the fact that the Community are controlled by rangers, yet individuals have the option to return to the City at any time they choose. The concept is weak. The New Wilderness is Lord of the Flies without the plane crash or the peril or the literary prose. It is The Walking Dead without the zombies.
Something that shook me out of my ennui was the portrayal of female sexuality, which was problematic to say the least. One female character flagrantly uses sex to assume joint leadership of the Community. Another female’s foremost character trait is her longing to get pregnant so as to secure the favour of a man. Meanwhile, the 12- or 13-year-old protagonist, Agnes, shortly after her first period, craves sexual intercourse with the only teenage boy in the group:
"she would have to have real sex to get pregnant and what they were doing wasn’t sex. Agnes knew it wasn’t real sex but didn’t know how to make it real sex... She had even tried to trick him one day by insisting the anthill they’d been sitting next to belonged to a rare poisonous kind of ant and that they needed to undress quickly... She had needs."
I am surprised this got published in 2020. It perpetuates disgusting misogynist tropes about insatiable female sexuality and young girls entrapping older men, the kind of stereotypes that are often spouted as excuses by paedophiles and rapists, rather than included in supposedly literary novels by middle-aged female authors. It turned my stomach, and clearly that wasn’t Cook’s intention. In seeking to write something fresh and liberating, she has penned something regressive and disempowering.
When it wasn’t about the sexual desires of children, this book was easy to read. The prose was clear, albeit a little colloquial and often repetitive. The narrative voice switched fairly comfortably from Bea’s to Agnes’s perspective. However, except insofar as it shunned action, there was nothing literary about it. Nevertheless, it is worth remembering that half of last year’s Booker Prize was awarded to an exceedingly easy read that failed to live up to its promise of literary merit (The Testaments by Margaret Atwood), so I cannot rule out the possibility that a lightweight judging panel might choose to reward this timid debut. But in my opinion, books that contain sentences like “the tippy tops of the mountains came into view” are not worthy of literary prizes.
Ok, let’s get the elephant-in-the-room out of the way first: This is not a story I enjoyed in terms of it being a ‘good’ read, or even as an especially engaging tale, indeed if it wasn’t for the philosophical questions it raises, I might not of stuck with it at all. However, it does make one think…and, it does that very well.
Opening during a long-term experiment to measure human impact on a wilderness environment, the story’s focus is Bea and her young daughter, Agnes. Ranging over a period of around twenty years, the relationship between mother and child constantly shifts between nurturing and destructive. The reader is left in little doubt of their love for each other, but there is an increasing sense of distrust that constantly bubbles to the surface. That their interactions oscillate between showing innate need for each other, and unreserved rejection, makes for an often raw and uneasy read.
The wilderness features in much of the story, and there are some stunning descriptions of the interplay between people and fauna. Again, this swings from being beautiful and idealistic in some passages, to violent and disruptive in others. One thing this book never does is let the reader be too comfortable for too long; whether it’s examining the essence of humanity, motherhood, or freedom, it constantly employs brutal imagery to do so.
There were some aspects that didn’t perhaps work so well: Not least the ubiquitous (but totally unconvincing) rangers, and the tendency to portray humans as somehow separate from the environment rather than an integral part of it. Neither was I persuaded to mourn the loss of this wilderness – under Cook’s penmanship, it seemed to represent just another form of captivity. Overall though, it was her continual reliance on brutality to make a point that spoilt it for me.
If this book had not been on the Booker prize list, I would not have chosen it, as it is not a genre I would normally gravitate towards. If this book had not been on the Booker prize list and I had read it, my impression may have been less negative given the expectation that comes with such a nomination. My review is definitely skewed by the label of prize nominee.
I have searched for allegory or metaphor: maybe the plight of modern day refugees or Native American displacement. Both could be applied, but if this was the author's intent, the message was probably a little too subtle.
3 stars from me, because although my expectations were not fulfilled, it is a well written story that incites reflection on the state of the modern world, it explores the relationship between mother and daughter and shows how personal survival can change what we would call civilised behaviour.
















