Print List Price: | $18.99 |
Kindle Price: | $6.99 Save $12.00 (63%) |
Sold by: | Hachette Book Group Price set by seller. |
Your Memberships & Subscriptions

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.
![A Boy and His Dog at the End of the World: A Novel by [C. A. Fletcher]](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/51oMZkp-x8L._SY346_.jpg)
Follow the Authors
OK
A Boy and His Dog at the End of the World: A Novel Kindle Edition
Price | New from | Used from |
Audible Audiobook, Unabridged
"Please retry" |
$0.00
| Free with your Audible trial |
Hardcover, Illustrated
"Please retry" | $7.80 | $2.13 |
Audio CD, Audiobook, CD, Unabridged
"Please retry" | $22.75 | $15.00 |
My name's Griz. I've never been to school, I've never had friends, and in my whole life I've not met enough people to play a game of football. My parents told me how crowded the world used to be, before all the people went away. But we were never lonely on our remote island. We had each other, and our dogs.
Then the thief came.
"This unputdownable story has everything -- a well-imagined post-apocalyptic world, great characters, incredible suspense, and, of course, the fierce love of some very good dogs." -- Kirkus (starred review)
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherOrbit
- Publication dateApril 23, 2019
- File size3368 KB
Customers who viewed this item also viewed
From the Publisher
A Boy And His Dog At The End of The World
|
|
|
---|---|---|
|
|
|
Editorial Reviews
Review
Amazon.com Review
Editors' pick: Ferociously good. Griz’s quest to recover his kidnapped dog bursts with heart, compassion, and the oft-neglected power of love and loyalty."—Adrian Liang, Amazon Editor --This text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition.
About the Author
From School Library Journal
Product details
- ASIN : B07FHYLY31
- Publisher : Orbit; Illustrated edition (April 23, 2019)
- Publication date : April 23, 2019
- Language : English
- File size : 3368 KB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Sticky notes : On Kindle Scribe
- Print length : 418 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #76,348 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #530 in Contemporary Literary Fiction
- #791 in Dystopian Fiction (Books)
- #832 in Coming of Age Fantasy (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the authors
Discover more of the author’s books, see similar authors, read author blogs and more
Discover more of the author’s books, see similar authors, read author blogs and more
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 Amazon
Reviewed in the United States on April 25, 2019
-
Top reviews
Top reviews from the United States
There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later.
Between the rocks and the powerful surf, she couldn't survive, and they could never recover her body.
One day, a ship with red sails arrives in their little harbor, carrying a man called Brand, who says he wants to trade. Brand, we soon learn, is a charmer, a storyteller, a liar, and a thief.
This is where our story really starts, and it's a story told entirely, with one small exception near the end, from Griz's viewpoint, in a notebook that he carries with him.
Brand adds color, fun, and a little news to the day, because strangers showing up is the only way to learn of what's happening away from their own island and their near neighbors, the Lewismen, on a nearby island. They all like Brand, and there is much talk about trading--but one of the things Brand wants to trade for is one of Griz's own two dogs, two small terriers called Jip and Jess. Brand wants Jess, because Jess is female, and dogs Gmuch as humans have dramatically collapsed in numbers. Griz says no. Everyone else says Jess is Griz's, and Griz won't give her up, ever.
Brand laughs it off.
Brand is invited to join them for dinner, and he brings his own contribution, something they've never had before, that he picked up in Spain--marmalade. They all eat and enjoy it, but Griz broke a tooth the day before, and the sweetness is too much for that broken tooth. Griz eats less than anyone else. Griz wakes up before everyone else, too--to find Brand is leaving, and all of Griz's family is sleeping very very deeply. He struggles to wake them, fearing they may not, and when his father is awake, they discover how much Brand has stolen, including all the fish they would have been both eating and trading in the coming weeks.
And Jess. Jip is still present, but Jess is gone. And Griz sees Brand's red sails just about to disappear over the horizon. Jip and Griz quickly set off in the sailboat Sweethope, Griz's own boat, following Brand.
What follows is a hard chase, with stops at places Griz never knew of, or had only read of in books gathered from "viking" abandoned towns and scattered abandoned buildings. There are several encounters with Brand, who proves to be in some ways cultured and educated, and who keeps insisting that Jess is his because he stole her, that he's not a monster, and that Griz, with no trace of beard at all, is obviously too young to be pursuing him, and needs to turn around and go home. He also tells Griz, repeatedly, that he's not a monster, a claim that Griz has good reason to doubt.
Griz continues the pursuit, and learns a great deal about the way the world has changed. Harrowing encounters included an encounter with wild pigs, that he wouldn't have survived except for the chance arrival of a French woman who says her name is "John Dark," or something that sounds like that. Griz does mention in passing, in the notebook he carries, that that's not what she really said, but what she really said was no more her real name than "John Dark," but it was a good name and what she chose to be called.
We see a depopulated England, and life (other than human) prevailing, and find both terrible and wonderful things, such as the Homely House. There are disturbing remnants of how people chose to face the end of their world, and some of the ways people are choosing to survive are disturbing too.
All along the way, there are secrets to be discovered, and secrets to be revealed. including Griz's own. Griz also finds a lot to think about, how dogs have been with humans from the beginning, and were betrayed by humans in the end. We learn about the Freemen, who apparently maintained underground, electronic brains--as long as possible, until the last people who knew how died. And now, at least some of the Freeman are spreading la peste, the plague, the actual plague.
I mentioned that Griz has a secret, but there's also another, major, secret, very important to Griz, that needs to be discovered.
This was a slow read for me, because it's a post-apocalyptic novel, of exactly the kind I don't enjoy nearly so much as when I was a teenager living through the Cold War. (Okay, yes, the Cold War may be back again, but I no longer want to focus on the aftermath of it going hot in some way when I'm reading for leisure.) But this one was recommended by a friend, whose judgment on this I trust, and the trust was not misplaced. Even though I took a few breaks, I kept returning to it, because, yes, it's worth it.
Also, all dogs encountered in the course of the book are alive and well at the end. Yes, that's something I require, to consider a book readable.
Recommended.
I bought this book.
I normally don't read science fiction, but this book has me mesmerized.
I'm only 1/3 through it, but would already recommend it.
That is----if the ending is tied up satisfactorily.
I'm meaning, that it could be happy or tragic; just not slipped away to finish the story.
Griz lives at the end of the world. An event occurred that nobody really understands—the “Gelding”—and the vast majority of human beings were no longer able to have children. With only a tiny, tiny percentage (like 0.0001 percent tiny) of people still able to have children, the population of the Earth dropped off a cliff. The story takes place a few generations after. So Griz can say that, “In my whole life, I haven’t met enough people to make up two teams for a game of football.” He estimates there are maybe 10,000 people left alive on the Earth. But this isn’t one of those fiery apocalypses. Griz and his family are able to live a nice life on some islands off of Great Britain, only maintaining regular contact with one other family. But the excitement of a visiting traveler who comes bearing stories and offers of trade ends in misery when the traveler poisons Griz’s family and steals his dog.
“There may be no law left except what you make it, but if you steal my dog, you can at least expect me to come after you.”
There is a lot to like here. This is a great dog book. The emotional beats and oh so rare human interactions are poignant and rich. Literary merit notwithstanding, Fletcher’s story is never boring. I particularly loved this particular post-apocalyptic world. What would happen if we just . . . disappeared? That isn’t quite what happened here. The “Busters” had a long time to live with the knowledge that they wouldn’t leave much behind. They reacted in different ways, but some took steps to prepare for a world empty of people as best they could. So the world sits empty, but nature is in constant movement.
“Nature will take a building down if you give it enough time. The rain gets in, the cold turns water to ice in the winter, the ice swells the building cracks and then seeds sprout in the cracks in the spring and all you have to do is wait for the roots to push the walls and the roofs further apart to let in more seeds and rain and ice and eventually things fall apart just as surely here on the mainland as out of the islands.”
I love this. It’s so different from what I’m used to, but Fletcher takes such great care with it. Griz has a lot of knowledge, although he and his family are always engaging in what he calls “Liebowitzing,” trying to save knowledge, looking for practical books that may save them. Griz, though, likes the books with stories in them. Although to Griz a crowd of people is just as fantastical as a dragon. All those stories give Griz a lot of knowledge, but Griz will learn that seeing something isn’t the same as reading about it.
Griz narrates the story. It is structured as Griz’s journal entries, talking to the person in a photograph he found. Because Griz is in the future, talking about the past, Fletcher is free to drop little bits of foreshadowing. These can enhance a story. In fact, I would like to see more of this. The rise of 3rd-person limited POVs in SF means you rarely see it these days. But here lies my one really issue with the book. Fletcher leans too hard on this storytelling tool, and in general leans too hard on our emotions. I wound up walking away thinking Fletcher set out to tell a certain kind of story but wasn’t willing to commit to it. It wound up a serious mar on a story I otherwise loved. Less would have gone further.
Top reviews from other countries

It is, however, firmly a young-adult book, with childish tropes and plot lines to match. The writing is frequently cliched and "cookie cutter" in thought and structure. For example, every five pages or so the author defaults to a tacky tabloid story telling method, saying something akin to "It was a very good day. Until it wasn't." Seriously, this method for building suspense (a poor-man's alternative to actually suspenseful writing) happens AGAIN and AGAIN and AGAIN, sometimes with slight variations ("I was so glad to find this item. But I didn't know that it would ultimately be my downfall!") and greatly cheapens the experience. For the atrocious writing style alone I can only give it three stars.

Charmingly told by a character that you will struggle to get out of your head, A Boy and His Dog at the End of the World is a triumph of originality. And just writing this review has once again stirred those emotions I felt whilst reading it. Loved it, loved it, LOVED IT!!
Very highly recommended by me!

The world is in a very different state to what we know today. The world's population has collapsed, after the vast majority of people were left incapable of having children. (It's been estimated roughly one in a million were left unaffected). "In my whole life", says Griz, "I haven't met enough people to make up two teams for a game of football. The world is that empty." It's not known for sure what caused the Gelding, as it came to be known - there were a variety of theories, but nothing certain was ever discovered. Griz has noticed that dogs also have been affected in some way - the vast majority of pups being born are male; a shortage of female pups will obviously lead to a dwindling population.
Griz lives on Mingulay, in the Outer Hebrides, with his parents and two siblings - Ferg and Bar. There had been another sister, Joy, who was a year older than Griz - she died when he was eight. (She fell from a cliff and her body was never found). Griz's mother has never been the same since that day, having suffered a head injury. The family believe she fell and cracked her head on a rock, presumably running to try and rescue Joy. "Her brain [was] too wounded or two scarred for her to get out of herself again."
Griz also has two dogs, Jip and Jess - Jess, being a female, is something of a rarity.
Trouble comes to the island on a boat with red sails. The sailor is a man called Brand, and he says he's come to to trade. Unfortunately, while Brand tells a good story, he's anything but honest. Amongst his gifts are a bottle of akvavit - Scandinavian whiskey - and a jar or marmalade. Brand's marmalade was drugged and - by the time the family come round - Brand has left. Griz is the first to recover and, realising Brand has taken both Jess and a large haul of fish, takes off after him - along, of course, with Jip. "And there may be no law," says Griz, "except what you make it, but if you steal my dog, you can at least expect me to come after you. If we're not loyal to the things we love, what's the point ?"
When I started this book, I had been expecting a kid's story. That was a mis-judgement. On the author's website, it's listed as one of his adult books though I would possibly have labelled it a young adult book. Nevertheless, if it's a young adult book, it's one that this old adult enjoyed. Griz's story is one that I could relate to, also being a dog owner. It was also interesting, seeing how the world looked after the population had collapsed with its deserted cities and overgrown roads. One that I would certainly recommend.

