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Daughters of the North

A Novel

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

From Booker and Orange Prize-nominated author Sarah Hall comes the tale of an imaginary England, a future dystopian society where the right to bear a child is determined by a state lottery system.

In this stunning novel Sarah Hall draws on the work of Margaret Atwood and George Orwell to imagine a dystopic England where terrifying new systems of control are in place and reproduction has become a lottery. When a girl known only as “Sister” escapes the confines of her increasingly repressive marriage to find an isolated group of women living on a remote northern farm, she must find out whether she has it in herself to become an active insurgent.

This fascinating novel considers what lengths women will go to in a brutalized world in order to resist their oppressors, what tactics they must employ to survive and remain free. But the story asks a wider and more difficult question: under what circumstances might an ordinary person become a terrorist?

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 7, 2008
      Chronicling a journey of violence, oppression and fleeting liberation, this brutal third novel from the author of The Electric Michelangelo
      is a timely feminist commentary on war, gender, politics and identity. Set in a dystopian near-future northern U.K. where global warming, a fuel crisis, drug epidemics and a cruel totalitarian regime known as the Authority have savaged the land and people, the story is told by Sister, a young woman living in cramped terrace quarters. Sterilized against her will (the result of the Authority’s female sterilization policy) and forced to work in a “New Fuel” factory, Sister escapes to seek out Carhullan, a shadowy all-female commune run by the enigmatic Jackie Nixon. Carhullan is a hard-knocks utopia, in which women’s strengths and passions grow from manual labor, paramilitary training and intense, sometimes sexual, friendships. As the threat of the Authority grows, Sister rises in the ranks of the Carhullan resistance force, oblivious to the increasing similarities between the Authority and Jackie’s seductive, psychological control. Though the climax and denouement are sloppily handled, the overall effect is haunting, timely and well wrought.

    • Library Journal

      February 1, 2008
      In a flooded, postapocalyptic Britain, most of the country is wet and uninhabitable; what remains above ground is in the tight control of a repressive, misogynist regime called "The Authority." Citizens are assigned work in newly essential industries and are provided with tightly shared living quarters; women are force-fitted with contraceptive devices except for the fortunate few who win the breeding lottery. From these hellish conditions, a young woman leaves behind her husband and home to seek out a fabled, utopian community of women in the north. The brutal reception she receives upon her arrival there is offset by the warm communality that follows her acceptance into the group. However, all is not well, as the women must face predatory outside forces, and the novel races toward a riveting conclusion. After Hurricane Katrina and the Indian Ocean tsunami, this foreboding tale by Hall ("The Electric Michelangelo") seems eerily imaginable. Sure to be of interest to readers of Cormac McCarthy's "The Road" and others who like their apocalyptic fiction raw.Barbara Love, Kingston Frontenac P.L., Ont.

      Copyright 2008 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      March 1, 2008
      From prison, a woman tells us she has been Sister for the last three years; her former name is simply gone. So is the Britain we might have recognized in this futuristic tale set in the semitropical Britain of the authority, where seasons blur and people mourn the loss of March hail and even January cold. Flooded ports and lowlands, residents crammed together, Baghdad-style power outages, Soviet-style deprivation, civilian travel banned and cars, without fuel, long abandoned, nationalized resources, weapons in the hands of a dictatorial government that mandates contraceptionall parts of a 10-year official recovery that compels the narrator, after practicing for a month, to slip away with the rucksack she has hidden in an alleyway alcove. With food, water, clothes, and a World War II rifle, she seeks Carhullan, a womens commune of presumed terrorists and Furies, on a dangerous journey into the distant mountains. Halls compelling writing recalls Atwood and Lessing, resonating beyond obvious current parallels and never softening her vision of a dismal, hellish future and exalted, albeit transient, rebellion.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2008, American Library Association.)

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