The Emergency
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5.0 • 1 Rating
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- $16.99
Publisher Description
A gripping fable of imperial collapse that illuminates the crises of our times.
An empire has collapsed from boredom and loss of faith in itself. In the Emergency that follows, youth rebellions of urban Burghers and rural Yeomen embrace radical new ideas of humanity.
Doctor Hugo Rustin, chief surgeon at the Imperial College Hospital, is increasingly estranged from his city and his family - from his wife, Annabelle, who finds fulfillment in their changed community; and especially from his teenage daughter, Selva, who has turned against her father's values. When an incident at the hospital leads to Rustin's disgrace, he seeks redemption in a quixotic and dangerous journey into the countryside, with Selva as his companion, just as the conflict between Burghers and Yeomen is reaching a crisis.
The Emergency is a visionary novel of ideas and a taut page-turner that goes to the nerve center of what it mean to live in a time of fracture and upheaval. It asks what we owe one another across divided generations and classes, what common human bonds remain when a society falls apart. In creating a vividly imagined world, Packer takes us deep into the heart of our troubled moment.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Packer, a journalist and winner of the National Book Award for The Unwinding, delivers a propulsive Orwellian novel set in a strange future world known as "the empire." The story's beleaguered hero, Dr. Hugo Rustin, chief surgeon at a hospital in the empire's unnamed capital city, initially brushes off the Emergency, which begins when the city's ruling elite flees and teenage looters take to the streets. "These things never last," Hugo reassures his wife and their two children. "We'll go about our normal lives." But the empire collapses and after Rustin's misstep during a surgery leads to his suspension from the hospital, he's forced to confront the new order taking shape. In the vacuum left by the empire rises an egalitarian youth movement called Together, which elevates the formerly disenfranchised Excess Burghers, who scored too poorly on their exams to join a guild, and romanticizes a nomadic minority group called the Strangers. Tensions escalate between the Burghers, the urban middle class the Rustins belong to, and the less educated rural Yeomen who farm outside the city walls. Rustin, feeling adrift in a world that no longer values experience, embarks on a "humanitarian mission" to treat an ailing Stranger boy. At the last minute, his 14-year-old daughter insists on joining him, triggering a chain of events that will leave irreparable damage. Packer writes with spare elegance and mounting urgency, and while the depictions of rising class and intergenerational conflicts have clear parallels to real-world matters, the novel never loses its taut dramatic edge. It's a knockout.
Customer Reviews
Collapsed empire and value confronting battles
When the young believe they know better than their wise elders what results finds generations and values battling it out.