Gibbon's Decline and Fall
-
- €3.99
-
- €3.99
Publisher Description
"Decline and Fall is a work of considerable passion and substance" - Locus
"I'm going to count this novel as one of my absolute favourites of all time!" - Goodreads Reviewer, 5 stars
"I was so engrossed that I sat up reading until my eyes couldn't take any more" - Amazon Reviewer, 5 stars
A group of women race to avert apocalypse at the turn of the millennium.
In the year 2000 a ruthless politician is amassing a terrifying, fanatical power base. Suicide cults and paranoid militias are on the rise. Mobs of hooded men drive women from the streets. Something evil is threatening the world.
Of the six founder members of the Decline and Fall Club, five remain. The sixth, Sophy, disappeared three years before, her dazzling beauty undiminished - and her early life still as mysterious as her apparent end. Her friends come to see that unlocking the secret to Sophy's disappearance will be the key to the survival of humanity.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Tepper (Shadow's End) ) can be characterized as a quirkily feminist writer whose novels often question whether humanity might be better off with a smaller, more docile male population. This theme, combined with the author's ambivalence about Catholicism, informs this fable of ethics, feminism and transcendence, which employs an intriguing concept involving an alternate branching of the evolutionary tree. Carolyn Crespin comes from a stultifying family that believes women should be seen and not heard. When she escapes to college in the early 1960s, she helps form the Decline and Fall Club, comprised of herself and six other women (including a devout nun, a radical lesbian artist and a brilliant scientist). They band together to protect one of their members, an exotic beauty named Sova, from unwanted male attention. During a 40-year gap in the narrative, conservatism and misogyny increase, a focused evil grows and Sova mysteriously disappears. The tale resumes at the dawning of the Millennium, when terrorist bag ladies are on the rise and sexual desire is on the wane. Now, Carolyn and her friends must defeat an embodiment of violence and ultra-patriarchal masculinity or see women reduced to the level of walking wombs. As always, Tepper creates excellent female characters transported by a swiftly flowing plot. Her proposed solutions for the world's problems, however, may leave male readers wondering why they should settle for being little more than ambulatory sperm banks.