Adrift
A Novel
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- $16.99
Publisher Description
Evergreen Award Winner
The Strand Critics Awards Best Debut Nominee
Crime Writers of Canada Best First Novel Award Finalist
"Crackles with urgency and humanity...a book made to meet the moment. A must read." —Katie Lattari, author of Dark Things I Adore
For fans of The Last Thing He Told Me comes a page-turning thriller about hidden identities and the terrifying realities of climate change.
The truth won't always set you free...
Ess wakes up alone on a sailboat in the remote Pacific Northwest with no memory of who she is or how she got there. She finds a note, but it’s more warning than comfort: Start over. Don’t make yourself known. Don’t look back.
Ess must have answers. She sails over a turbulent ocean to a town hundreds of miles away that, she hopes, might offer insight. The chilling clues she uncovers point to a desperate attempt at erasing her former life. But why? And someone is watching her…someone who knows she must never learn her truth.
In Ess’s world, the earth is precariously balanced at a climate tipping point, and she is perched at the edge of a choice: which life does she want? The one taken from her—and the dangerous secret that was buried—or the new one she can make for herself?
A galvanizing riddle that is just as unmooring as it seems, this sharp character-driven odyssey explores a future challenged by our quickly changing world and the choices we must make to save what matters most.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
At the start of Brideau's uneven debut, a woman wakes up on a sailboat moored in a remote archipelago off the British Columbian coast. It's 2038, and she has no memory of her past, though she finds envelopes filled with cash and a pair of notes on board, one stating her name is Sarah Jane Song, and another warning, "Start over.... Don't look back." She sets sail in search of her identity, dubs herself Ess, and discovers she is among the growing number of "amnesia refugees" escaping climate disaster in the U.S. Ess tries to keep her memory loss under wraps as governments worldwide round up refugees like her and place them in camps. After a strong start, the plot stalls and Brideau's thoughts on the effects of climate change take center stage ("All these people see the crumbling infrastructure around them and realize climate change is real despite all the effort to deny it, and they finally realize it's going to get extremely shitty," one character clumsily monologues). The author shows promise, but struggles to cross the finish line.