Station Eleven Book Review

I have been challenging myself this year to read a book a week. Since beginning this challenge, and exposing myself to many genres or literary novels. I have found some real gems that I would like to share what we can learn from their genius works. The first one I would like to discuss is Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel. Without further ado, here is my Station Eleven book review.

This book falls into the dystopian genre, if you wanted to put it in a genre. However, it is more literary in the way that it was written. It begins with the end, if you will. The way that it is written, is what I would call non-linear. It is something that would take most readers by surprise. I think that most people have an expectation of a linear storyline, they want A, B, and C to happen in order, and then X, Y and Z wrap the story up at the end. That is how a normal story will advance, and what a reader expects. This story doesn’t work that way, but it does work.

Station Eleven Book Review

Categories

The story doesn’t choose to focus on a single character. It works by running through several categories. Each category starts off a section. The section will have characters, these characters may or may not know each other. They may or may not have been introduced in other sections. Each category brings up some important part of the world that we are learning about. We learn important tidbits quickly, like how the gasoline went bad. How people have to travel by foot.

Other categories take us back in time, tell us how the world ended. Some of them talk about before the end.

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Character Development

All the important characters, have lives that weave in and out of each others. The beginning of the book starts with a death, it’s this person’s death that is the glue that all the rest of the character’s lives spin off of. This is a moment that affects not only the world of the novel, but all the character’s lives.

Writer’s takeaways

The way that this book is written is very unconventional. As I said earlier, it’s not linear, it’s in categories. Each category is important to the world of the book. In addition to the categories, the book centers around characters that have rich backstories that the book discusses in detail. The book is interested in the ways in which each character handled the end of things, which varied, depending on the age of the character. The book also uses the end of the world to study the ways in which people will continue to gather, the ways in which smaller societies will develop as larger infrastructure crumble.

I think it is worth studying this type of work, looking at non-linear storytelling and how well it can work when it’s done right. And then looking at how important it is to care about the characters, even in a story with high stakes. A person’s life may be on the line, but, you need to care about them in order for it to matter.

Thank you for reading my book review of Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel. Please let me know what you thought of the book, and if you think it was amazing as I did, Thanks!