The New Wilderness
The New Wilderness book cover

The New Wilderness

Hardcover – August 11, 2020

Price
$10.03
Format
Hardcover
Pages
416
Publisher
Harper
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0062333131
Dimensions
6 x 1.29 x 9 inches
Weight
1.25 pounds

Description

“Could this be the great climate change novel of our time? Buzz is building fast for the epic debut novel of Diane Cook.” — Entertainment Weekly “The emotional core of the story is the relationship between Bea and Agnes, whose perspectives drive the narrative. It’s a damning piece of horror cli-fi, but it’s also a gripping and profound examination of love and sacrifice.” — Buzzfeed “Cook writes about desperate people in a world of ever shrinking livable space and increasingly questionable resources like air and water but also about the resilience of children who adapt, even enjoying circumstances that overwhelm the adults around them. Cook also raises uncomfortable questions: How far will a person go to survive, and what sacrifices will she or won’t she make for those she loves? This ecological horror story (particularly horrifying now) explores painful regions of the human heart.” — Kirkus Reviews ( Starred Review) “A wry, speculative debut novel. . .Cook’s unsettling, darkly humorous tale explores maternal love and man’s disdain for nature with impressive results.” — Publishers Weekly ( Starred Review) “Violence, death, tribalism, lust, love, betrayals, wonder, genius, and courage—all are enacted in this stunningly incisive and complexly suspenseful tale akin to dystopian novels by Margaret Atwood and Claire Vaye Watkins. When Cook finally widens the lens on her characters' increasingly desperate predicament, the exposure of malignant greed, deceit, and injustice resonates with devastating impact.” — Donna Seaman, Booklist ( Starred Review) “More than timely, the novel feels timeless, solid, like a forgotten classic recently resurfaced—a brutal, beguiling fairy tale about humanity. But at its core, The New Wilderness is really about motherhood, and about the world we make (or unmake) for our children.” — Washington Post "A dazzling debut...Cook takes command of a fast-paced, thrilling story to ask stomach-turning questions in a moment when it would benefit every soul to have their stomach turned by the prospect of the future she envisions. I, for one, was grateful for the journey." — Téa Obreht, The Guardian “Humanity returns to nature in Diane Cook’s timely ecological tale. . . . A gripping adventure that denies its readers easy answers, The New Wilderness is an important debut, and an illuminating read in these times, when the stakes of humans’ relationship with nature have never felt higher.” — USA Weekend "5 of 5 stars. Gripping, fierce, terrifying examination of what people are capable of when they want to survive in both the best and worst ways. Loved this." — Roxane Gay via Twitter " The New Wilderness is a virtuosic debut, brutal and beautiful in equal measure." — Emily St. John Mandel, New York Times bestselling author of STATION ELEVENxa0and THE GLASS HOTEL “Cook's writing is both a melodic ode to nature and a devastating eulogy to what has been lost…This is a gorgeous tale of motherhood and the will to live…Diane Cook builds a place so rich it feels like home, even as it frightens in its ferocity.”xa0 xa0 xa0 xa0 xa0 xa0 xa0 xa0 xa0 — Shelf Awareness “The novel tackles the deepest of human emotions—as well as big ideas about the planet—in satisfying ways. Also, it’s a page-turner!” — LitHub “A wonderfully imagined … tense future-shock novel.” — 2020 Booker Prize Judges "An imaginative, dystopian look at what our world could become…I was gripped by how vivid the story was, how expertly Diane Cook got into the dynamics of a group of strangers surviving in the wild, and their relationship with those in power.” — Hey Alma—Favorite Books for Summer “THE NEW WILDERNESS left me as stunned as a deer in headlights. Gut-wrenching and heart-wrecking, this is a book that demands to be read, and urgently. With beauty and compassion, Diane Cook writes about the precariousness of life on this planet, about the things that make us human — foremost the love between mothers and daughters, at once complex and elemental. Cook observes humanity as a zoologist might — seeing us exactly as the strange animals we really are.” — Rachel Khong, author of GOODBYE, VITAMIN “Diane Cook upends old tropes of autonomy, survival, and civilization to reveal startling new life teeming beneath, giving a glimpse into the ways the world we think we know could come unstuck and come to life in the care of the women and girls of the future. This is not just a thrilling, curious, vibrant book--but an essential one, a compass to guide us into the future.” — Alexandra Kleeman, author of YOU TOO CAN HAVE A BODY LIKE MINE " The New Wilderness strips us of our veneer of civilisation and exposes us for what we are: driven to survive, capable of shocking cruelty and profound, fierce love. This story of what a mother does to save her daughter is unflinching, horrifying, forgiving, deeply moving, and filled with truth that stayed with this mother long after the final page." — Helen Sedgwick, author of The Comet Seekers and When the Dead Come Calling "An absolutely riveting and propulsive novel. Terrifying, and as real as can be. Epic in scale and story; granular and recognisable in people and place. The New Wilderness is surely an instant classic in our stories of survival, sovereignty and adaptation. Cook's writing is so sure-footed, prescient and trustworthy, it's all the reader can do to follow her. For fans of Ling Ma's Severance and Hernan Diaz's In the Distance, and many, many readers in between ." — Caoilinn Hughes (Orchid & the Wasp/The Wild Laughter) “As her characters navigate axa0changing terrain and their own emotional landscapes, Cook incorporates the whole of human experience. The New Wilderness examines our relationships to place and to others as the Community considers its right to be on the landxa0and whether others have any business sharing the space.” --BookPage — BookPage USA Today—5 Books Not to Miss: “ The buzz: “A gripping adventure that denies its readers easy answers, ‘The New Wilderness’ is an important debut,” says a ???? (out of four) review for USA TODAY." — USA Today (four stars) “The book manages to have a driving plot at the same time that it supports big themes, like the best speculative fiction can do. And now it's on the longlist for the Booker Prize. The New Wilderness deserves its place there.” — Amazon.com “A soulful, urgent debut…The push-pull ambivalence of Bea and Agnes’s bond forms its beating heart…What lingers, beyond the awesome power of Bea and Agnes as heroines, is pure wonderment at all in this world of ours that is not human.”xa0 xa0 — The Guardian “Cook captures not only the push-pull intimacy particular to a mother and child, but the way all relationships come with conflict and contradictions. Whatever the future holds, may Cook write some more books in it.” — San Francisco Chronicle “Her writing is deceptively simple, beautifully corporeal . . . "xa0 — San Francisco Chronicle "Expertly plotted . . . highly seductive writing . . . It is the anthropological acuity in Cook's writing that makes it so persuasive. She explores how our nature is informed by the land we inhabit, how our conception of civility is relative to the circumstances in which we find ourselves."xa0xa0 — Times Literary Supplement (London) “The emotional core of the novel—and its true source of brilliance—lies in the relationship between Bea and Agnes, the most intricate and morally arresting relationship Cook has conjured to date.”xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0 xa0 — Nation “An absolutely breathtaking novel…captivating and engaging in the struggle for survival but also in the loss of one’s humanity in the fight for survival and what we try to hold onto when the world has changed forever…A poignant perspective on human survival when the world has made survival much harder.” xa0 xa0 xa0 xa0 xa0 xa0 xa0 xa0 xa0 xa0 xa0 xa0 xa0 xa0 xa0 xa0 xa0 — Girly Book Club Diane Cook is the author of the novel, THENEW WILDERNESS, and the story collection, MAN V. NATURE, which was afinalist for the Guardian First Book Award, the Believer Book Award, and the Los Angeles Times Art Seidenbaum Award for First Fiction. Herwriting has appeared in Harper's , Tin House , Granta , and otherpublications, and her stories have been included in the anthologies Best American ShortStories and The O. Henry Prize Stories . She is a former producer for the radio program This American Life , and was the recipient of a 2016fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts. She lives inBrooklyn, New York.

Features & Highlights

  • A
  • Washington Post
  • , NPR, and
  • Buzzfeed
  • Best Book of the Year • Shortlisted for the Booker Prize
  • “More than timely, the novel feels timeless, solid, like a forgotten classic recently resurfaced — a brutal, beguiling fairy tale about humanity. But at its core,
  • The New Wilderness
  • is really about motherhood, and about the world we make (or unmake) for our children.” —
  • Washington Post
  • "5 of 5 stars. Gripping, fierce, terrifying examination of what people are capable of when they want to survive in both the best and worst ways. Loved this."
  • Roxane Gay via Twitter
  • Margaret Atwood meets Miranda July in this wildly imaginative debut novel of a mother's battle to save her daughter in a world ravaged by climate change; A prescient and suspenseful book from the author of the acclaimed story collection,
  • Man V. Nature
  • .
  • Bea’s five-year-old daughter, Agnes, is slowly wasting away, consumed by the smog and pollution of the overdeveloped metropolis that most of the population now calls home. If they stay in the city, Agnes will die. There is only one alternative: the Wilderness State, the last swath of untouched, protected land, where people have always been forbidden. Until now.
  • Bea, Agnes, and eighteen others volunteer to live in the Wilderness State, guinea pigs in an experiment to see if humans can exist in nature without destroying it. Living as nomadic hunter-gatherers, they slowly and painfully learn to survive in an unpredictable, dangerous land, bickering and battling for power and control as they betray and save one another. But as Agnes embraces the wild freedom of this new existence, Bea realizes that saving her daughter’s life means losing her in a different way. The farther they get from civilization, the more their bond is tested in astonishing and heartbreaking ways.
  • At once a blazing lament of our contempt for nature and a deeply humane portrayal of motherhood and what it means to be human,
  • The New Wilderness
  • is an extraordinary novel from a one-of-a-kind literary force.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(694)
★★★★
25%
(578)
★★★
15%
(347)
★★
7%
(162)
23%
(531)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Like a first draft written by a bored child

What were the Booker folks thinking?! Goodness gracious, this is some of the laziest writing I've ever encountered. It's follows a Community of 20 random (!!) people selected to -- and I must stress this is a quote from the book -- "see how people interacted with nature." You know, because no one's ever done that before. I get the strong sense the author has never been camping and just started writing about what she was pretty sure goes on out there. Maybe she doesn't have internet service where she lives. Who knows. She says right off the bat in the book that they don't keep track of days, which makes sense only when you realize that it gets her off the hook for HER keeping track of time or distance. Descriptions of landscape, flora and fauna are vague, and the only plant she seems to know by name is sage. The landscapes are jumbled, creating a sense that lakes, mountains, deserts and forests are just piled one on top of the other. She has no grasp of how big these places are, or how they're connected. Then there's the place names. City. Private Lands. Mines. Wilderness State (not an actual state, mind you.). Valley. Post. At first I thought she was going to present these as archetypal places beyond time and place, but no. The Valley is called Valley, as if there's ONE valley in a vast wilderness. Similarly, the things they carry with them in the wilderness are also common items elevated to proper noun status. Book Bag. Manual. Cast Iron. (One of the things they carry with them as they hike around the wilderness is a 40-pound cast iron pot!) The writing is so bad I found myself bookmarking every page. Witness hackneyed monstrosities like this: "Bugling elk crowded valleys with sounds of a lost world. The animal equivalent of a haunting, lonesome whistle from the Refineries outside the City." The bugle of a male elk in rut does not sound like that. It's called bugling for a reason. You can go on YouTube to hear what it sounds like, you know. Look at this failed attempt at profundity: "Of course, they could always outwit the animals. Well, almost always. The drive for survival is strong. Even the most brute creature can be clever if it means another morning.... " Not only does the author betray a near total lack of knowledge about the wild lands, it doesn't appear she knows any actual people. Even given the small cast of characters, none of them come across as people. The dialog is clunky and, the people act like spoiled children. When the Community sees a fawn left to die by the herd, they "were enraged and sickened. They threw stones at the deer 'Why didn't you take care of this one?' some yelled. 'It was a deer too.'" Supposedly this is a dystopia, but they have to stop for their post at the, um, Post, and they are media celebrities back in the city. People send them cookies! The government gave them a manual to followed called, um, Manual, and they have to check in at ranger stations. When describing maps she repeatedly uses the term "upside-down W's". An upside-down W is an M, of course. I could go on. Eventually I gave up. It used to be I would finish any book I started out of some odd principle even I can't explain, but I'm getting older and there are too many good books out there to force myself to slash through this amateurish nonsense.
14 people found this helpful
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Must read

One of the best Booker list novels I have read in years. A meditation on mother’s and daughters and humanity.
5 people found this helpful
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Wandered in the Wilderness for Too Long

Started and ended fairly strong. Felt like I wandered around in the wilderness about 200 pages longer than I should have. The whole time I thought she was writing with the goal of selling as a blah Netflix or Amazon mini-series.
4 people found this helpful
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At Every Turn It Refuses to Be What You Expect

The New Wilderness is masterfully constructed and well-written. It's unsettling and secretly funny in the same wonderful way that Diane Cook's short story collection, Man V. Nature, was. Even more so because we get to spend more time with the characters and see how they grow and change over the years.

We start with Bea, a woman who's gone to live in a small, experimental group (the Community) as a hunter-gatherer in the Wilderness State. She's done so because her little daughter, Agnes, is deathly ill from breathing the polluted urban air of where they'd been living before, in what is simply referred to as The City.

The novel is full of such generic nouns ominously capitalized, which gives it something of the dreamlike quality of an allegory, but it's also very specific in certain ways: how the land looks and smells and sounds, how the people of the Community hunt, gather and preserve food, how they live and how they die, which aspects of civilization they hang onto the longest, the group dynamics of their little band. Later, the perspective switches to Agnes, and we get a completely different view of things. Bea is proficient as a survivalist, but Agnes arrived in the Wilderness State so young that she is essentially a native, and in that way is very different from her mother.

Certain aspects of Bea's back story emerge, but other aspects remain mysterious. On one level it's a story of the intense, turbulent relationship between mother and daughter. It's also a story about the struggle to survive as a hunter-gatherer, which is both exhausting and tedious. The disagreements and power struggles that arise within the group and how they get resolved. But the backdrop to all this is the wider mystery of exactly why they are there, and what the deal is with the Rangers, whom they are supposed to check in with from time to time.

There seems to be a study -- but why? What are they supposed to be studying? The Rangers at first seem faintly comic, bureaucratic representatives of the civilized life that the hunter-gatherers have left behind, but each encounter with them grows more sinister and more mysterious. Why do their uniforms keep changing? What's the secrecy surrounding the dead hiker they found, in this area where unauthorized access is forbidden?

Even though New Wilderness has already gotten lots of prepublication acclaim -- many starred reviews, long-listed for the Booker Prize -- I felt as I was reading it like I was in on a secret, that this was a book not everyone is going to appreciate, only people with a taste for the subtle. At every turn it refuses to be what you expect, and resists the temptation to be obvious. I found myself thinking of Station Eleven and how *cozy* a dystopia, in comparison, was created there. Station Eleven seems to me the sort of book that becomes popular because it reads well and feels profound, but at the same time doesn't actually challenge conventional wisdom in any way that matters. While The New Wilderness does. But I hope I am wrong about this, and that everyone will love it as much as I did.
4 people found this helpful
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Storytelling

The New Wilderness reads like a long, dragged out movie with poor actors. Okay if you need a book to help you fall asleep at 3 a.m. Immature writing that rolls along with a sprinkle of wisdom here and there. I believe young readers will enjoy and relate to this novel. Awards? Why?
2 people found this helpful
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Not a good read at all. NOT.

The story (somewhat of a 'story') was difficult to grasp. Most of the narrative was griping about how the guys were in control and not doing a very good job of it. I never did get a grasp of what was happening from the very beginning. Just a difficult book to get interested in. The focus seemed to be complaining about other people in a group of 20 people who volunteered to live in the "Wilderness" which was controlled by "Rangers". Do what? No realistic narrative at all. I read a lot of books and this one is going back to Amazon. I normally give my new books that I read to my local library, but not this one...
1 people found this helpful
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Slowwwwwww

Absolutely nothing happens in this book. So slow. I was so disappointed.
1 people found this helpful
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Why all the buzz?

I'm perplexed by how much positive press The New Wilderness received. I struggled to get through this book--put it down and grudgingly picked it up numerous times in the two months it took me to slog through. Each time I hoped for a turn, a fleshing out of characters that would make them seem real, a plot that held believable tension, writing that didn't feel cliche ridden. In short, I didn't care for any of it and wouldn't recommend it to anyone. I was remarkably unmoved by the entire visit to Diane Cook's world.
1 people found this helpful
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too grim

Zero insight
1 people found this helpful
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A Great Story, A New Classic

Above all else, this is just a great story - I had a hard time putting it down. It’s also flawlessly written and feels like a new classic. Many reviews here describe this story as dystopian, which is fair, but in my opinion, the focus of this story is human relationships, mother-daughter relationships in particular. This is not a book I would normally pick up, but I’m so glad I did. Best thing I’ve read all year.

PS - the reddish-hot-pink used on the jacket’s back should only be used with a pair of 3D glasses. Who can read that?
1 people found this helpful