Almost four years ago now, I moved from Michigan to Nevada. In Michigan, I lived right on the water, on an inland lake. Like, open the door and the water was no more than a stone’s throw away. I’ve been swimming in the summer and on ice skates in the winter for as long as I can remember. Moving to Nevada was a very real change from that. Nevada is the driest state in the country in a good year, and we haven’t been having good years lately. We’re in the middle of a serious drought, and it’s not hard to imagine a future in which there could be significant water restrictions.
But the action in Thirst is kicked off by something not so prosaic as a drought. Rather, the fresh water simply vanishes. The grid goes down, as does the network, and emergency services are so overwhelmed that they can’t respond to the crash causing the enormous traffic snarl Eddie Chapman finds himself in. He doesn’t know about the water yet. Frustrated at the delay, close to home, and wanting to avoid worrying his anxious wife, Laura, he leaves his car behind and jogs back to his house. On the way there, he notices that the stream he crosses is dry, the trees around it singed and ashy. And thus Eddie, Laura, and their suburban neighbors find themselves in an awful bind: unable to communicate with anyone besides the people they’re in physical proximity to, no access to news or information, and no water during the steamy summer weather…
For full review, please visit: http://www.500booksblog.com/2016/03/book-14-thirst.html