Not far in the future, Francesca is an apprentice
in the idyllic, agrarian community of Heron Fleet. She
loves her impetuous partner Anya and the community acts
as mother and father to her, as its founders intended.
But outside Heron Fleet, the world is violent. Only a
remnant of city populations, organised into violent
despotic scavenger gangs, cling on by combing through
rubble in search of food. They are the survivors of an
ecological disaster. The causes have been forgotten, but
the climate suffers with harsh, cold winters and short,
hot summers. Between these two worlds, Tobias trades
food gathered from agrarian communities for raw
materials from the cities. But most of all he seeks
books that might help him understand what happened to
the climate; he believes that if humans are to have a
long-term future, the agrarian communities must expand.
Francesca rescues Tobias when his boat is wrecked by a
storm and his arrival coincides with a crisis in
Francesca and Anya's relationship. This pushes Heron
Fleet into a turmoil, which threatens the community's
cohesion and brings the ethical basis on which the
community was originally formed into doubt. Heron Fleet
asks many questions. To what extent is necessity an
excuse for the suppression of basic human rights? How
easy would it be for our comfortable society to become
poor, nasty and brutish? Is there a natural urge to be
literate? What is the proper duty of the individual to
the community? The book, which has been inspired by a
number of authors, including Margaret Atwood, John
Christopher and Russell Hoban, will appeal to fans of
speculative literature. Author Paul weaves gripping
dystopian fiction with an underlying theme of global
warming, posing questions about human nature and needs -
both for today's society and for the future.
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