Literary fiction
Future Home of the Living God
by Louise Erdrich
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Quick Take
Rather than merely capturing the horror of such circumstances, Erdrich also offers her characters and readers the comfort of radical love.
Synopsis
Louise Erdrich, the author of bestselling novels including LaRose and The Round House, paints a startling portrait of a young woman fighting for her life and her unborn child against oppressive forces that manifest in the wake of a cataclysmic event.
The world as we know it is ending. Evolution has reversed itself, affecting every living creature on earth. Science cannot stop the world from running backwards, as woman after woman gives birth to infants that appear to be primitive species of humans. Thirty-two-year-old Cedar Hawk Songmaker, adopted daughter of a pair of big-hearted, open-minded Minneapolis liberals, is as disturbed and uncertain as the rest of America around her. But for Cedar, this change is profound and deeply personal. She is four months pregnant.
Though she wants to tell the adoptive parents who raised her from infancy, Cedar first feels compelled to find her birth mother, Mary Potts, an Ojibwe living on the reservation, to understand both her and her baby’s origins. As Cedar goes back to her own biological beginnings, society around her begins to disintegrate, fueled by a swelling panic about the end of humanity.
There are rumors of martial law, of Congress confining pregnant women. Of a registry, and rewards for those who turn these wanted women in. Flickering through the chaos are signs of increasing repression: A shaken Cedar witnesses a family wrenched apart when police violently drag a mother from her husband and child in a parking lot. The streets of her neighborhood have been renamed with Bible verses. A stranger answers the phone when she calls her adoptive parents, who have vanished without a trace. It will take all Cedar has to avoid the prying eyes of potential informants and keep her baby safe.
A chilling dystopian novel both provocative and prescient, Future Home of the Living God is a startlingly original work from one of our most acclaimed writers: A moving meditation on female agency, self-determination, biology, and natural rights that speaks to the troubling changes of our time.
Why I love it
Tavi Gevinson
Guest Judge
"The first thing that happens at the end of the world is that we don’t know what is happening." Like any good dystopian thriller, Future Home of the Living God externalizes present-day anxieties with such imagination that you both forget about your fears and imagine the worst possible manifestation of them. That rare effect begins with the voice of 26-year-old Cedar Songmaker, our warm, chatty narrator and hand-holder through the apocalypse. What starts as writing letters to her unborn child becomes a way for Cedar to think through the unthinkable. Louise Erdrich can see through Cedar's eyes so completely and clearly that even her white hot panic can be articulated. The circuit from Cedar’s heart to her brain to her sentences is as short as can be—immediate but thorough, startled but precise, and one of the last things she can call her own.
Rather than merely capturing the horror of such circumstances, Erdrich also offers her characters and readers the comfort of radical love. Makeshift families become the only way to cherish the last days of humanity. The characters surrounding Cedar become your loves, too. My favorite parts of the book were her biological mother’s husband’s daily treatises on why to not kill yourself (he, too, uses writing to feel his way along the darkened hallway of humanity’s future): "Who says any complexity is irreducible? IT IS BEING REDUCED ALL AROUND US RIGHT NOW." Just not in this beautiful book.