A boy comes to take Nell away, but she cannot leave Eva though sisters by birth, Hegland turns the girls into lovers-and ideologically pure lovers, at that. Slowly, because the alternative is starvation, Nell learns the wisdom of the forest: killing a wild sow with a rifle she barely knows how to fire, using herbs for medicines and tea, gathering acorns to pound into flour. In the best scene, the father's chain saw kicks back and cuts him, and his daughters are helpless, unable to do more than watch as he bleeds to death. The mother dies the father pushes his dreamy daughters to learn such humble skills as gardening and canning. There's a war somewhere, and ever more virulent strains of viruses rage through the population then, suddenly, there's no more food available in stores, no more gasoline, no more television. She places a wife, a husband, and their two daughters, Eva and Nell, on 50 acres of second-growth redwood forest in northern California-the idea seeming to be that since the location is remote to begin with, news of the outside world would filter in slowly. Hegland is vague about civilization's downfall. Brisk, feminist, contemplative first novel about the end of contemporary civilization and the survival of two sisters.
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