A long time ago, I asked a very well established author what her publishers were doing to publicise her new book. ‘Oh,’ she said with some amusement, ‘I think they might mention it in casual conversation.’
It was a simpler age.
Anyway, as it is so
difficult to have a casual conversation these days I thought I’d mention it in
casual bloggage – ‘Oh, did you know N M Browne has a new book out?’
Bad Water is an optimistic novel written by someone
pessimistic about the future. Yes, it is unfashionably post-apocalyptic: but in
a good way.
I grew up under the
threat of nuclear war, and spent my childhood reading dystopian SF and my adult life reading about over population,
global warming and mass extinction. As I live within half a mile of the Thames, it is very
obvious that a one metre rise in sea levels would wipe out much of the city. So
that is the premise of Bad Water: climate change floods cities, brings
disease, instability and the unnamed horrors of ‘the Chaos.’ My book is about
what happens next.
Ollu lives on a
custom built barge, ‘The Ark,’ trading recycled material, fixing things,
growing herbs and keeping livestock on their trail barges. She is fearful of
plague and water-borne diseases, scornful of the idiocy of preekers ( the pre
chaos people ie us), and avoids the toxic
aftermath of flooding, dreck rivers where the remains of tall buildings still
stand as hazards in the waterscape of her life. These forbidden places
constitute Bad Water.
Obviously, when her mother gets sick, Ollu has
to journey into Bad Water to find teck weapons to trade for her mother’s life.
It’s not an easy
task. Ollu frees slaves captured by her own brother and fights them for control
of the Ark. She breaks rules and travels to the heart of forbidden territory. My
rotting, drowned London is a lively place, festooned with plant covered walk-ways
strung between high buildings, buried
under the greenery of vertical farms. I imagined goats and chickens, nets of
water rats, fishing boats and floating dope farms: a hard place to live where a
lot of living still goes on. Ollu has to befriend people who should have been
enemies and by the end of the journey she has changed her mind on almost
everything she thought she knew.
I wrote the first
draft of Bad Water way back – so
long ago that I can’t even find the email trail. I was writing historical fantasy and this post-apocalyptic
adventure did not fit my brand. Years later, I saw that a small publisher, Kristell
Ink, was looking for novels and sent them the draft. It wasn’t immediately
accepted, but I reworked it and it finally sees the light of day on Monday. It
is a better book for the delay.
And maybe now is the right time for a book
that makes the case for trade over conflict, the hope of globalism over narrow
tribalism. Ollu believes in civilisation and does the right thing even when it
threatens to cost her everything.
In the year that
Glasgow host the COP 26 summit and climate change is again on the agenda, maybe
this book’s time has come?
I’m an optimistic
pessimist: it’s not going to storm the best seller lists, but I hope that those
who read it will like it. I’ll take that.
And here's a trailer!
3 comments:
That's a terrific trailer! Did you make it yourself? I've been toying with the idea of making one for an upcoming book but not quite sure where to start.
(And on a side note, finding the trailer on YouTube led me to your comments about writing for children. Couldn't agree more.)
Hi yes I did do it myself. You can do more Hollywood type block buster ones too. I used imovie and used garageband for the sound. It is a bit fiddly but fun.
Thanks for the names. I'll be sure to take a look at them.
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