David27 wrote:I can definitely understand why it is so popular in Russia. Millions use the vast amazing (it truly is) Moscow metro daily, and the fact that this story is built around the metro with a lot of cultural references partially driving the adventure is compelling. I was in Moscow in 2011, and I had fun reminiscing, and would look up what stations look like to remind myself of the stations and lines myself (I forgot a lot! but it came back as I was reading so that was a lot of fun).
That's true
Also, like with all dystopian fiction (I guess), it can be very comforting to read about someone who definitely has it worse than you do. A boy for whom going to the next metro station is a huge adventure. And when actually using the metro, you feel so grateful just to be able to hop on a train so easily, to have working escalators with no missing steps, to have wifi on most trains
(there was no wifi there back when the book was written)
As someone who's never been to New York or London, if I were to read dystopian fiction where they're still recognizable, I'd be jealous of the main characters I guess
TBH this is my first dystopian book.
Also, as the author pointed out (in a very political interview - please discuss only the book here!):"I believe Western European post-apocalypse stories mean zombie stories or just virus stories or whatever," Glukhovsky explains. "They have this cheerful tonality because they free Western society of the laws and obligations and turn the very known urban environment to no man’s land, where everything is possible and where you can dehumanise human beings and murder them. Wherever zombies are popular, they are popular because people are tired of rules. Zombies give you a fairy tale that allows you to legally smash the head of your neighbour because they’ve been dehumanised. ... The popularity of the zombie tales and the Western style post-apocalypse is the consequence of this."
Zombies allow Americans to dream of the past, to transport back to romanticised days of the Wild West. On the other side of the Bering Strait, the population doesn’t pine for a time when humans were wild – it dreams, wistfully, of another relic of the past: order.
"This incredibly nostalgic, bleak, regretful tonality of the Russian post-apocalypse stems from the fact that we had this feeling – just like people in the Dark Age and medieval times – that the Golden Age of civilisation was long gone and you were looking into the past with a great nostalgia thinking that the higher the paramount of culture and science and civilisation was already gone. You fear the future because you know for sure that every tomorrow is going to be worse than every today. You look back with awe and admiration and nostalgia and you miss all these days. You understand they are gone forever and you have no hope or future."
And this explains perfectly why I never cared for books with zombies. Oh and the interview mentioned
S.t.a.l.k.e.r. computer games.
There's more but the link is so political that I won't share it here (there are also minor spoilers). PM me if you can't find it via google. I'll be happy to discuss the interview outside this forum.
For female characters, I don't necessarily need a gun-slinging female character that shatters gender roles for me to enjoy a novel, but I was more bothered by the fact that women seem almost non-existent! They should make up half the population, but I can't think of a single female character's name, which just makes it feel like an older military novel, or (literal) man against nature novel, but it's supposed to show a whole society in the metro so I don't understand what all the women are doing! lol.
Oh I agree, but the presence of a female fighter is very telling with regards to what the author thinks about women. So far all references to women involve motherhood and having babies
Artem's friend has a little sister and they are harsh towards her.
(but for me the worst part are expressions like "sit like a woman and do nothing", "old women's tales", "blush like a girl"... sigh, and I'm not even done with the third chapter yet)