Author:Scott Reintgen
For all fans of The 100, the final instalment in a thrilling dystopian trilogy in which ten recruits must battle one another to survive . . . in space
In this electrifying conclusion, the Genesis team face a final, desperate battle to ensure their very survival and secure their way home.
The Genesis team finds their escape from the planet cut off after their launch station is destroyed. The countdown is on as the collision of the two moons closes in and the remaining group of Genesis and Adamite survivors attempt to cross battle-strewn continents in an effort to escape Eden in time.
The battle will eventually take them to space, where they will wrestle with Babel for control of the only ships that can get them home.
Brilliantconcept meets stellar execution in this fast-paced deep space adventure. I was hooked from page one - V.E. Schwab, #1 New York Times Bestselling Author
An ingenious choose-your-own-adventure challenge... Questions such as: “Where am I going?”... “Which choice will make my life worthwhile?” feel existential and urgent... Who can travel, and on what conditions, is one of the primary human rights questions of our era, and The Wandering skilfully takes it on.
—— Lauren Elkin , GuardianWith its choose-your-own adventure structure, The Wandering is fiction at its most lifelike, presenting the reader with choices and inevitable misgivings... It is also fiction at its most untethered, where readers can hurl themselves across time zones, selves and situations, free of risk, danger or discrimination.
—— Matthew Janney , GuardianAn ingeniously crafted debut which lets you make your own choices about where you want the story to go. This is an electrifying novel about cosmopolitanism and global nomadism that keeps readers on their toes.
—— Rabeea Saleem , Book RiotSets you free to roam the Earth... an incisive commentary on the cosmopolitan condition.
—— Tiffany TsaoThe perfect match of theme and genre...impeccably executed... This book is escapism taken to the next level, while still making serious and significant comments about modern societies... Paramaditha excels at mordant observations about migration, the brutality of Trump’s America, the falsehood of the American dream, and the personal dimension of the 'refugee crisis'... [It] made me think about the world, about chance and fate and the choices we make.
—— Helen Vassallo , Translating WomenA cleverly crafted tale about the illusion of free will, and the stakes and pressures that accompany the choices influenced by one’s identity in the world.
—— Cher Tan , The Saturday PaperA story of migration, of searching the world for happiness and hoping that it will be found over the next page (or if you turn to page 42)... While it might seem at first to be a book about travel, it is in fact a tale of belonging... A deeply affecting, intensely personal novel that uses its experimental method of storytelling to worm its way into your very bones... an interactive adventure like no other.
—— Will Heath , Books and BaoIntan Paramaditha shakes up her readers. Her stories reveal that the most terrifying thing in life is not one of the supernatural ghosts that populate her work, but human prejudice. As far as I’m concerned, only writers of genius are able to convey a layered and nuanced world, and Paramaditha is one of them.
—— Eka KurniawanThis is a book for the new age - put yourself in the shoes of a global nomad and choose which way you want to go.
—— BNE Magazine AustraliaPine is a thrill of a book
—— i-DI loved this book! Hugely atmospheric, exquisitely written and utterly gripping
—— Lucy Foley, author of The Hunting PartyThis is true modern gothic ... Toon’s plain, poetic language has a hypnotic quality
—— Harper’s BazaarA haunting tale
—— Sunday ExpressA memorable debut from a promising new writer
—— Irish TimesMarries the claustrophobia of rural life with fascinating hints of Scottish myths, to create an emotional read with the pace of a thriller
—— Irish Country MagazineA remarkable debut
—— ImageHas all the ingredients of a modern gothic.
—— Herald, Hot List 2020A debut novel that's carefully calibrated to make every single hair on the back of your neck stand up on end
—— Scotland on SundayA modern gothic thriller that draws on the author's own Highland childhood
—— Herald MagazineWith Pine, (Toon) … has passed the debut hurdle in striking style.
—— Harper's BazaarA haunting and heartbreakingly bewitching tale … Packed with folklore, magic and an eerie sense of foreboding every time you turn the page, Pine will captivate readers from the very first page
—— Her.ieA gothic stirring of folklore and legend
—— RTÉ GuideEerie and spell-binding
—— Irish ExaminerFrom the first page PINE casts a sense of slowly-rising unease that is completely compelling. It's both eerie and thrilling at once, and had me under its spell until the end
—— Sophie Mackintosh, author of THE WATER CUREAn atmospheric tale of memory and loss
—— Daily MirrorEerie and dark, you'll be mesmerised by this dramatic tale with its tightly-woven plot
—— WomanIf there's any doubt that the Gothic thriller is enjoying a boom, Francine Toon's debut should settle the matter. PINE, a moving study of memory and loss, is both spooky and tender; drenched in a sense of place and yet eerily timeless
—— Mick HerronCombines the Gothic sensibilities of Shirley Jackson with the psychologically astute suspense of Gillian Flynn ... will leave you gripped and transfixed
—— Sharlene Teo, author of PontiFrancine Toon's touching account of a flawed, yet tender, father-daughter relationship in PINE is all the more compelling against the starkly beautiful backdrop of the Scottish highlands
—— Livia Franchini, author of Shelf LifeA beautifully crafted gothic tale of isolation and not belonging. Thoroughly gripping and stunningly atmospheric
—— Lucie McKnight Hardy, author of Water Shall Refuse ThemAn atmospheric tale of memory and loss, movingly told through a child's eyes
—— Sunday Express MagazineMany of the themes familiar from Austen’s novels are deftly revisited by Hornby, and the letters that are reimagined are pitch-perfect, with deeply touching confidences shared in family correspondences. You can tell this book by its cover – it’s quite lovely.
—— IRISH TIMESBeautiful novel[…] light hearted historical fiction which resembles Austen’s novels, a really lovely read very suitable for incoming spring’
—— Excuse My Reading (Instagram)Gill Hornby unfolds it all in her imagination.
—— The TimesHornby combines a moving portrait of sisterly devotion with a comic depiction of the provincial life so brilliantly evoked in Austen's own novels
—— DAILY MAIL[A]t the heart of it all there's a romantic twist..."Hornby is at her best describing the complex bonds between the excellent women of her story. She describes the horrors, but also the pleasures of spinsterhood"
—— THE TIMES