“The Wild Dead is a tightly plotted mind-thrill . . . This is the feminist dystopian mystery series you didn’t know you needed.” — Meg Elison, Philip K. Dick Award-winning author of The Road to Nowhere series Mysteries and murder abound in the sequel to the Philip K. Dick Award-winning Bannerless A century after environmental and economic collapse, the people of the Coast Road have rebuilt … collapse, the people of the Coast Road have rebuilt their own sort of civilization, striving not to make the mistakes their ancestors did. They strictly ration and manage resources, including the ability to have children. Enid of Haven is an investigator, who with her new partner, Teeg, is called on to mediate a dispute over an old building in a far-flung settlement at the edge of Coast Road territory. The investigators’ decision seems straightforward — and then the body of a young woman turns up in the nearby marshland. Almost more shocking than that, she’s not from the Coast Road, but from one of the outsider camps belonging to the nomads and wild folk who live outside the Coast Road communities. Now one of them is dead, and Enid wants to find out who killed her, even as Teeg argues that the murder isn’t their problem. In a dystopian future of isolated communities, can our moral sense survive the worst hard times?
“An intriguing mystery made compelling by its post-apocalyptic setting . . . Another great read from Vaughn.” — S. M. Stirling, New York Times best-selling author of The Sky-Blue Wolves and Dies the Fire
A Mariner Original
A John Joseph Adams Book
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Everyone has a past. We could be proud of that past, something worth telling someone about. Or it could be something we are ashamed of, something to avoid in any and all conversations. Eventually, whether we like it or not, the past has a way of catching up with us. How would you like to be judged on something you did twenty years ago? Could you remember the circumstances in great detail? Or was it something so shameful you’ve done your best to block it out? Whether positive or negative, our choices that we make on a daily basis affect those around us. But how much can a community suffer over one person’s mistake?
Investigator Enid is back on the case! A year has passed since the Pasadan case and it is time to move on to something easier. Freedom-loving Enid is having a hard time leaving Serenity House. Olive is due with the household’s first child, and Enid desperately wants to be a part of it. With duty on the line, she promises her housemates to be back as soon as she can, pleading in whispers to the baby to stay put until she’s home.
Enid travels to the wayward station to pick up her new partner, Teeg, before heading on to assignment, but not without warning. Teeg is fresh out of training and his trainer is full of concerns regarding his patience and quick temper. Enid akes the advice under consideration, hoping to use this simple case as a great learning opportunity.
The pair is headed as far north as the Coast Road will take them- The Estuary. A place that “rarely exceeded quota because there isn’t enough to begin with”, that rarely earn a banner, which means they are missing out on that younger generation taking over households and responsibilities in the future. The Estuary deemed themselves “a loose collection of households whose members preferred to rely on themselves and one another” essentially eliminating the need for a committee but also putting the community at risk for involving investigators in senseless mattes, such as restoring a pre-Fall house.
As soon as Enid and Teeg see the structure in question they know it will be n open and shut case. For the sake of how long it took them to travel out here, they give the place a chance and do a thorough investigation. They gather information from interviews of surrounding households with the consensus being that it was a waste of resources. Years of storms have washed away the foundation making it literally stand precariously in the air. The building itself is “held up by nails, twine, and hope.” There isn’t enough hope in the world that could keep that structure standing, but the owner wants to keep a family promise. Enid decides to brave the house and take a walkthrough while Teeg stands guard.
The inside reflects the disastrous outside. Walls are gone, the floorboards are unstable, and Enid discovers a pile of trash in the corner. Needing something to focus on other than judgment, Enid discovers the pile of trash is actually a worn blanket hiding a satchel containing flint and steel, undeniable proof a squatter frequents the teetering house. The owner of the house doesn’t seem a bit surprised by this and explains that wild folk occasionally come down out of the woods to trade supplies, it was probably one of them.
Just as Enid and Teeg are gearing up to deliver their judgment, they are interrupted by a feral scream coming from the marshlands, prime hunting grounds for scavengers. The man is running towards them like he’s being chased by the devil. Through his exasperated breaths, they are able to hear he has stumbled upon a woman’s dead body in the marsh. Naturally having investigators present, Enid and Teeg run the trajectory back to where the body is located. They confirm the community’s greatest fear that it was a murder and not an accidental death.
The Estuary folk want to know the judgment on the house. They try and persuade the investigators the murder isn’t worth looking into, only making Enid question the situation more. And people want to know if they are being judged due to the cloudy past of a single woman twenty years ago. What is everyone hiding? And will there be justice for the dead?
Great detective story, characters and actions made sense as did the conclusion. That it’s set in a dystopian future is secondary to the storytelling.