Exodus (2002 novel)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Exodus
Author Julie Bertagna
Publisher Pan Macmillan
Publication date August 2002
Media type Paperback
Pages 352
ISBN 978-0330399081
Followed by Zenith

Exodus is a science fiction novel written for young adults by Julie Bertagna published in August 2002. The story is set on an island faced with the problem of a rising shoreline, caused by a melting ice cap. Mara must think of a way to save herself, the other villagers and, most importantly, the world. The book was short listed for the Whitbread Children’s Book of the Year in 2002. The book’s sequel is Zenith, published in 2007.

Julie Bertagna was inspired to write this book in 1999, when she learned of two South Pacific Islands being engulfed by the sea as a result of global warming, forcing the people to find higher land. Bertagna started to investigate into the topic of global warming and the stories inspired her to write Exodus, and its sequel Zenith. The purpose of the book is to inform young readers about global warming and convince them that something must be done about it.

[edit] Plot summary

In the year 2100, Mara lives on the island of Wing, with fellow villagers. The melting ice cap has caused the shoreline to rise and they are now almost out of land. Through her cyberwizz, a computer-like gadget, she navigates through information to find where they can go. She meets a mysterious creature called Fox, who demands to know where she is. Mara is excited because beyond him she can see a new world, but she loses connection before she can learn more. Mara tells the villagers about New Mungo, and place where they can go which is high above sea level. They eventually leave in fishing boats, but are forced to leave behind the stubborn elder generation.

Once they reach New Mungo, they realize it is actually not a welcoming place; a huge outer wall surrounds the whole sky-city. They they are forced to join a refugee boat camp and many of them die there, including Mara's best friend Gail. The Sky Police, from New Mungo, occasionally take the strong up to the city in a procedure called Pickings, but Mara has a bad feeling about this. Mara learns all her family drowned in the perilous journey to New Mungo, and tries to commit suicide. When she realizes her will to live is too strong, Mara manages, with the help of an urchin she names Wing, to enter the city gate. There she meets the people of the Netherworld (a strange twilit place in the shadow of the sky city, with the roofs of the drowned city of Glasgow jutting above the sea). They immediately recognise her as their messiah, the Face in the Stone, from an old prophecy called the Stone Telling. She lives with them for some time, exploring and helping them to survive.

One day, while she is with her friend Gorbals in the forbidden university, Gorbals and Wing are taken by the Sky Police, and many sea urchins (a wild breed of children without language, but hairy bodies and webbed hands) are slaughtered. Determined to save her friends, she takes the uniform of a police women that the police accidentally killed in the massacre and sneaks up to the city. She is overwhelmed by its superficial beauty and shallow entertainments. While searching through the Noos, a more evolved version of the world wide web, she meets Fox. She discovers it is David, the quiet, hard-working grandson of Caledon, creator of the Sky City and the one who forced many people to drown if they didn't pass an intelligence test to allow them into the city.

Together, they organize an escape plan that involves David crashing the Noos with a 20th-century virus allowing Mara to free the slaves and then leave the city. The only catch is that David would not be able to leave with Mara, with whom he has fallen in love, because he must stay to begin a rebellion against the unfair New World. While executing her plan, Mara fatally stabs a man she believes is a spy, and then rescues Gorbals, Wing and all the people chosen in the Pickings, who have become slaves. They slide down air vents into the Netherworld and board a supply ship. They break free of the city walls, also saving the people in the refugee boat camp and the Netherworld. The boats are programmed to Greenland, the only place that is not underwater. Fox also slides down the air vents, to begin his rebellion outside the reach of his grandfather. The book finishes with Mara wondering how far a person will go to save themselves, and if Caledon was right to save a special few. The book ends with the hope that the refugees will reach safety in Greenland.

[edit] References