Book Review: Aurora, when the lights went out
By Robert McCool
When a monster solar coronal mass ejection (CME) strikes the Earth it destroys all of the power grids in the world, leaving our Earth in the literal dark as the electricity disappears worldwide. This is what occurs in David Koepp's second book titled Aurora (ISBN 978-0-06-291647-1). Koepp is the screenwriter of many popular movies, including the first two Jurassic Park releases, Mission: Impossible, and War of the Worlds, plus many more, some of which he also directed.
In this page-turner Koepp focuses on a particular family, split by two distant locations. Aubrey Wheeler is in Aurora, Illinois, a suburban single ex-wife and stepmother of her ex's child from a previous marriage. The ex is an obnoxious gambler and drug user who refuses to go away after the divorce. His son is an obnoxious fifteen-year-old Scott who hates everything including his father, while taking up space and dishing out his hatred to everyone, especially Aubrey, though he refuses to move out of her house.
On the other side of the continent lives Aubrey's estranged billionaire brother who has prepared a disused Minute Man missile silo in the middle of the desert as a “safe refuge” in the event of a disaster such as the one happening right now.
The book focuses upon the two sides of this family and how they cope with the new reality of a modern dark ages.
Aubrey, who is not a disaster prepper, struggles with the responsibility of Scott and some of the neighbors with whom she has a connection. Even going to the grocery to prepare for an uncertain future is a self-defeating chore that she shares with Scott's holier-than-thou drenched assistance. Still, she finds a way to normalize life as much as she can.
Meanwhile, her brother Thom, a Silicon Valley billionaire, has his hands full collecting the already committed professionals who will help him live the life he has grown accustomed to. He sends a quarter of a million dollars to Aubrey and pleads for her to come share his bunker, which she declines, as she wants nothing to do with her brother's help.
Bad guys develop, all after the money Thom has sent to his sister. Death occurs.
And Audrey joins in with a neighbor converting his lawn to a vegetable garden that will produce the food they desire, as they toil and till the rich earth..
How Audrey and Thom resolve their differences and come together in the end is a satisfying place to end their story.
Later, the power resumes in a reduced state. It is all happiness for the remaining characters, with a hope fulfilled.
I recommend this quick read as entertainment for the lighter summer days ahead; perhaps as a beach read. The characters feel solid in their roles and the plot moves like sighing waves slapping the shore. There is that inevitability to think about: what we would save if the world collapsed around us?
Stories Posted This Week
Wednesday, November 20, 2024
- Bluffton Beavers sports roundup, Nov. 13-19
- ODOT prepping for first snow of the season
- Mason named OBL 2024 Banker of the Year
- October 2024 land transfers in Bluffton school district
- November chamber meeting explores member news, Blaze plans and flag etiquette
- Bluffton EMS by the numbers: October 2024
- Children left unattended in running vehicles can lead to abductions
- Icon search function goes from 0 to 30
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
- Tickets and streaming information for Nov. 22 Pirate football playoff game
- Spirit Bus for November 22 football playoff in Findlay
- Tea Bag Exchange & Tasting at BPL, November 21
- Letter: University students learn about Fair Trade
- Join volunteer crew for 2024 Ream Display-Blaze of Lights setup
- Village of Bluffton asks for updated utility billing contact information
Monday, November 18, 2024
- Dorothy P. Moser operated Moser Electric
- Multi-agency active shooter drill to be held at Apollo
- Adopt-a-Family for Christmas via Bluffton Food Pantry
- Pirate football to play Hamler Patrick Henry at Findlay
- The "Brice" Presbyterian Church cornerstone
- Pirate football to face Patrick Henry in region finals