The Men
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Narrated by:
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Mia Barron
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By:
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Sandra Newman
About this listen
Jane Pearson is camping with her husband Leo and their five-year-old son Benjamin, deep in the California woods on an evening in late August. At the moment that she drifts to sleep outside the tent where Leo and Benjamin are preparing for bed, every single person with a Y chromosome vanishes from the world, disappearing from operating theatres mid-surgery, from behind the wheels of cars, from arguments and acts of love. Children, adults, even fetuses are gone in an instant. Leo and Benjamin are gone. No one knows why, how, or where.
After the Disappearance, Jane enters a reality she barely recognises, where women must create new ways of living while coping with devastating grief. As people come together to rebuild depopulated industries and distribute scarce resources, Jane reunites with an old college girlfriend, Evangelyne Moreau, leader of the Commensalist Party of America, a rising political force in this new world. Meanwhile, strange video footage called "The Men" is being broadcast online showing images of the vanished men marching through barren, otherworldly landscapes. Is this just a hoax, or could it hold the key to the Disappearance?
From the author of The Heavens, The Men is a gripping, beautiful and disquieting novel of feminist utopias and impossible sacrifices that interrogates the dream of a perfect society.
©2022 Sandra Newman (P)2022 Sandra NewmanWhat listeners say about The Men
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- 18-11-24
The Initial Premise Is Amazing
After reading the synopsis, I was instantly drawn in.
The book hits the ground running with some very surreal imagery bringing a stark concept to life very quickly.
It’s told solely from a first person perspective and that narrative can be at times a little confusing as it jumps from present day to various other events in the main character’s somewhat very troubled early life.
The themes of whether life is better or worse without men is explored and the reader will draw their own conclusions.
Overall, it’s a good book, if a little over long..
The conclusion of such a high concept was always going to be difficult to resolve and I found it a little jarring br />It’s excellently narrated whilst not being too melodramatic.
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