Ali Karim was a Board Member of Bouchercon [The World Crime & Mystery Convention] and co-chaired programming for Bouchercon Raleigh, North Carolina in 2015. He is Assistant Editor of Shots eZine, British correspondent for The Rap Sheet and writes and reviews for many US magazines & Ezines.
FEVER from award-wining South African crime
writer Deon Meyer is a stark departure from his bestselling Benny Griessel thrillers; at its core FEVER remains firmly a
crime novel. Set in a post-apocalyptic world, it explores the relationship of a
teenage boy Nico and his father, Willem Storm when faced with a dangerous new
world.
A mutated viral epidemic which starts
under a mango tree in Africa, soon engulfs the world within weeks, leaving over
ninety percent of the World’s population dead and dying, while the few
survivors (with lottery-like genetic immunity) soon find themselves at the
mercy of feral dogs, as well as from marauding gangs, and disease.
Nico and his Father Willem survive the
epidemic by chance. They had been in the hills exploring a recently discovered
cave dwelling when the virus struck, bringing civilisation to its knees. After
rescuing a women named Melinda from the unspeakable clutches of two violent
brigands, Nico saves his father’s life, and in so doing finds his role reversed
becoming the son with a gun, and one not frightened to use it to protect
Willem.
Soon Willem and Nico meet others on their
travels, setting up a community of sorts, named Amanzi, close to a major dam
that they manage to harness to generate power via hydroelectricity. Soon, the
community takes shape growing in number thanks to Willem and Nico seeding the
surrounding land with postcards telling other survivors about their new home, a
place of shelter named Amanzi – thanks to the so-called Hennie Fly, and his
diesel powered Cessna dropping the handwritten leaflets of hope.
Willem works tirelessly in creating this
new world, though being the man in charge poses challenges with his
relationship to his son – who is not only grieving for the loss of his Mother,
the loss of the world he once knew but also confronting the loss of childhood.
A political power struggle arises with the
arrival of the evangelical Christian pastor Nikosi Sebago and his congregation
that grows within Amanzi as people search for answers to why this horror has
come to Mankind. Willem’s secular viewpoint is at odds to the Pastor’s
preaching so he reluctantly aligns himself with the mysterious ex-soldier
Domingo, who becomes the new community’s protector. Domingo also becomes a
surrogate father in the mind of Nico, who grows more and more distant to his
real father Willem, and so the stage is set for the struggles that lie ahead
for this disparate band of humanity.
Structurally,
this hypnotic and hefty thriller is interesting, as well as strangely
comforting as it is a coming-of-age tale, as well as a
philosophical lament on humanity and its problematical relationships between
peoples, as well as our environment. Though an extremely thrilling adventure
story and one that can be read as just that – a fast moving thriller – Meyer’s
post-apocalyptic tale’s real virtue is its ability to provoke deep thought in
the reader as it reflects upon human nature, and our place on Earth (conscious
beings with a feral side to our existence). There is little doubt that the dark
side of our nature is an essential evolutionary tool, but when faced with times
of fear and scarcity, it also becomes something more.
The reason why this novel is not only
interesting thematically, but also structurally is that its shape takes the
form of the recollections of a grown-up Nico Storm. Many of these recollections
are not linear for reasons that become apparent on reading this richly textured
narrative; which is peppered with insights of life before the virus took hold,
as well as the hellish days that followed.
There are vignettes scattered throughout FEVER
that make you pause, make you reflect and ponder what it is about us that makes
us human, as well as the thinness of the line that separates us from all that
is feral, wild and dangerous – both within humanity as well as outside – the
inhumanity of our situation. The story of a survivor, who used to own an ‘all you can
eat' buffet before the fever came, and why he
closed it down becomes the novel in microcosm.
At its core FEVER
is a crime thriller, because it details the investigation by Nico Storm as to
why the founder of Amanzi – Willem Storm – was murdered.
Multiple viewpoints and the non-linear
nature of the passage of time disorientate the reader so we become ensnared and
terrified inside the unfolding drama, and sucked into this ravaged world which
Meyer crafts with the precision of a master storyteller.
The pace is unrelenting and despite its
length and dark subject matter, it is paradoxically a very fast read, as well
as an extremely upbeat story. The tale reflects on the good within humanity as
a social animal, but one which has a dark shadow where morality and the care
for others becomes compromised when fear and scarcity knock on our doors.
This thriller is designed to make you
think about our situation, the social constructs we build around our society
and how the veneer between the civilised and the feral is gossamer thin. This
observation is most evident in the overflowing waste-bins of the ‘all you can
eat’ buffet after the doors are closed; while in
the villages of the poor, children still go to sleep crying with empty
stomachs.
Deon Meyer should be applauded for this
brutal, unflinching tale of the excesses of humanity coiled like a python
around a coming-of-age tale; one that makes one think deeply about
the human condition as it entertains as well as warns of the dangers ahead, for
our dark-side maybe our undoing, as well as our salvation – for we are all
feral – given the right context.
Translate by Laura Seegers