Home » » The Fireman review – Joe Hill's apocalypse feels real and visceral

The Fireman review – Joe Hill's apocalypse feels real and visceral

Written By Unknown on Tuesday, June 21, 2016 | 2:40 AM

Joe Hill’s follow-up to NOS4R2 envisages a world overcome by a fungus that causes spontaneous human combustion

It is difficult to know whether to be more taken with the moment in Joe Hill’s The Fireman when, with humanity all but wiped out by spontaneous combustion, JK Rowling bites the dust (shot for using her money to save the infected masses), or when a character speculates that Keith Richards is likely to have survived. “Nothing can kill him. He’ll outlast us all.”

After the horror of his last novel, NOS4R2, Hill has taken a different road with The Fireman, a post-apocalyptic thriller set in a world infected by Dragonscale, a mysterious fungus, which tattoos its hosts with beautiful black and gold markings then sets them on fire. It spreads quickly, the world as we know it disappearing rapidly as vast swaths of America burn and unofficial “cremation crews” of the uninfected form to kill off those who spread the disease.

Continue reading...

0 comments:

Post a Comment