| The
Snow by Adam Roberts pub: Gollancz. 297 page enlarged
paperback. Price: £10.99 (UK). ISBN: 0-575-07181-8 check
out website: www.orionbooks.co.uk
The
basic premise of this story is that it starts snowing and it just doesn't stop.
After a very short while, the snowploughs stop working and thereafter everything
else, including governments. Most of the population starves or freezes to death.
I remember reading in a Victorian book on railways that said London was
only three days away from starvation and it was only the railways that kept it
fed and enabled it to exist at all as a vast metropolis. More recently, I think
it was Andy McNab on some calamity scenario TV programme, who said the collapse
of law and order was only three missing meals away. 
The story is told at the beginning from the viewpoint of an Asian woman,
Tira, who is a resident of London. Thereafter, by being interposed with copies
of interrogation and other reports, Adam Roberts deals with the early part of
this catastrophe very well. His civilisation finishes with a whimper rather than
a bang. Our heroine eventually decides to head out of London and has to
move across the rooftops as the still falling snow has filled the streets to the
gutters. All sorts of odd pieces of equipment are used to aid survival but eventually
she ends up entombed in a snow buried tower block living of tinned food. Finally,
the lone survivor in the block, she is rescued by men diving down through the
hundreds of feet of snow in a vehicle modified to heat its way down through the
packed iciness. This, in turn, re-surfaces and is picked up by a hovercraft.
Our heroine finds herself in a survivors town run by the military and which
floats on the top of the snow supported by barrage balloons embedded in it. Women
are few and she finds herself married to a general who is tipped for the top post
'Interim President' in what is an Atlantic region government. Tira
becomes involved with a man who wants to overthrow the regime and who hints at
having proof it was a US government science project that went horribly wrong that
led to the snowfall. There are other rumours, that Australia is snow free or that
the blizzards were the acts of aliens. After years, the snowfall eventually
stops and Adam Roberts considers how the survivors could manage to survive.
I enjoyed the book but have to say that I thought the first half better than the
last part. One can imagine such an apparently endless blizzard would create catastrophe
and the author's story is very good at showing how people would cope with this
and the sort of society they might create to do so. However, I think as
a story it rather drifts away towards the end and does not achieve the expected
promise the writing in the first half led this reviewer to expect. Paul
Hanley
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