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The Passage by Justin Cronin

By Even Stevens | Posted Under Book Reviews | Comments (26)



the_passage.jpg

The Passage is a post-apocalyptic novel that deals with a virus that essentially turns people into vampires. The novel jumps between two periods: 2018, when the virus is formed and spread, and 92 years later, focusing on a colony of survivors in California.

In 2018, we meet Amy Harper Bellafonte, who in the first sentence is described as “the One Who Walked In, the First and Last and Only, who lived a thousand years.” We are given her background, how she comes to be in the care of a nun, Sister Lacy Antoinette Kudoto (who has some mysterious supernatural senses) and eventually how her story intersects with Agents Brad Wolgast and Phil Doyle. Wolgast and Doyle are involved with Project Noah, a government program that takes death row inmates and saves them from being euthanized in exchange for a lifelong contract allowing the government to experiment on them (injecting them with viruses, naturally) and essentially turning them into super soldiers. We are also given snippets of interactions between Grey, a custodian at the secret government compound, and Patient Zero, the first to be injected with the virus. Patient Zero can get into Grey’s head and he begins to talk to Grey and show him certain things and essentially infiltrates Grey’s mind. Zero manipulates Grey into letting him and The Twelve (the twelve other inmates being experimented on) out and the spread of the virus is rapid and devastating. I should mention here that Amy was also selected for Project Noah and is given the virus, but it does not affect her like it does the death row inmates. When the chaos breaks out, Agent Wolgast is able to escape with Amy to a small camp in Oregon as the virus rips apart the rest of the nation.

The novel then jumps ahead 92 years to the First Colony. The First Colony is a camp of survivors who live behind giant walls and constantly have lights going to keep out the infected. They are self sufficient, living off the land, and they have other institutions, such as an infirmary and a school. The Colony is thrown into turmoil when almost simultaneously, Amy shows up at their gates, several of the colonists begin to go crazy, and the lights begin to fail. Several of the colonists set out to find a way to fix the lights and save their colony from being taken over by the infected.

If you can believe it, that’s only about the first third of the book, and it is a ridiculously bare bones account of even those events. I have to hand it to Justin Cronin, he created an incredibly detailed story that is well-realized and quite impressive. Unfortunately, I think this is also the novel’s biggest weakness. I could tell as I was reading that he was building up to some major events, but sometimes the story completely dragged on getting to those points. Cronin also switches view points several times and uses different writing formats (e-mails, newspaper reports, journals, and memories, as well as present day point of view), which took some getting used to on my part.

Let me throw in an aside here. I generally don’t like trilogies or multi-book series unless they’re done well. If you’re going to do several books, make sure you have something to say. So as I started reading this book, I noted the 766 page book length and the several stories weaving together, ending with the First Colony and said to myself about halfway through “thank goodness this is a stand alone book, I’m so sick of authors dragging out stories unnecessarily.” So then I’m getting closer to the end and things really aren’t getting wrapped up and I became suspicious, so I did some quick Googling. Guess what? This is a planned trilogy. I almost threw the book in frustration. This book really is good; Cronin is a man of detail and knows how to tell a story but the writing is bloated at times, which detracted from the experience. So, I suppose my conclusion here is that this is a good story with good writing but it is long and it requires patience. If you know that going in, I think it will be a better experience than I had when I thought I was reading a stand alone book. And for the record, I will be reading the next entries in the trilogy.


For more of Even Stevens’ reviews, check out the CBR-III blog.









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Comments

Good review, this one is on my list. I too am fed up with every series being a trilogy and said the exact same thing as you in my review for Guillermo Del Toro and Chuck Hogan's "The Fall" (The Strain: Book II). Incidentally, that is a vampire-virus end of the world story too. That reminds me I need to get the review posted!

Posted by: TylerDFC at January 31, 2011 10:09 AM

I had that exact same experience, reading that book. Thought it was a stand-alone, etc. I will also be reading the next ones, if somewhat grudgingly.

Posted by: Andie at January 31, 2011 10:34 AM

Why is there never a virus that turns people into much nicer people?

Posted by: , at January 31, 2011 10:48 AM

ugh. i totes wanted to read this until the planned-trilogy part.
why must everything be so epic?

Posted by: gp at January 31, 2011 11:08 AM

"Why is there never a virus that turns people into much nicer people?"

Hmm. Interesting concept. You'd never be able to make it an 'Oh no it's the apocalypse du jour' type of story, but the idea that a virus could ...

Hmm. The virus suppress the reptilian hindbrain in higher mammals, making them less territorial, less prone to violent emotions and decreasing what some call the baser impulses. Hmm.

I will endow it with the working title "The Gentle Apocalypse." Thanks, Comma!

Posted by: The Wanderer at January 31, 2011 11:53 AM

I love trilogies! Heck, I love series that are more than three books in length. There's so much more development that can be done, especially when it comes to creating new worlds. The only downside is that authors seem to have a hard time letting go. Most of the series that originally start out as 4 or 5 books almost always balloon, sometimes to double the original length, and the overarching plot can drag as side stories continue to develop.

Posted by: Nate at January 31, 2011 11:54 AM

This book totally floored me. But I do love epic, long books, and trilogies. I thought the world Cronin created was fascinating and detailed. I absolutely fell in love with some of the characters (Wolgast is amazing, if short lived).

This was also one of the more unsettling books I've read. I've read my fair share of vampire/horror/sci-fi, and the sense of dread that hid behind each coming paragraph lasted for all 700+ pages.

I thought the book, and the experience of reading it, were incredible. I'd recommended for fans of Stephen King's The Stand, Dark Tower series, or even epic sci-fi like Dune.

Posted by: Brian at January 31, 2011 12:14 PM

Tyler, I have The Fall sitting on my bookshelf waiting to be read, I absolutely loved The Strain.

I really DID like this book but like I said I thought I was reading a stand alone book. I think 766 pages is a bit bloated to be just the first book in a series, there were definitely a few points I was like "alright let's get to it already!"

Posted by: Even Stevens at January 31, 2011 12:34 PM

oh and , I think you're totally onto something with the nice virus. It could be called Project Kumbaya.

Posted by: Even Stevens at January 31, 2011 12:36 PM

I think they tried chemically altering people to be nice, in Serenity. That didn't really work out.

Posted by: Ian at January 31, 2011 12:59 PM

Loved this book - but also didn't realize it was a planned trilogy at the time. He's actually coming to town to speak this spring, think I might have to go listen to him.

The one thing that bugs me is the term 'vampires.' Yes, I guess that's what the Virals are, but compared to the whole Twilight, True Blood, Vampire Diaries variety, Virals are way more terrifying, IMO.

Posted by: fenchurch at January 31, 2011 1:03 PM

That is true, fenchurch, he definitely took care not to paint them the same way as those types of vampires you mentioned. But they can't go out in light and they bite necks and drain people's blood. I think the biggest difference here is that the Virals are all primal instinct; Find humans and kill them. Although he does hint at the fact that the Virals may retain some memories or feelings of their human life as well.

Posted by: Even Stevens at January 31, 2011 1:14 PM

Read this knowing it was part of a planned trilogy, AND movie, because I like long sciencefictionhorrorfantasy... oh wait, we call it speculative fiction now, right? Anywho it was a fun read, but a bit uneven at times. Character motivation and detail wavered quite a bit.

I will be reading the second, since GRRM doesn't seem to be doing JACK SHIT!!!

Posted by: seth at January 31, 2011 1:41 PM

There was some movie, early 70's I think, about a cold-like bug that made you love everyone. Can't seem to find it on imdb though.

Posted by: Drake at January 31, 2011 1:41 PM

I've been considering buying this book for some time. If it's a trilogy, I'll wait until all 3 are out because I'm compulsive like that.

Posted by: Az at January 31, 2011 1:59 PM

Even Stevens: "The Fall" is only 300 pages. It really could have just been tacked on to "The Strain". I got it from the library. It's very much worth reading but "The Strain" was better.

Posted by: TylerDFC at January 31, 2011 2:24 PM

Even Stevens, so it's been done? Oh, Niflheim. It was a good thought while it lasted.

Posted by: The Wanderer at January 31, 2011 2:43 PM

I agree that 766 pages looked long, but I couldn't put it down and am on pins and needles for the next one! Plus I sort of loved the portrayal of Texas.

Posted by: Alarmjaguar at January 31, 2011 4:48 PM

Apparently this is going to be awhile in the making (probably because hes writing more 800 page books). The second book doesn't come out til 2012 and the third is slated for 2014.

Posted by: Even Stevens at January 31, 2011 5:23 PM

Heh Heh..this isn't even a Game of Thrones thread and still we get a GRRM rant. The man has power!

Anyway, this book was somewhat of a mixed bag for me. Loved the opening segment w/ Amy, but the Colony stuff moved way too slowly and the cast of characters were all pretty bland. Also annoying was the movie friendly United Colors of Benetton approach Cronin took with the cast. It felt contrived and I expected these plucky kids to try and save the environment or something.

That said, Cronin is a good writer who paints a pretty interesting post-apo world, his vamps are actually threatening, and the action and character development picks up toward the end. I'll likely give the sequel a try.

Posted by: stryker1121 at January 31, 2011 9:16 PM

Did anyone have the feeling that The Passage was written by two different people? I savored the first 200 pages; the story was couldn't-put-it- down engrossing and the writing was stellar. But when the story shifted to the First Colony, the latter two-thirds of the book, the writing became clunkier. Different stylistically. Some sentences I had to read over to comprehend the meaning. The characters were not as well drawn and, frankly, most -if not all- did not really capture my interest or empathy. Near the end, I also realized might not be a satisfactory ending in the remaining pages. I went online and discovered that this book would be the first in a trilogy. I was both disappointed and heartened. While I love to know that additional volumes will continue a story that I savor (ie, I am sad that I am near the end of the third book in The Hunger Game Series by Suzanne Collins), I was not left in a happy place at the end of this book. But I would be dishonest if I said I would not check out the next volume as soon as it comes to the public library.

Posted by: yemayah at January 31, 2011 9:42 PM

Posted by: The Wanderer at January 31, 2011 11:53 AM
---
No problem ... as long as I get 5%.

Posted by: , at January 31, 2011 10:56 PM

Ok apparently I'm out of the loop... what is GRRM?

and yes, yemayah, I definitely felt like the first part of the book was wildly different from the second part. Not that that's a bad thing, but it really took me some time to adjust to his rapidly changing styles. I honestly want a lot more Amy and a little less Colony people.

Stryker, I didn't even notice the United Colors of Benetton thing (heh)... but you're totally right on that one too. I'm hoping he can keep the momementum going for two more books.

Posted by: Even Stevens at January 31, 2011 11:40 PM

"Why is there never a virus that turns people into much nicer people?"

For those of you who are interested in gentle apocalypses, and can stomach comics, try "Record of a shopping trip to Yokohama" (orig. "Yokohama Kadaishi Kikou").

Manages to be both gentle and epic, and tremendously sad/beautiful.

This book sounds nuts/intriguing. Although the comments about the second part being so disjointed are a bit discouraging... Very good review, though. Two paragraphs in I was completely googly-eyed and thinking 'must read this'.

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Posted by: Matthew C. Kriner at March 25, 2011 10:56 PM