In her quest to save her post-apocalyptic Arizona community from an epidemic, a woman with supernatural healing powers discovers that the only cure may lie in her shadowy past and the ghosts that prowl her dreams
Kim Antieau is the author of several novels and short stories for adults and teenagers, including Mercy, Unbound. She graduated Eastern Michigan University and lives with her husband, poet Mario Milosevic, in the Pacific Northwest. Aside from writing books, she works as a librarian.
In a post-Collapse United States, where the Territories have devolved back to a form of local rule, Gloria Stone is a resident healer - more unkindly known as soothsayers, considered part witch, part some sort of psychic. In the small community of Coyote Creek she lives a rustic but happy life, content with the rules forbidding old tech but ever wary of something in her past that haunts her dreams. Gloria has no memory of anything up to a few years earlier when she woke in a cave and wandered until she found Coyote Creek. However, her bliss is disrupted when a messenger from the Arizona governor insists that she leave town and visit him. She refuses and suddenly all the citizens in town get ill with something she doesn’t seem able to cure. What she discovers in the capital will awaken her dormant memories and explain why her dreams are filled with chanting of some sort of code. Kim Antieau’s novel is entertaining enough but I tumbled to the central conceit about halfway through and it should be no surprise to any seasoned genre reader. Over-hyped but a pleasant enough way to spend a day.
Gloria has no memories from before she woke up in a cave, stumbled out into the world and accidentally healed someone, but she's had a good life for the last 10 years or so, living and working in Coyote Creek. She has no family but she loves her town and people she cares for who in turn care for her, she has a few lovers but she still keeps people at arms length. Then one day a guy who gives her the creeps shows up and tries to force her to go see the governor of post apocalyptic Arizona, the Fall happened 300 years previous, but she has no desire to go and has heard rumors of healer's being kidnapped and kept. A series of unfortunate events see's her kicked from her home and roaming about trying find answers to the string of people who keep falling sick and losing their memories. Kim definitely has a specific style and manages to draw me in with her characters and her world building, this world being arid and full of life at the same time. Gloria's growth was interesting and her origins were fascinating once they became clear as well.
At first I didn't like it -- something bugged me, it was written too glibly and there was too much unnecessary sex. Turns out sex was one of the only ways the main character could "connect" with humans. She was a machine, but had no memories and so didn't know this. It got better, and turned into a really quick, interesting read about the world left after our own crumbles. About a man-made technology -- the "Gaia Websters" -- whom nature reclaims and turns into healers. Light, entertaining fare.
for a relatively short novel, it has everything you could want! i absolutely LOVED this story ... no matter who or what other people expect you to be, what really matters is who you are and who you want to be.
I'd give this three and a half stars. The concept was interesting and I did really want to know what happened to everybody and hoped it would all work out--and it did. "Websters" refers to a sort of weaver, in case you're wondering ('cuz I did).