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The Emergency

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George Packer’s gripping fable of imperial collapse illuminates the crises of our times.

One ordinary late-spring day, the Emergency begins. In the city by the river where Burghers live, separate from the agricultural Yeoman faction, Dr. Rustin watches the old imperial structures authorities flee, airwaves falter, and officials disappear without a trace. The laws that once upheld strict harmony soon don’t fit anymore; the new idea of Together takes hold. Self-reliance and solidarity build across the population, from specialized committees deemed “self-orgs,” to We Are One gatherings for group decisions, to democratizing forms of address at the hospital where Rustin is the chief surgeon.

Everywhere people are rapidly adapting, taking action, but Rustin has doubts—which seem less and less welcome. Most troubling is that his beloved teenage daughter drifts further away by the day, lost to new technologies and community efforts.

Though Rustin is afraid, alienated by the present state of affairs, and unsure of what’s to come, when the story of a lost Yeoman boy reaches him, he resolves to go on a search, which will bring him not just closer to finding the child but ultimately toward what he still believes is valuable in his world. The Emergency is a soaring, captivating story of a man and a family amid a changing landscape, in which the award-winning author George Packer presents a tale of our times in a work of social and political urgency, revelation, and prophecy.

416 pages, Hardcover

Published November 11, 2025

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George Packer

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Profile Image for T Davidovsky.
497 reviews17 followers
December 7, 2025
The Emergency is a very smart, thoughtful, poignant, biting, and well crafted story about how people respond to collapse of social order. It asks: Can you ever be prepared for upheaval? What remains afterward? Will you see the best in humanity? Will you see the worst? The writing is proficient, and the character work is strong, effectively portraying how diverse people might respond differently to chaos and catastrophe. They rarely find unifying principles to bring everyone together, and George Packer resists offering easy answers to tough questions. As a result, there’s a perpetual sense of unsteadiness and alienation that should resonate with most people in the world at the moment.

At first, I saw similarities to Animal Farm and 1984. Those comparisons would normally be high praise, but the more I think about it, I realize The Emergency rubbed me the wrong way. When a book portrays a series of movements focused on making the world safer and fairer, I expect their attempts at building a utopia to not be laughably flawed, whereas Packer seems more interested in exposing how juvenile, narrow minded, undercooked, and lazily cobbled together their ideologies are. No utopia is easy to build or maintain, so I understand if a novel can’t be set in a cozy hopepunk anarchist cooperative or a fully automated luxury communist solarpunk society, but I wish efforts at reform and revolution in The Emergency had been taken seriously. While dystopian fiction should be bleak, the bleakness here comes without being earned. There are missed opportunities to say something inspiring as the narrative shies away from urgency, always retreating into platitudes about the value of dialogue. I don’t mean to minimize how important dialogue is, but I wanted The Emergency to be more ambitious. It has the trappings of ambition, but lacks the necessary vision.

There’s also something incurious about the book. Various interdependent interest groups are introduced as automatic enemies without ever interrogating why upbringing alone might cause them to be drawn to diametrically opposed worldviews. It relies heavily on mapping these groups onto real world counterparts. The thing is that the world of The Emergency is different from reality. The real world has power hungry demagogues, profit motives, and things like religious dogma to reinforce division. In the book, however, there aren’t as many clear motives for why people are drawn to specific national narratives, why false and inflammatory versions get propagated, why outsiders always end up othered as a result, and why no one can find common ground. The novel just assumes that humans have the unalterable character flaw of being fundamentally vulnerable to brainwashing, which feels defeatist and unimaginative. It’s not the type of speculative fiction novel that needs worldbuilding, but without even hinting at explanations, the book is blind to the systems that perpetuate social divisions.

To be as politically insightful as this book thinks it is, it truthfully needed some sort of equivalent for talk radio, cable news, social media, and other platforms used for spreading information and misinformation. (There is arguably a social media equivalent, but it isn't used for algorithmically spreading content. It's just used to numb people to reality.) It also perhaps needed a slightly clearer sense of whether anyone benefits from misinformation or from the resulting fear of others. It's possible to address these issues without worldbuilding (like in I Cheerfully Refuse by Lief Enger). It would be fine to keep things vague, but what The Emergency is doing goes beyond vagueness. It not only fails to answer whether anything or anyone is behind these divisions, but also neglects to even make the question feel relevant. The result is a story that is likely to capture a lot of what Americans already feel about politics without articulating something useful, new, or profound about those feelings.

I still don’t want to turn fans of literary dystopia away. I think it’s important to read about these more skeptical approaches to change and chaos, and I legitimately enjoyed the challenge of figuring out what exactly about this book didn’t work for me. I also think The Emergency does shed its skepticism at times. It might not have faith in humanity as a whole, but individuals in the story do grow, learn, and change for the better. If you like character driven books that feel relevant to what’s happening in real life, this one might work for you, regardless of how you feel about the skepticism.

~Thank you to Netgalley and the publishers for the Digital ARC. All opinions are my own.~
Profile Image for The Speculative Shelf.
289 reviews596 followers
October 17, 2025
A compelling and creative spin on dystopian fiction, The Emergency is a prescient fable chronicling the collapse and reformation of a nameless city-state.

The novel works best in its opening section, depicting societal collapse through the eyes of one family within this contained “city by the river.” It is especially timely, with clear parallels to our present moment as characters grapple with conspiracy theories, backlash against wokeness, debates over immigration, cancel culture, and tribalism.

Once the protagonists venture into the countryside and encounter the more feral responses to the titular “Emergency,” the story grows unwieldy and less narratively satisfying, with shifting alliances and more thinly drawn characters. A bit more focus and less sprawl might have made these undercooked elements feel richer.

My thanks to the publisher and NetGalley for an advanced reader copy in exchange for an honest review.

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Profile Image for Rolf.
18 reviews
November 23, 2025
I have been reading a lot of apocalyptic fiction this year, so when I saw this title was appearing – and from George Packer, a writer whose work I have known for many years through his fine contributions in the New Yorker – I was excited to read it. I found, however, that his new novel was not very successful, nor an especially rewarding read.

Packer is seeking, or so I read the book, to create an allegory of the modern American condition. The imagined world of The Emergency is one of simplifications – a reduction to lowest terms. The physical world of the novel is simplified to city and countryside, with an unknown distant region serving as a boundary. Packer imposes a simplified socio-economic structure onto this essentialist geography, consisting of three basic social categories: Burghers (city), Yoeman (countryside) and Outsiders (refugees or poor immigrants, described as semi-nomadic plains people). This creates a controlled environment in the novel to allow Packer to explore what might transpire when a normative order, that is the generally agreed-upon rules that allow the dominant structure to retain its integrity and to cohere, dissolves.

The Emergency (itself an event never explained or really even described) precipitates the unravelling of the social equilibrium of the old order (the Empire), an implicit nod to the modern liberal-democratic state, which operates under the rubric of "Good Development." That good development, however, has been good for some, but not for others – most perhaps; when the Emergency arrives, dismantling the existing state order, the different groups resolve their social identity into starkly different forms that reflect their resistance to the old hegemony.

In the city, the traditional Burghers (aka the bourgeoisie) find themselves cast aside for a new youth-led social movement which rallies together under the banner of "Together" – spontaneous, decentralized and self-organised (recalling "Occupy Wall Street" perhaps), embracing an unapologetic, tradition-busting progressivism. In case we weren't quite following the allegorical undertones, we learn that the militants of "Together" are called the "wide-awake," whose job it is to patrol the city and "wake it up." Thus does the formerly prosperous urban-bourgeoisie, exemplified by the main character Rustin, fall victim to the untrammelled wokeness of their progeny, dissatisfied with the stultifying norms of the "Good Development" imperium.

In the country, we have the yeomanry, who, under the hegemony of the old order have been the producing class, living in rural underdevelopment, illiteracy, and semi-poverty. Untethered from the old system, the peasants, too, find themselves in sway to a new thinking advanced by their youth, who adduce the "lost," true philosophy of the land "Dirt Thought": "Words lye [sic], Dirt is true," is one of the saws of the movement.

The yeomanry of the country have longstanding grievances with the burghers of the city, and the novel itself is set in the context of ever rising tensions between Democrats and Republicans, sorry Burghers and Yeomen, with the Strangers (the downtrodden immigrant) putting a stress on both –  greeted with a quickly-exasperated goodwill by the former, and open hostility (as thieves and marauders) by the latter.

Packer exploits his allegorical set-up in various ways that offer a correspondence with the malaise of modern America. As one instance: misinformation. Information flows under the imperial system have broken down, the one (there's more simplification for you) newspaper ("Verity") has ceased publication. Previously, the country had "always the same as the news they had in the city." But now, if the Burgher "said a story was false," the Yoeman "would know it must be true— the wilder the story, the firmer his belief." There's also a nod to AI in the book, in the form of "Better Humans," robotic avatars who are perfect replicas of their original human, but with knobs and made up of copper wire. And so on.

It's all rather foursquare and inartful. The actual story, presumably meant to operate upon this allegorical setting to extract some insights into the quagmire of our modern society and its politics, was, for me, curiously inconsequential and underwhelming. In the end – no spoilers here – it is clear that Packer is not especially optimistic about our abilities to resolve the deep structural problems. It is, quite literally, a shitshow. And we're left with a not-especially subtle echo of the old Voltairean wisdom in the face of a world full of problems, il faut cultiver notre jardin. It's a tepid conclusion to an often listless story.
Profile Image for Tori.
85 reviews3 followers
July 26, 2025
The Emergency, as an event, was nothing short of a societal and systemic upheaval of cataclysmic proportions. Overnight, the enforcers of the Empire fled, leaving once-beholden individuals, spanning three different cultural groups - the Burghers of the city, the Yeoman in the farmland, and the nomadic and triangulated outliers called Strangers - immediately empowered to immediately redefine their present and future, shedding all that failed to serve them.

“Yes, that was it — to be better! It was what everyone in all times wanted, even if the wish lay buried for years under layers of quotidian debris. But the effort needed was immense, the human stuff so flawed — indifference, indolence, fear.”


What was promised — communality in place of archaic hierarchies, group decision making instead of singular ruling, an uplifting of the young to shape the world they inherit — quickly descends into a fascist, fear-driven state with a new-but-same-as-the-old hierarchy of power, class and “The Other.”

There’s a throughline of how attempts at reinvention, of “doing things better” and “getting it right this time,” leads not to a revolution but to repeating the patterns, behaviors and failures of past empires.

I can’t say the book gave me faith in our ability (at scale, and in my lifetime) to join together and affect radical change that shifts the scales of power, eliminates fascism and oppression, and improves the lives of everyone on earth.

But it did affirm that we can be better at a community level (perhaps even beyond that!) - but only if we’re willing to relinquish our ties to the way things have always been, to our position in social and economic hierarchies, to the ways we “other” those with less privilege, and to the blind faith placed in those in power.

4.5 stars. Thanks to the publisher - Farrar, Straus and Giroux - and Netgalley for access to an advanced copy of this novel.

(As an aside, there were multiple moments in this book where I was reminded of The Other Valley - fans of that novel will certainly appreciate this one. I’m sure this novel will also resonate with Americans - well, half the country, at least.)
Profile Image for Bess.
79 reviews1 follower
November 23, 2025
i really enjoyed this book as a portrayal of how fragile our grip on the world is. how everything we know to be true can be upended, how easy violence becomes when you dehumanize people, and what really matters in the end. there were some obvious flaws in only telling the story from one side and uncertainty about what exactly the novel was trying to be, but it was still an interesting portrait of people with beautiful writing.
Profile Image for Lori.
1,790 reviews55.6k followers
November 14, 2025
Everything was fine—until it wasn’t.

What the book calls The Emergency seems to erupt out of nowhere. Three distinct classes of people, once coexisting and supporting one another—the Burghers with their hospitals and elite schooling, the Yeomen with their farms and working-class ethic, and the Strangers, roving outsiders on society’s margins—suddenly find themselves cut off, suspicious of each other’s intentions, and fueling the fires of fear about what each group might be plotting.

In the midst of this upheaval, young adults seize the disruption to dismantle the existing government and implement a new system they call Togetherness. At first, it sounds like an ideal utopia: a mindful, humanitarian society where no one person rules and everyone has a voice in shaping the rules. But the experiment quickly unravels, breeding further division between city folk and country folk, until everything collapses into one tumbling ball of chaos.

While I appreciated the ideas in theory, the execution often felt like a slog. The book could have been more thought-provoking and engaging at half the length, trimming away much of the extraneous detail.

More than once, I was tempted to DNF—it was hard to connect, and I struggled to care about the characters. Still, I’m glad I stuck with it, because the story does improve as it goes along.

This novel will resonate with fans of The Handmaid’s Tale, Earth Abides, 1984, and Lark Ascending—stories where you either fall in line with the new regime or fall at its hands.
Profile Image for Abigail E.
449 reviews18 followers
Read
November 7, 2025
Y’all I cannot give this the usual review treatment because this was not an Abigail book so it’s not even fair of me to say another word!! That’s never stopped me before though so here goes:

*ahem* I am the wrong audience for this book. The plot is SO INTRIGUING - a society collapses in what is eventually referred to as “The Emergency,” and what follows is the portrait of a society trying to move forward when previous rules, systems, and norms no longer apply. We follow a doctor and his family as they react and respond to the new world.

I said SIGN ME UP but maybe I shouldn’t have as I am simply not intelligent enough to appreciate a book such as this?! I do appreciate MacMillan Audio for providing the ALC in exchange for my honest review and do hope they accept my promise to stay in my lane next time. I also do believe this book might be good (the narration was!), it was just beyond me. This one is out Nov 11 if anyone wants to read it then explain it to me like I’m five!

Anyone else read a book they were just reeeeally the wrong audience for recently? I’ll respond after my reread of something more my speed - perhaps Goodnight Moon? 🤭

#MacAudio2025
Profile Image for Aimée.
16 reviews5 followers
June 8, 2025
2.75 ⭐️ The Emergency drastically changed the Empire and the lives of Burghers and Yeomen. From now on, the young are in power and they introduced a new order that follows the principles of Together: “Everyone belongs”, “Listen to the young”, “I am no better and neither are you”, and “You shall be as gods”.

We mainly follow the surgeon Hugo Rustin who disapproves of this new order, even though his wife and children are advocates of Together. Especially his daughter Selva seeks comfort and a community in Together. Hugo’s relationship with Selva becomes more complicated. When the two go on a journey, they get a chance apart from any outside influence to reconnect.

The author’s writing style is great and I liked the concept of a fallen Empire and two rebellious groups that take over the city and countryside.
However, I had a hard time getting through this book. I wish the conflict between Burghers and Yeomen had been explained in more detail. Even after finishing this book, I didn’t have the feeling that I understood these two groups—but maybe that was the point?
In addition to that, the new principles of Together didn’t have a shocking effect on me as I usually expect from other dystopian novels when a new order is introduced.
Overall, the story just didn’t hook me, and the main character felt a little flat.

Thank you NetGalley and Farrar, Straus and Giroux for this ARC!
Profile Image for Holly Deitz.
351 reviews
June 13, 2025
Thank you to NetGalley and Farrar, Straus & Giroux for letting me review an uncorrected digital copy of this book.

Wow I loved it! I don't want to do any spoilers, but the world building was fantastic, the character building as well. It was beautiful and horrifying, but never grotesque. That's difficult to do with this genre. I found myself stopping and really thinking about what was going on many times. It's that kind of book.

If you liked The Dog Stars, Oryx and Crake, The Parable of the Sower...I think this will be up your alley.
Profile Image for Matt Bender.
267 reviews6 followers
December 18, 2025
Despite some excellent scenes (Rustin’s work interrogation, the teen gallows), something doesn’t work. Part of it is that the main character is participating a dystopia from an elite’s perspective— he’s very white collar, indifferent, and naive. He loses his job, but there isn’t any material loss. The yeoman and burghers are also completely bipolar and seem like a coastal liberal’s stilly stand-in’s for urban and rural America. Here totally homogenous but there is no caste protocols which doesn’t add up. Then there is the dystopian plot which isn’t that terrifying.

I wouldn’t call this book prescient and fill a little annoyed by how much I expected from the novel after reading an excerpt in the Atlantic. Packer sort of seems inspired by real social disruptions like the French Revolution or collapse of the USSR, which isn’t a compliment because it’s like neoliberalism and globalization and the internet never happened. Does anyone seriously think that the collapse of American institutions wouldn’t be filled by some power? Would the DSA and proud boys really be the ones to take over? That’s what The Emergency suggests.
Profile Image for Erik.
364 reviews3 followers
December 16, 2025
I like George Packer’s long form pieces for The Atlantic, which are generally sociological analyses of the state of America, which as we know ain’t great. This book is more like a fable about a governmental collapse in a “city by the river” in an unspecified time and place. (They have cars but not cell phones, the narrator of the audiobook has a British accent. These clues don’t mean much.) The novel follows the story of a doctor in the post-fall period and the interactions of the three different tribes. It’s easy to see the allegorical comparisons to factions of America and to imagine how society might reorganize after such a collapse. Considering it’s both commentary and fiction, I thought it was pretty good on both levels.
Profile Image for Nina.
23 reviews1 follower
Want to read
December 27, 2025
DNF..... for now

Was pretty engaging at first but lost steam about 1/3rd in. DNFing so I can read other books lol.
Profile Image for Charis.
Author 5 books9 followers
April 15, 2025
Thank you to Net Galley and Farrar, Straus and Giroux for letting me read this advance copy!

Reading any dystopia and being truly swept away in 2025 is difficult: current affairs have been too influential on our perception of reality. This novel feels dangerously of the moment, and therefore quickly dated, at the start: it seems clear that this world is an echo of current fears of fascism in America and the not yet vanished language of the pandemic. Throughout, there is an Orwellian distrust of group-think and a focus on how tradition, hierarchy, and individualism are necessary parts of a functional society.

The protagonist, a self-professed ‘humanist’ and firmly established member of the ‘elite’ or ‘bourgeoisie’ depending on your preferred period of social upheaval, is unwilling to accept the new social order that has taken over his society:

"'This is unprecedented,' he kept repeating, as if the insight might solve their problem."

His daughter, on the other end of the spectrum, embraces the new order with some naivety, but also desperation. It becomes clear as the novel progresses that she is actually extremely intelligent, but is being wilfully naive as she is searching for some form of meaning or hope that she can be part of to create a world that is better and more just than her father’s. She is searching for moral meaning in the future; he found his purpose in the past and is deeply hurt by her rejection of his identity. As a depiction of generational conflict, their relationship is believable and sweet — both have the power to hurt each other, and do, but are also trying to communicate across the divide.

The plot is very readable; Packer has not forgotten to entertain. The allegorical, storyteller’s tone is reminiscent of Ursula Le Guin — science fiction by the way of reality. At the start, it is so close to reality, it threatens to push the reader out of enjoying the imaginary world, although the plot swiftly picks up pace and draws us into the unique conflicts of this universe.

The conflicts in 'The Emergency' (generational divide, societal malaise, virtue signalling, refugees, class and immigration, xenophobia, the control of social media over the young, the cruelty of meritocracy, the danger of mob rule) are ripped from our headlines, and therefore it would be easy for us to draw parallels between our own beliefs and the events of the novel, casting moral judgements on the author’s choices.

However, this also feels like a fruitless exercise. As one example, the Yeoman, who repeatedly refer to themselves as ‘native’ and are legitimately a colonised people with an uneasy relationship with the ‘City’, are shown to be practical and stereotypically connected to nature. However, their young people also appear to be mini-fascists, or violent thugs, corrupting old myths to suit their own ends. This is not dissimilar to their peers in the city, who are also discovering violence, albeit in a different way. A colonialist reading would be easy — Packer refers to the old regime as an empire to make it even easier — but it is also more complex and human than that. It’s about lack of communication, and fear, and how divide is easily sown between people. Perhaps it is also about how the young can be both dangerous and innocent because of their naivety and desire to make a mark on the world.

Packer deftly weaves together different themes of upheaval and identity, but avoids taking a side. Ultimately, this novel is about what it means to be human in a time of generational change. Meaning, in ‘The Emergency’, is found through making connections and trying to communicate even if you don’t understand: this is what all the characters we are rooting for try to do in their own way, to make the world better.
Profile Image for Chelsea Knowles.
2,634 reviews
July 28, 2025
*Thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for an advance reader copy of this novel in exchange for an honest review*.

The Emergency follows an Empire that has collapsed. This leads to an Emergency and urban Burghers and rural Yeomen are on opposite sides with different ideologies. The novel follows Doctor Hugo Rustin who is chief surgeon at the Imperial College Hospital and is struggling to connect with society after the Emergency. His wife, Annabelle finds fulfilment in the community and Together. Their daughter, Selva has turned against her father’s values and is pulling away from him. Rustin decides to go on a humanitarian mission with his daughter Selva just as the conflict between the Burghers and Yeomen is reaching a crisis.

This was one of my most anticipated reads of 2025 after reading Packer’s nonfiction work, Last Best Hope and this lived up to all my expectations. This novel reminded me of George Orwell and I think this perfectly reflects what Packer has discussed in his nonfiction. This is such a unique novel and I honestly don’t think I’ve read anything like this before. Learning about the society in this was so interesting and I particularly liked the Yeomen. I think there is a lot to take away from this regarding politics, society and ideology. I don’t think this will be for everyone but I do think everyone should read it because it’s truly fantastic and definitely one of my favourite reads of the year. This is a book that sticks with you and I have not stopped thinking about it since I read it. The writing is so good. I loved this so much and I had such a great reading experience.

Favourite quote (subject to change upon publication) - “But the thought of her husband coming home gave her an image of him at the dinner table, in his weekend flannel shirt (was there ever a greater creature of habit?), after a "project day" of weeding the garden or repairing closet drawers. He would go around the table and have each of them in turn-first Pan, then Selva, then Annabelle-report highlights from their week, unaware that his face was glowing, not at anything they said but at the pleasure of their company. This image was utterly ordinary, and therefore sacred. It didn't matter to anyone else. Compared to the future of the city it was trivial. The four of them were trivial. One by one they would all disappear, while Together would continue indefinitely.”
Profile Image for sedge.
90 reviews15 followers
October 17, 2025
(ARC via NetGalley and the publisher.)

All art is political, but is it necessarily relevant?

Observing the reception of Pynchon's Shadow Ticket has been bemusing. Reviews ask, Why doesn't it tell us (whoever "us" is, but apparently liberal US citizens) what to do, how to make sense of and move through the second Trump term? Or perhaps it does provide insights, and thus prove its value?

These are all weird questions to ask of a book. As Lyta Gold writes in the introduction to Dangerous Fictions: "So much went wrong when it was decided that everything had to pay its way". This is nowhere more true than in art, particularly literature.

I don't know if Shadow Ticket does, or does not, have something "of value" to offer the reader with reference to current events. Pynchon has never struck me as an author too concerned with that kind of immediate relevancy.

By contrast, George Packer, in The Emergency, has A LOT to say about the present moment. To do so, he presents what is, on the surface, an extremely-abstracted and -simplified allegory.

There's an Empire that has fallen, a city by the river, and different populations of people moving through the city and its outlying territories. These various populations are called Burghers, Yeomen, and Strangers: that is, urbanites, countryfolk, and refugees. In the wake of the Empire's fall, the Emergency takes hold, and with it, remarkable social changes. In the city, young people and those without status enact Together, which might be best described as a naive horizontalism. Meanwhile, out in the country, young men are developing a sickening, bestial ideology out of misunderstood trash.

Both sets of young people further seek to abandon what being human is (or might mean, or something). In the city, they allow robot versions of themselves, called Better Humans, to be built based in part by probing psychological-market research, while in the country, young men don animal heads and train for brutal physical engagement. (They call themselves, and I am very sorry to have to type this out, "Manimals".)

The range of possibilities for how rebellion and building a new world can happen is disappointingly, if unsurprisingly, narrow. The city's experiment with Together slides into Red-Guards-like paranoid militarism, called Wide Awake, while the Burgers' bestial rule is terrifying from the get-go. (The implication that our world's "woke" is this world's violent sousveillance project is, to put it mildly, deeply disturbing.) That the only way society can change is towards overt violence feels like a failure of Packer's liberal imagination. One could be generous and say that it is a failure instead of the protagonist's liberal imagination. Either way, the lack of any viable alternative is pretty depressing. Not, that is, in terms of proposed social policy (though there is that), but in terms of imaginative, narrative ambition.

The book is set somewhere that could be anywhere in the developed world, in that there are trams and automobiles. The setting in time is even vaguer. Women wear hats in public, but there is no mention of any kind of contemporary mass communication: no radio, no phones, certainly not any TV or internet. There are, however, extremely powerful VR goggles and, later, robots whose technology is highly retro-futuristic, like wax cylinders and coils of copper wires.

I struggle with evaluating the choices in made in this book. The biggest flaws, I think, are the limited range of possibilities for change and the absence of mass communication. Any story remotely interested in mass social change, whether set in the speculative present or, really, any time in the 20th century, needs to wrestle with the influence of mass comm, whether newspapers or radio and TV or the internet. Omitting all such platforms from the world of The Emergency certainly makes an easier story to tell, but also a less insightful one.

I usually bounce off modern allegories, but Packer does a lot of interesting character work that complicates the apparent/surface simplicity. There is real craft in the way details are elaborated and reexamined and it is the book's greatest strength to be willing to deepen the allegorical simplicity. The superficiality of the groups' labels is somewhat developed over the course of the novel into a critique of social classification (and our emotional investment in/identification with it).

On the other hand, I wonder if the whole book was trying too much, too consciously, to be relevant. Packer certainly loves his four-part social schemata; his most recent non-fiction book, Last Best Hope, is structured according to Four Americas which are competing narratives of the past and visions of the future.

In the end, I think, despite moments of insight and striking visual imagery, the allegory structuring this book cannot hold up and, unfortunately, the result is fairly incoherent, if not fairly pat.
Profile Image for ROLLAND Florence.
115 reviews5 followers
November 9, 2025
Empires fall slowly, and then suddently. The city state that is depicted in this dystopian novel makes no exception.
A well-oiled society with deep-running issues, large scale organized exams and "excess" citizens has reached the point of no return when a critical percentage of the population wants to burn the old ways to the ground.
A chief surgeon, leading a comfortable life with his wife and two children, ends up swiped by the events. As the old ways are thrown away during the "emergency", another name for a revolution, he tries to find his place in a changing world.
The former losers are becoming leaders, the former interns are becoming directors. George Packer explores skillfully the reshuffling of responsibilities that happens during a revolution. The former figures of authority, who were associated the establishment, are destituted... It leaves a void that has to be filled. Ambitious young people can rise and reinvent new ways of leading. Drunk on utopia, the partisans of the revolution try to find ways of becoming better humans. In the meantime, the ennemies of the city go through their own revolution - one that looks like the rise of fascism. Both systems cannot coexist peacefully.

Nobody is better than the other! The relents of Jante Law, with another name, are the cry of the revolution that agitates the citizens of the Empire. I am quite the supporter of Jante Law actually (as typical in Scandinavia). It was interesting to see the worst fears of the people who dislike this type of society depicted in the novel.

I had trouble going through the Part 1 of The Emergency but really enjoyed it from Part 2 onwards. On top of the revolution, there is an interesting exploration of the relationships between parent and teenage child in this novel. A father and his daughter try to repair their relationship through unprecendented events - and how can you guide your child through the transition to adulthood when the world you knew is collapsing?

Young people may want to burn the old ways to the ground, like the daughter in The Emergency. But what happens when the time comes to breathe through the ashes?

Thank you NetGalley, George Packer and Farrar, Straus and Giroux for the ARC.
I enjoyed reading through this Orwell-meets-Frankenstein novel. Part 1 was weaker in my opinion, and I had to push through - otherwise, I would have given it 5 stars.
138 reviews7 followers
January 1, 2026
Correspondences with the current political scene – the claim, for instance, that an opposing faction eats dogs – make particularly timely George Packer’s dystopian parable, “The Emergency,” in which an old, traditional order has fallen to a new, supposedly more humane order whose governing sentiments are “Togetherness” and the belief that no one is better than anyone else.
In the way of all such would-be Utopias, though, the reality is some distance from the ideal, both externally, where the world is divided into two antagonistic camps, one inside a “city by the river” where professionalism is celebrated, and the other outside the city, where more artisanal pursuits are the reality; and internally, where the supposed egalitarian sentiments have made for a climate where deviation from governing orthodoxy isn’t abided and where “nothing was private anymore.”
Still, not a totally bad situation for the novel’s protagonist, Dr. Rustin, as the book opens, even with the “petty new irritations” the new order makes for him, until, in a stark wake-up call for him of just how intolerant the guiding sentiments have become, he ends up being temporarily relieved of his duties at his hospital for having been insufficiently considerate toward a nurse for having shown what he regards as unprofessional behavior during an operation.
Still not the end of the world for him, his dismissal, with the opportunity it affords him, along with his daughter, Selva, to check on the condition of a boy outside the city limits whose father, a refugee from the outside, says has been seriously injured.
And indeed in such severe straits do they find the boy that Selva, over her father’s objection, leaves him to minister to the boy while she sets off across the “Walking Dead”-like landscape to acquire needed medical supplies, a trek which will bring about a horrific outcome for her as the novel rushes to its sobering conclusion.
Disturbingly dystopian, as I say, the book, with distinct parallels to our own time, though not as absorbing for me, with my not being a big fan of dystopian fiction in general, as it might be for those more taken with the genre.



Profile Image for Stephanie (aka WW).
988 reviews25 followers
July 18, 2025
The Emergency comes on an ordinary late spring day and changes everything for the City-based Burghers and their rural/agricultural counterparts, the Yeomen. What was once a cooperative existence has turned into a violent conflict. The young have taken over in a movement called Together with rousing slogans such as “Listen to the young”, “Everyone belongs” and “You shall be as gods”.

The story mostly follows Dr. Hugo Rustin, who is trying to get his bearings in the rapidly-changing world. As he struggles to find his place in the new order, Dr. Rustin faces challenges within his own household; his teenage daughter Selva has enthusiastically joined Together with a vision toward improving society beyond that of her father’s generation. When Dr. Rustin hears of an injured Yeoman boy who is lost in the countryside, he leaves his familiar environment to find him. His daughter joins him on his journey and thus begins the heart of the novel, which examines the relationship between the two and their encounters with the forces that strive to lead in the new order.

I enjoyed the world-building of this book and followed the narrative closely as it grew more and more intense. However, I would have liked to have known more about the Burghers and the Yeomen (and the Strangers), maybe with a chapter or two up front about society before the Emergency (the little-mentioned Empire). I also struggled a little to understand the Yeoman movement, especially the faction led by Little Cronk. I understand, though, that it may have been the goal of the author to show that there would be no little degree of chaos in the face of vast changes in society. This book would appeal to those who like messy, violent dystopian narratives like Octavia Butler’s Parable books.
Profile Image for Jess Reads.
225 reviews3 followers
November 10, 2025
Thank you to Macmillan Audio for the advanced listener copy of this dystopian novel.

I could not stop listening to this one. It really hits the ground running and never stops. This is definitely a work that I will reread in the future.

This political allegory really sheds light on how easily people can become complacent with wrong doing in times of political turmoil by just trying to get through each individual day. You see how easily someone can be indoctrinated into a belief system just to save their way of life through the lense of our charcters. The story is extremely relevant to the current situation in the United States, drawing many parallels.

In the beginning, this reads like an anti-socialism manifesto, but stick with it. The author does an excellent job of showing the wrongs of all the political factions throughout the story, leaving no stones unturned. He does such a good job, that by the end you are left with a feeling of hopelessness for the future. Despite these feelings of despair, I immediately wanted to read this again after finishing.

I definitely recommend this insightful and well written dystopian novel and can't wait to see more work in this genre from this author.
Profile Image for Sofia.
851 reviews21 followers
November 28, 2025
In the end this book hits a bit closer to home… I saw so many things that are in a way taking place in our world today. But let me dive into what the story was, we mostly follow 3 people on the book Rustin, his wife and his daughter, but mostly Rustin, and he is a man that saw his world change from day to night very quickly and almost without realizing, and how those changes also transformed his world and even his own relationship with himself and others…

I really like dystopian stories where the main character feels wronged and tries to work his way around what is happening with him and the others around him, so that is a plus in my review, Russel had a true journey in what the emergency meant for him and for society around him. My main critic is that the book ends in a very open note, because anything can happen. And I can appreciate more the cover, after finishing the book and to understand what I mean you need to grab a copy and read for yourself.

Thank you Netgalley and Farrar, Straus and Giroux, for the free ARC and this is my honest opinion.

not related with Netgalley, i also listened to the audiobook, and i must say that the person reading it did a great job, and that made the experience even more worthwhile for me.
Profile Image for Melissa Levis.
70 reviews2 followers
November 29, 2025
The Emergency was an interesting exercise in speculative fiction. The question? What happens when an empire falls? George Packer’s answer… well, that’s kind of a trip.

The main premise: The society wakes up one day to a government that just gives up. Yup, that’s it. No crazy revolution or anything, they were bored.

The ride this novel took me on was at times turbulent, tense and even amusing. This piece is dripping in satire & allegory. Sometimes even to the point where it seems Packer isn’t even trying that hard to give symbols. Some of these circumstances straight up made me grin (not a bad thing.). It creatively examines the divides between class, culture and generations. And further dissects what each “should” do for each other.

The meat of the book takes place on a journey shared by father and teenage daughter, who are of course not seeing eye-to-eye. There was never a prediction as to what would happen next, and that helped make this one a dystopian page turner.

Read this if…
You're a fan of the classic dystopian/speculative works like 1984 and the Handmaid’s Tale.
You want to read a tale about a society crash out, that in many ways mirrors the modern United States.

Thank you to Netgalley and Farrar, Straus and Giroux for the advanced ecopy.
Profile Image for Scott.
270 reviews1 follower
December 23, 2025
Known more for his non-fiction work, George Packer starts off a little shaky in his novel. "The Emergency." His depiction of the collapse of civilization and separation into three distinct foes -- the Burghers, Yeoman, and Strangers -- feels too on the nose, leaving little room for subtlety.

However, the satirical parable finds its footing in the relationship between Dr. Hugo Rustin and his 14-year-old daughter, Selva. As they set out on a humanitarian mission to contested territory, Huge wrestles with his irrelevance in a society that no longer honors titles and distinction. Selva tries to find a new identity after academics have been rendered obsolete, struggling to interpret the principles of Together, the new society's loosely defined collection of beliefs and principles.

As the novel progresses, the writing becomes less heavy-handed, though there are some significant plot holes. "The Emergency" adopts a better pace in the final chapters, upping the tension and more deftly depicting the class and intergenerational conflicts.

Packer is at his best when he is obliquely commenting on the ripple effects of AI and the dissolution of government, and this work is a worthy entry to the canon of dystopian fiction that reflects our current moment.
Profile Image for Jensen McCorkel.
431 reviews3 followers
May 22, 2025
We follow Dr. Hugo Rustin, a disgraced surgeon, he has a teenage daughter (Selva), a young son (Pen) and his estranged wife (Annabelle). We accompany them as they navigate life after the collapse of the empire. What was once was the norm is no more. Traditional ways have fallen, and new ideas are beginning to emerge. From all this, conflict erupts between the Burghers and the Yeomen.

Radical ideas and political turmoil. This novel makes us question conformity, societal norms, politics and their role in an ever changing world where power seems more important then human connection. Where assimilation is more important then individuality. At least until its not. What happens after its collapse? How would you survive in a world that is evolving so quickly.

From the beginning you can see just how well written this novel is. The imagery and world creation is up there with some of the best. So vivid it was easy to envision, like a movie playing in your head.

Overall so complex and well done. An amazing read, especially during these turbulent times.
Profile Image for Ashley Prunier.
15 reviews1 follower
August 2, 2025
The Emergency tells the tale of a family living through divisive political turmoil. In a setting where there is no real formal law and order, several characters must decide where they stand on important issues that fit with the majority’s ideas or go against the grain and form their own moral compass. Hopefully no one comes for me for saying this but I found the author’s writing style to be similar to Ray Bradbury or Kurt Vonnegut in the sense that the message within the story is not very clear cut and you have to read a bit between the lines to draw a conclusion. With that being said, I think this story tries to challenge what one defines as good or bad, and if doing bad things makes someone a bad person regardless of context. It also highlights some other topics that I think are important in the current day and age such as herd mentality, fear mongering, otherness, and artificial intelligence. Overall, I enjoyed this book and I would like to read more from this author in the future. Thank you to the publisher and NetGalley for the e-ARC.
Profile Image for em.
130 reviews
December 1, 2025
Firstly, let me thank all parties involved for giving me an ARC of this book.

Secondly, I'd like to call this an absolute mind-bender. I'm convinced "The Emergency" should be mass distributed to book clubs with mandatory discussion participation.

I went in blind, hardly remembering snippets of the work's description, and got sucked in with each turned page. Despite a slow start, the further you venture, the more unsettled you become by all that's happening. The Emergency promises a fresh start and a better world led by the young, yet as I continued reading, I noticed subtle nods at Orwell's "Animal Farm". The discomfort and uncertainty grew.

I can't say the plot surprised me, and neither did the ending. I believe that says a lot about the unconscious understanding many of us have of these kinds of regimes and how easily an idealistic concept turns into a nightmare.

Hats off to Packer, this book prompted me to have more debates in my mind than I've had in a long time. I might even dissect the work further in a blog article (remains to be seen).
Profile Image for Yari.
294 reviews29 followers
November 18, 2025
The Emergency by George Packer (book cover is in image) echoes of Animal Farm and 1984 by George Orwell, and the current US political landscape. It examines how a younger generation rejects the elite and middle class ideals in order to create new landscape of inclusion and success for the Strangers (the poor and disenfranchised) only to reveal that it is no different than the Burghers (the elite class) and the Yeoman (the working class).

The narration by Billie Fulford-Brown was well done, bringing these characters to life, and creating an engaging experience, so much so, that I abandoned the physical book and ultimately ended up completing it in audio.

Thank you @macmillan.audio, @fsgbooks, and @netgalley for the opportunity to listen to the ALC and read the ARC. All opinions are my own.

Pub Date: Nov 11 2025
Rating: 4 Stars

#MacmillanAudio
#FarrarStrausandGiroux
#TheEmergency
#GeorgePacker
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Profile Image for Brian Mikołajczyk.
1,093 reviews12 followers
December 19, 2025
An unspecified political emergency dubbed "The Emergency" has occurred and society has broken down.
The urban burghers who live in the city have organized into self-orgs and created a movement called Together; the movement is ran by children. Hierarchy both politically and professionally has been dismantled. The rural yeoman live in near anarchy outside the cities and are starving out the cities by not providing food.
Rustin is a chief doctor at a hospital and is kicked out because he has strict procedures during surgery (as is required) which the new order does not like.
However he hears of a stranger--a foreigner that's not from the area; neither a burgher or a yeoman--in yeoman lands that has a gangrenous foot that needs help. He seeks to help this youth and travel outside the city limits into the unknown with his daughter.

The allegory to modern issues is very loose; yes there is unsurmountable political division themes in the book but overall it was meh.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
26 reviews4 followers
April 15, 2025
4.5 stars

Let me say upfront that some of the best speculative fiction is often written by authors that we don't usually associate with science fiction. Packer proves my suspicion. He has the scholarly chops to offer us an intelligent political allegory. It's not clunky, nor are the characters mere mouthpieces but overall it felt like a philosophy of history set to story. Something, that I personally enjoy. It's prescient. Emergency is captivating in the sense of slowing down for a car wreck. This is my way of warning you that sometimes reading this novel felt a little too close to the mark. So let me ask, do you enjoy reading about people trying to live through Imperial Melancholy--that Ozymandias time of long autumnal shadows when an empire’s best days are well behind her? If so dear reader this is the novel for you.
Profile Image for Reader Ray.
262 reviews4 followers
October 26, 2025
The Emergency
George Packer



Date of Publication: November 11, 2025

ARC courtesy of FSG and NetGalley


The Emergency is a dystopian novel that tells us what happens when an empire falls. An unspecified Emergency leads to the collapse of a society, abandonment of systems of order, and fractionation between the urban elite Burghers and rural Yeomen.

George Packer presents us with a jolting allegory of current events, with growing class fractionation and generational conflicts. Amidst this brewing turmoil of ideological clashes is Dr. Hugo Rastin and his daughter Selva, in a quixotic quest to find meaning and hope amidst the chaos.

The Emergency is immersive and thought-provoking, and will linger long after the last page.

In fact, you will be reminded of it every time you read the news.


Profile Image for India Dwyer.
168 reviews3 followers
November 16, 2025
**2.5 stars**

I found Packer’s writing style and use of metaphor in The Emergency particularly engaging, and the setting resonated strongly in a post-COVID world.

That said, the pacing occasionally felt uneven—something I don’t typically notice or mind—and I felt the characters could have been introduced with greater depth to foster a stronger emotional connection. In some respects, however, this distance seemed purposeful, reinforcing the novel’s themes; if this was an intentional choice by Packer, it was effectively executed.

While I thought the ending was handled well, I ultimately struggled to maintain motivation to continue reading. The limited cohesion and the difficulty I had connecting with the characters reduced my investment in their journeys and, consequently, my interest in discovering what would happen next.
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