When the Earth starts spinning just a bit faster, three people from a small Alaska town find their lives intertwined with each other's and the fate of the planet.
Foster's debut novel has grand ambitions, which are made intimate through a close examination of the characters at its core. Twenty-year-old Tanner wants to escape Keber Creek, a town of 900 people, and especially his father, so he reaches out to a fellow Keber Creek native, Victor Bickle, a former Columbia professor of mechanical engineering, for advice. Tanner quickly finds himself working as Bickle’s assistant at the Circumglobal Westward Circuit Group, where Bickle has parlayed his internet success into a job as host of the company’s new series, Professor Bickle’s Science Hour, where he bounces between acting as a spokesperson and scientist. The days are growing shorter, though, and opponents of CWC suggest that its pioneering travel program, which can jet people across the world in less than an hour, is the root cause. The clear connection between hyperspeed travel and rapidly shortening days is clear to activists across the globe, and it’s a cause taken up by 15-year-old Winnie, another Keber Creek resident, as a way to make friends during a lonely high school experience. She and her friends protest this pursuit of profit over global stability, and her world slowly begins to find its way to Tanner and Bickle’s, with Foster artfully weaving their stories together. Winnie spends much of the book desperately pondering her existence in relation to her mother, who haunts the novel like a ghost after trying to take her own life, unlikely to emerge from her coma. She was looking, explains Foster, “to deny that she was in this world deeply and truly without a reason.” While a definitive reason never arrives, Winnie might take heed of one of Tanner’s observations during the novel’s waning pages: “In Greek, ‘apocalypse’ means an uncovering or unveiling; it means something brought into view.”
Equal parts ambitious and intimate, with enough humanity and empathy to keep weighty themes from swallowing it whole.