Bannerless
2017 • 272 pages

Ratings16

Average rating3.6

15

I first fell in love with Carrie Vaughn's work with the Kitty Norville series - a werewolf named Kitty who ran a late-night radio show. Kitty and the Midnight Hour. (Both the name of her show and the first book.) So when I discovered she'd starting writing a dystopia that revolved heavily around reproductive rights, I was SO ON BOARD. Bannerless and The Wild Dead are the first two books of the Bannerless saga. And they're GREAT. They're technically murder mysteries set in a dystopian society; Enid, our main character, is an investigator, the closest thing this society has to police.

The dystopia part of the society involves epidemics and natural disasters nearly eradicating humanity; with so few people left and less of the earth habitable, they've regressed to a mostly agrarian society. Farmers, weavers, hunters. To keep the population from exploding past the land's ability to feed it, birth rates are strictly controlled. As civilization was falling, people realized birth rates were going to be massively important, and the birth control implant, and the technology to make it, was one thing they managed to save. They also have solar-powered cars, lights, and flashlights, though they're uncommon enough to be notable.

I find it a little improbable that they still have the tech to make the implants; they say that before the supplies from “before the Fall” ran out, the medics figured out how to make the hormone from “what they had on hand” - but - I feel like a more interesting plot point would be that they're running out of implants, and how the society would have to deal with that changing. But that is not the case, at least not in the first two books.

Regardless of how improbable the birth control issue is, the rest of the plot is pretty good. There's a good mix of salvaged goods and subsistence farming; of new houses built in low-tech ways and the occasional ruins from Before the Fall. They have some books and records of what it was like, and Enid often wishes she had the tools that forensic investigators had, Before. Fingerprints, and DNA, though she doesn't call it DNA. They don't have cameras, she has to sketch crime scenes and take notes.

I really enjoyed both books; Carrie Vaughn's writing style is wonderful to read. The first book rambles a little bit, but while some of it doesn't seem necessary for the first book, it's important for the second. I'll definitely be following this series.

You can find all my reviews at Goddess in the Stacks.

September 15, 2018Report this review