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CITY OF ORANGE by David Yoon

CITY OF ORANGE

by David Yoon

Pub Date: May 24th, 2022
ISBN: 978-0-593-42216-8
Publisher: Putnam

A man wakes up alone near an abandoned housing development with no memory of who he is or how he got there.

It’s 2010 in California, and the nameless narrator wakes up in a dried-out riverbed under a concrete bridge. He has a searing headache, the knowledge that he’s living in a post-apocalyptic world, and a bottle of painkillers, but nothing else. He can’t even remember his own name. He slowly figures out how to survive, finding clean water and an abandoned shelter with cans of food. An exploration into the surrounding neighborhood, full of brand-new construction left to rot, results in a terrifying discovery that makes the narrator apprehensive about moving out of his shelter and into an empty house. But one day, a young boy named Clay finds him. Clay is clean and well fed, and though he's reluctant to answer too many questions, he seems confused when the narrator refers to the world being over. As the narrator slowly tries to piece together the mystery of the apocalypse through Clay’s cryptic clues, he also starts to remember his old life, even the parts he wishes could remain forgotten. Yoon’s version of the apocalypse takes a much narrower focus than many in the genre, focusing on community, family, and loss through the narrator’s personal experience. The start may be a little slow going, but as the narrator begins to pick up the pieces of his memory, his own story becomes much more compelling and heartfelt than the end of the world could ever be.

Out of a ruined America, an earnest and affecting character study.