Dreamland
An Evening Standard 'Best New Book' of 2021
by Rosa Rankin-Gee
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Pub Date 1 May 2021 | Archive Date 17 Mar 2021
Simon and Schuster UK | Scribner UK
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Description
In the coastal resort of Margate, hotels lie empty and sun-faded ‘For Sale’ signs line the streets. The sea is higher – it’s higher everywhere – and those who can are moving inland. A young girl called Chance, however, is just arriving.
Chance’s family is one of many offered a cash grant to move out of London - and so she, her mother Jas and brother JD relocate to the seaside, just as the country edges towards vertiginous change.
In their new home, they find space and wide skies, a world away from the cramped bedsits they’ve lived in up until now. But challenges swiftly mount. JD’s business partner, Kole, has a violent, charismatic energy that whirlpools around him and threatens to draw in the whole family. And when Chance comes across Franky, a girl her age she has never seen before – well-spoken and wearing sunscreen – something catches in the air between them. Their fates are bound: a connection that is immediate, unshakeable, and, in a time when social divides have never cut sharper, dangerous.
Set in a future unsettlingly close to home, against a backdrop of soaring inequality and creeping political extremism, Rankin-Gee demonstrates, with cinematic pace and deep humanity, the enduring power of love and hope in a world spinning out of control.
Available Editions
EDITION | Other Format |
ISBN | 9781471193811 |
PRICE | US$20.00 (USD) |
PAGES | 480 |
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Featured Reviews
Set in the near future, the seas are rising and those who can afford to have abandoned the once popular coastal resort of Margate. But, with memories of happier times in the town and little other choice, Chance’s mother Jas takes up a cash offer to relocate there from London. For a while Chance and her brother JD live a chaotic but relatively cheerful life against a backdrop drugs, booze, casual sex and poverty. As things deteriorate on both a personal level and for those left in Margate in general, Chance finds happiness with Franky, a girl from across the ever-widening social divide.
That is, until the dark reality of the LandSave scheme kicks in and things get a whole lot worse.
Dreamland was inspired by actual and considered Government policies and paints a vivid and all too believable picture of what happens when social deprivation and climate change meet political extremism and ruthless self-preservation.
Often bleak and violent, there’s also a great deal of love – romantic, familial, between friends… and for Margate itself. It’s a striking novel of hope against the odds.