It looks like you've stumbled upon a page meant to be read by our code instead of viewed directly. You're probably looking for this page.

  1. Book Reviews
  2. Foreword Reviews
  3. Translations / Literary

Just after the Wave

Not to up your anxiety about climate change? But: read Just after the Wave, Sandrine Collette’s postapocalyptic novel. The cli-fi thriller follows a large French family’s plans for escape as a tsunami and endless rounds of “demented weather” threaten to swallow up their mountaintop home.

Told largely from the viewpoints of the mother, Madie, and the eleven-year-old middle child, Louie, the novel unfolds as one heartwrenching, disastrous event after another. The parents realize that their house, though well provisioned with food, fresh water, and a flock of chickens, will soon vanish underwater. Their rowboat is their only shot for safety, but it will only hold eight. The parents slip away at night, leaving three kids behind with a note, hoping to rescue them later.

Louie, one of the abandoned children, is a fascinating character study. He is a sensitive, intuitive, and resourceful survivor who works through the pain and stupor of his parents’ betrayal to keep his diminished family alive and safe from an onslaught of nightmarish events.

Madie is also a fascinating and textured personality, her thoughts dissected as she reacts to harrowing levels of stress with a torrent of mingled guilt, horror, and numbness. Just when things become unbearable, Madie finds the strength to push through, even while her flaws and ambivalence about motherhood are apparent.

Beautiful, soaring prose captures the emotional intensity. When Louie and his siblings read their parents’ note, it “crumpled their faces and stopped their hearts”; fear “keeps them sprawled in their beds, arms outspread, crucified.”

Just after the Wave is an engrossing fable in which families and societies unravel and are refashioned. Sandrine Collette ratchets up the exquisite tension with each chapter, her dystopian world horrible to contemplate though it contains shining moments of hope and love.

Reviewed by Rachel Jagareski

Disclosure: This article is not an endorsement, but a review. The publisher of this book provided free copies of the book to have their book reviewed by a professional reviewer. No fee was paid by the publisher for this review. Foreword Reviews only recommends books that we love. Foreword Magazine, Inc. is disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255.

Load Next Review

Book Reviews