Review: Aestus: Book 1: The City by S. Z. Attwell

Review: Aestus: Book 1: The City by S. Z. Attwell

Aestus: Book I: The City (book cover)
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Description (from Amazon.com)

An underground city, built centuries ago to ride out the devastating heat. A society under attack. And a young solar engineer whose skills may be the key to saving her city…if she doesn’t get herself killed first.

When Jossey was ten, the creatures of the aboveground took her brother and left her for dead, with horrible scars. Now, years later, she’s a successful solar engineer, working to keep her underground city’s power running, but she’s never really recovered. After she saves dozens of people during a second attack, she is offered a top-secret assignment as a field Engineer with Patrol, but fear prevents her from taking it…until Patrol finds bones near where her brother disappeared.

She signs on and finds herself catapulted into a world that is far more dangerous, and requires far more of her, than she ever imagined. The creatures and the burning heat aboveground are not the only threats facing the City, and what she learns during her assignment could cost her her life: one of the greatest threats to the City may in fact lie within. With thousands of lives at stake, can she act in time?

Aestus is an adult dystopian science-fiction series set centuries after climate change has ravaged much of Earth. An epic story of vengeance, power, shifting loyalties, and survival that looks at just how far people will go to protect what they love, brought to you by science writer S.Z. Attwell, Aestus paints a picture of a world in which far too little has changed.


5 stars

My Thoughts

Cli-Fi, or climate fiction, is not new to the world of literature. Jules Verne’s 1889 novel The Purchase of the North Pole is the earliest example I know of. However, cli-fi has seen an uptick in offerings over the past decade. Typically, cli-fi sticks to near future timelines with a distinct dystopian feel. Some novels, however, take us centuries into the future and employ unique engineering or adaptation methods to allow the characters to exist in the first place.

S. Z. Attwell’s Aestus: Book 1: The City is one of those books. Set long after a climate disaster that has left the surface of our planet incredibly difficult to inhabit, the story focuses on a solar engineer turned Patrol named Jossey Sokol and her discovery of the true threats to the society.

Primarily told from Jossey’s point of view, the story successfully weaves political intrigue, mystery, science fact, science fiction, classism, betrayal, action and even romance together in order to bring us into the City and beyond. This is a drama, a cli-fi that sometimes feels as operatic as Dune or Foundation. And while those two novels are set in a place far removed from Earth, Aestus: Book 1: The City is set here, and that makes it all the more possible…and very similar to the world of today.

To pull off so many elements of fiction in one book takes a lot of pages (700 or so), but the writing is smooth, without too much superfluous narration. Attwell does an outstanding job. It is easy to digest and engaging as I thought about how the present is exposed in this novel’s future. While it does end on a cliffhanger, Aestus: Book 1: The City does not leave us wondering about much. All in all, S. Z. Attwell’s novel is a fitting entry into the cli-fi library, and I look forward to reading Book 2.

Available at Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Aestus-Book-S-Z-Attwell-ebook/dp/B08FD6TVLJ


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