Station Eleven
Station Eleven book cover

Station Eleven

Paperback – June 2, 2015

Price
$13.60
Format
Paperback
Pages
352
Publisher
Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0804172448
Dimensions
5.16 x 0.77 x 7.99 inches
Weight
8.8 ounces

Description

A National Book Award Finalistxa0• A PEN/Faulkner Award Finalist • One of the Best Books of the Year: The Washington Post, San Francisco Chronicle, Chicago Tribune, Buzzfeed, and Entertainment Weekly,xa0Time, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, Minnesota Public Radio , The Huffington Post , BookPage, Time Out, BookRiot “ Station Eleven is so compelling, so fearlessly imagined, that I wouldn’t have put it down for anything.” —Ann Patchettxa0“A superb novel . . . [that] leaves us not fearful for the end of the word but appreciative of the grace of everyday existence.” — San Francisco Chronicle “Deeply melancholy, but beautifully written, and wonderfully elegiac . . . A book that I will long remember, and return to.” —George R. R. Martin“Absolutely extraordinary.” —Erin Morgenstern, author of The Night Circus “Darkly lyrical. . . .xa0A truly haunting book, one that is hard to put down." — Thexa0Seattle Times “Tender and lovely. . . . Equal parts page-turner and poem.”— Entertainment Weekly “Mesmerizing.” — People “Mandel delivers a beautifully observed walk through her book’s 21st century world…. I kept putting the book down, looking around me, and thinking, ‘Everything is a miracle.’”—Matt Thompson, NPRxa0xa0 “Magnificent.” — Booklist “My book of the year.”—Karen Joy Fowler, author of We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves “Unmissable. . . .xa0A literary page-turner, impeccably paced, which celebrates the world lost.” — Vulture “Haunting and riveting.”— Milwaukee Journal Sentinel “ Station Eleven is the kind of book that speaks to dozens of the readers in me—the Hollywood devotee, the comic book fan, the cult junkie, the love lover, the disaster tourist. It is a brilliant novel, and Emily St. John Mandel is astonishing.”xa0—Emma Straub, author of The Vacationers “Think of Cormac McCarthy seesawing with Joan Didion. . . .xa0Magnetic.”xa0 — Kirkus (starred)“Even if you think dystopian fiction is not your thing, I urge you to give this marvelous novel a try. . . . [An] emotional and thoughtful story.” —Deborah Harkness, author of The Book of Life “It’s hard to imagine a novel more perfectly suited, in both form and content, to this literary moment. Station Eleven, if we were to talk about it in our usual way, would seem like a book that combines high culture and low culture—“literary fiction” and “genre fiction.” But those categories aren’t really adequate to describe the book” — The New Yorker “Audacious. . . . A book about gratitude, about life right now, if we can live to look back on it." — Minneapolis Star-Tribune “A surprisingly beautiful story of human relationships amid devastation.” — The Washington Post “Soul-quaking. . . . Mandel displays the impressive skill of evoking both terror and empathy.” — Los Angeles Review of Books “A genuinely unsettling dystopian novel that also allows for moments of great tenderness. Emily St. John Mandel conjures indelible visuals, and her writing is pure elegance.” —Patrick deWitt, author of The Sisters Brothers “Possibly the most captivating and thought-provoking post-apocalyptic novel you will ever read.” — The Independent (London)“A firework of a novel . . . full of life and humanity and the aftershock of memory.”xa0—Lauren Beukes, author of The Shining Girls “One of the best things I’ve read on the ability of art to endure in a good long while.” —Tobias Carroll, Electric Literature “Will change the post-apocalyptic genre. . . . This isn’t a story about survival, it’s a story about living.” — Boston Herald “A big, brilliant, ambitious, genre-bending novel. . . . Hands-down one of my favorite books of the year.” —Sarah McCarry, Tor.com “Strange, poetic, thrilling, and grim all at once, Station Eleven is a prismatic tale about survival, unexpected coincidences, and the significance of art.” — Bustle, “Best Book of the Month”“Disturbing, inventive and exciting, Station Eleven left me wistful for a world where I still live.”xa0—Jessie Burton, author of The Miniaturist EMILY ST. JOHN MANDEL's five previous novels include The Glass Hotel and Station Eleven, which was a finalist for a National Book Award and the PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction and has been translated into thirty-five languages. She lives in New York City. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Jeevan’s understanding of disaster preparedness was based entirely on action movies, but on the other hand, he’d seen a lot of action movies. He started with water, filled one of the oversized shopping carts with as many cases and bottles as he could fit. There was a moment of doubt on the way to the cash registers, straining against the weight of the cart—was he overreacting?—but there was a certain momentum now, too late to turn back. The clerk raised an eyebrow but said nothing. xa0“I’m parked just outside,” he said. “I’ll bring the cart back.” The clerk nodded, tired. She was young, early twenties probably, with dark bangs that she kept pushing out of her eyes. He forced the impossibly heavy cart outside and half-pushed, half-skidded through the snow at the exit. There was a long ramp down into a small park-like arrangement of benches and planters. The cart gained speed on the incline, bogged down in deep snow at the bottom of the ramp and slid sideways into a planter. It was eleven twenty. The supermarket closed in forty minutes. He was imagining how long it would take to bring the cart up to Frank’s apartment, to unload it, the time required for tedious explanations and reassurances of sanity before he could return to the grocery store for more supplies. Could there be any harm in leaving the cart here for the moment? There was no one on the street. He called Hua on his way back into the store. xa0“What’s happening now?” He moved quickly through the store while Hua spoke. Another case of water—Jeevan was under the impression that one can never have too much—and then cans and cans of food, all the tuna and beans and soup on the shelf, pasta, anything that looked like it might last a while. The hospital was full of flu patients and the situation was identical at the other hospitals in the city. The ambulance service was overwhelmed. Thirty-seven patients had died now, including every patient who’d been on the Moscow flight and two E.R. nurses who’d been on duty when the first patients came in. The shopping cart was almost unmanageably heavy. Hua said he’d called his wife and told her to take the kids and leave the city tonight, but not by airplane. Jeevan was standing by the cash register again, the clerk scanning his cans and packages. The part of the evening that had transpired in the Elgin Theatre seemed like possibly a different lifetime. The clerk was moving very slowly. Jeevan passed her a credit card and she scrutinized it as though she hadn’t just seen it five or ten minutes ago.xa0“Take Laura and your brother,” Hua said, “and leave the city tonight.” xa0 “I can’t leave the city tonight, not with my brother. I can’t rent a wheelchair van at this hour.”xa0In response there was only a muffled sound. Hua was coughing.xa0 “Are you sick?” Jeevan was pushing the cart toward the door. xa0“Goodnight, Jeevan.” Hua disconnected and Jeevan was alone in the snow. He felt possessed. The next cart was all toilet paper. The cart after that was more canned goods, also frozen meat and aspirin, garbage bags, bleach, duct tape.xa0“I work for a charity,” he said to the girl behind the cash register, his third or fourth time through, but she wasn’t paying much attention to him. She kept glancing up at the small television above the film development counter, ringing his items through on autopilot. Jeevan called Laura on his sixth trip through the store, but his call went to voicemail. xa0“Laura,” he began. “Laura.” He thought it better to speak to her directly and it was already almost eleven fifty, there wasn’t time for this. Filling the cart with more food, moving quickly through this bread-and-flower-scented world, this almost-gone place, thinking of Frank in his 22nd floor apartment, high up in the snowstorm with his insomnia and his book project, his day-old New York Times and his Beethoven. Jeevan wanted desperately to reach him. He decided to call Laura later, changed his mind and called the home line while he was standing by the checkout counter, mostly because he didn’t want to make eye contact with the clerk. xa0“Jeevan, where are you?” She sounded slightly accusatory. He handed over his credit card. xa0“Are you watching the news?”xa0“Should I be?”“There’s a flu epidemic, Laura. It’s serious.”“That thing in Russia or wherever? I knew about that.”“It’s here now. It’s worse than we’d thought. I’ve just been talking to Hua. You have to leave the city.” He glanced up in time to see the look the checkout girl gave him. “ Have to? What? Where are you, Jeevan?” He was signing his name on the slip, struggling with the cart toward the exit, where the order of the store ended and the frenzy of the storm began. It was difficult to steer the cart with one hand. There were already five carts parked haphazardly between benches and planters, dusted now with snow. “Just turn on the news, Laura.”“You know I don’t like to watch the news before bed. Are you having an anxiety attack?”“What? No. I’m going to my brother’s place to make sure he’s okay.”“Why wouldn’t he be?”“You’re not even listening. You never listen to me.” Jeevan knew this was probably a petty thing to say in the face of a probable flu pandemic, but couldn’t resist. He plowed the cart into the others and dashed back into the store. “I can’t believe you left me at the theatre,” he said. “You just left me at the theatre performing CPR on a dead actor.”“Jeevan, tell me where you are.”“I’m in a grocery store.” It was eleven fifty-five. This last cart was all grace items: vegetables, fruit, bags of oranges and lemons, tea, coffee, crackers, salt, preserved cakes. “Look, Laura, I don’t want to argue. This flu’s serious, and it’s fast.”xa0“What’s fast?”“This flu, Laura. It’s really fast. Hua told me. It’s spreading so quickly. I think you should get out of the city.” At the last moment, he added a bouquet of daffodils. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • NATIONAL BESTSELLER
  • • NATIONAL BOOK AWARD FINALIST
  • • A PEN/FAULKNER AWARD FINALIST • Set in the eerie days of civilization’s collapse—the spellbinding story of a Hollywood star, his would-be savior, and a nomadic group of actors roaming the scattered outposts of the Great Lakes region, risking everything for art and humanity. • Now an original series on HBO Max. • Over one million copies sold!
  • Kirsten Raymonde will never forget the night Arthur Leander, the famous Hollywood actor, had a heart attack on stage during a production of
  • King Lear
  • . That was the night when a devastating flu pandemic arrived in the city, and within weeks, civilization as we know it came to an end. Twenty years later, Kirsten moves between the settlements of the altered world with a small troupe of actors and musicians. They call themselves The Traveling Symphony, and they have dedicated themselves to keeping the remnants of art and humanity alive. But when they arrive in St. Deborah by the Water, they encounter a violent prophet who will threaten the tiny band’s existence. And as the story takes off, moving back and forth in time, and vividly depicting life before and after the pandemic, the strange twist of fate that connects them all will be revealed.
  • Look for Emily St. John Mandel’s bestselling new novel,
  • Sea of Tranquility
  • !

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(18.3K)
★★★★
25%
(15.2K)
★★★
15%
(9.1K)
★★
7%
(4.3K)
23%
(14K)

Most Helpful Reviews

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This book makes you feel like you'll eventually get to somewhere important

This book makes you feel like you'll eventually get to somewhere important. But you never do. The story, like so many well-reviewed books these days, has no point. There's no heart or moral. It drifts, as though the author themself lost interest while writing it. You wait and wait to find out why the various characters' lives are connected. You wait for that point in stories like these where the individual stories merge into a satisfying ah-ha moment where you finally put the pieces together and understand where the story had been taking you. You never reach that point here. This is a very unsatisfying story.
476 people found this helpful
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This got published?

The 'narrative' in this book has a very distinctive style. I'm not sure what to call it, but I can describe it as follows:

The author sent a long text message to her agent in which she used voice-to-text. This text message was long and kind of rambling; sometimes seeming more like a stream of consciousness. It changes verb tenses. Sometimes no verbs at all. When the agent got the text, she didn't really have time to read the whole thing, because she was in a grocery store buying bottled water. It was late a night. It was snowing. So, she called the author to ask what she wanted to do with it. The author said, "Print it. Sell it."
60 people found this helpful
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What is the point?

All this does is flip flop between a life that I couldn't possibly care less about and a group of people I couldn't be less interested in. Aside from the myriad plot issues, the story itself is just a yawn. There is no great revelation. Even if there had been, it wouldn't have been worth the slog it took to get to it. I really need to do a better job of researching books before I spend real money on them. I wouldn't have read this if it had been free at a garage sale had I known, but after buying it I felt obligated. Awful book, just awwwful.
60 people found this helpful
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Read this book now. It's so relevant.

Station Eleven
Emily St. John Mandel

Imagine a world where the libraries and bookstores are closed. No theatres, concerts or films. Singing and laughing together can be deadly. Wait… we don’t need to imagine it. We’re living in this world now. There are so many parallels between the world of Station Eleven, and the present day Covid 19 pandemic, except the pandemic in the novel spreads even faster and is inevitably fatal. Victims die within two days of getting sick. So, it could be worse. This fictional pandemic manages to wipe out 99.9% of Earth’s population, more or less. There’s no way to be sure of the statistics because there’s no internet, or gas, or electricity. Small bands of survivors find each other, and sometimes form settlements, sometimes murder each other. The people who are interested in rebuilding a nonviolent civilization sometimes need to kill in self-defense, in attempts to save their friends or themselves, and their vision of a better, peaceful, productive life.
The story begins before most people are aware of this deadly virus. Jeevan, a former paparazzi photographer, and paramedic in training, receives a phone call from a friend, warning him to stock up on groceries, and hide away in quarantine. He listens to his friend’s advice, and tries to warn his girlfriend, who replies, “It’ll be like SARS…They made such a big deal about it, then it blew over so fast.” Sound familiar? Seems to me that I heard someone say, “When the warm weather arrives, the Corona Virus will just disappear.” It hasn’t yet; after seven months we still have no vaccine and people are still dying. It’s August, it’s been warm for more than two months now, and the virus is still going strong.
The story, like everyone’s life, is divided into chapters that take place before and after the pandemic. Kirsten, a young actress who was eight years old when the virus struck doesn’t remember much about her early life. After the pandemic, as an adult, she’s part of a traveling Shakespearean theatre troupe. They travel from “town” to “town” with a small orchestra, giving performances and concerts. “Because survival is insufficient.” – a quote from Star Trek that’s repeated throughout the novel, and is painted on the side of the players’ horse-drawn van. It’s their motto, their words to live by. Shakespeare’s life and career were also defined by and shaped by the plague. The Globe Theatre was often closed due to the disease. “Plague closed the theaters again and again, death flickering over the landscape.” Shakespeare lost people he loved and understood how death can strike fast, hot and sharp like a bolt of lightning. “Hell is the absence of the people you long for.” Tell me about it. I haven’t seen one of my daughters for a full year, but at least she’s still alive, and there’s a strong possibility we’ll be able to spend time together soon. I’ve visited my ninety-year-old father once in seven months, just last week. Yesterday, his assisted living facility went back into lockdown. The CEO tested positive for Covid. Again, and again, the characters of Station Eleven, their lives, thoughts, and dialogue resonate with me.
Along with the lives of Kirsten and Javeen, another common thread holds the narrative together: a science fiction graphic novel, titled Station Eleven, created by Miranda, an artist. The fictional Dr. Eleven has also survived an apocalypse. He lives on a spaceship called Station Eleven, that’s disguised as an island, and says, “I stood looking over my damaged home and tried to forget the sweetness of life on Earth.” Kirsten, one of the main characters has forgotten, defensively blocked out, a memory of her life on the road when she was still a child. She also has difficulty remembering happier times. Kirsten has the only known copy of Station Eleven and its sequel, The Pursuit. She has memorized all of the text. “We long only to go home…We have been lost for so long…We long only for the world we were born into.” At one point in the story, these words buy her time and save her life.
Groups of people have banded together and formed townships. One of them has a school, a library and a museum. There’s a debate about whether or not the school children should learn about history, the way civilization was before they were born. Do they need to picture what life was like when you could connect to other humans across vast distances via cellphones and computers, to travel in cars, and even airplanes?
In their quest to reach this unusually evolved civilization, the Shakespearean theatre troupe and orchestra meet a vicious, homicidal Doomsday cult with a prophet who spouts such horrific nonsense that no one can logically argue with him.
“They tell you they were saved (from the plague) because they’re superior people and free from sin…You just remember your own lost family and either cry or harbor murderous thoughts.”
This prophet actually carries with him a page torn from a copy of Station Eleven.
There is so much to admire and enjoy in this novel. It asks a question that most of us are asking ourselves now: Can we rebuild civilization the way we knew it, only even better?
In most ways, this fictional pandemic and its aftermath are so much more horrific than our present-day pandemic, but in some ways this fictional world is more beautiful. The strength and heroism of the best of the survivors is inspiring to witness.
I loved this book, and won’t stop thinking about it for a long time. I’ve recommended it to all of my friends who read books and like to discuss them, a pastime I’m very fond of, even more-so during this difficult time. “Because survival is insufficient.”
52 people found this helpful
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NOT FOR SCI FI, FANTASY OR POST APOCALYPTIC FANS

I love Science Fiction and Fantasy in all it's forms.
A huge fan of post-apocalyptic survival novels and have been for decades.
I don't know how this book got so many ratings, except I HAVE noted how many of said reviewers are not 'Verified Purchaser".
Heck, I don't know how it got published, I don't see the market.
Nevertheless, large numbers of people seem to like it.
One comment says it reminds her of "The Road" by Cormac Macarthy. There you go. Wondering suicidal depression. Deep and Dark.
With no plot. Minimal story line. Some world building in the devastation would have been interesting.
I review things to warn or recommend other Amazon buyers about the item. I am definitely not a literary critic and apologize to those reviewers who are or expect me to be. Because I pay attention to other reviewers, I haven't wasted my money very often.
I will say that for me, a Sci-Fi Fantasy fan, Station Eleven is a boring, tedious sloooow slog through someones Shakespearean stage acting daydream, with the 'end of the world flu' thrown in to give it the only interest it has.
If you like "The Road", and very dark southern Gothic sorts of novels, this may be for you, but check it out of the library rather than purchase. People seem to love this book, or hate it.
Not recommended by me. Don't waste your money.
22 people found this helpful
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A novel about beauty and hope

My love for this beautiful novel has a lot to do with Mandel's restrained focus on the world of the imagination. She could have chosen to play up the dystopian horrors of her post-apocalyptic setting, but instead she's written a novel about beauty and hope, those precious and insubstantial things that keep us from sleepwalking through our lives.

In the opening scene, fake snow falls inside a theater, and a girl named Kristin watches in shock as the actor playing King Lear dies onstage. Outside the theater, another storm is brewing, and days later a flu pandemic has brought civilization to a state of collapse. Kristin somehow survives over the years to join a traveling theater company, taking refuge from the impossible horrors of her existence by entering the magical forest realm of A Midsummer Night's Dream. For just a few hours each day, the violent world recedes, taking with it her memories and regrets, and she is transformed, becoming Titania, queen of the fairies.

This is a novel with echoes of King Lear, A Midsummer Night's Dream, and (especially) The Tempest. Mandel reminds us that Shakespeare himself was haunted by senseless, early death, having lost several siblings and his own son. The theaters where he performed were periodically shut down by plague. Yet his plays endure, placing us in their dreamlike realms of possibility and hope. In Station Eleven, Mandel creates a world without Internet, libraries, or television. (Not to mention hospitals, electricity, antibiotics, or dentists.) Yet human beings still have a terrific longing for beauty, whether it's a self-published comic book that somehow survived the apocalypse, or a small paperweight with storm clouds brewing inside. Regardless of what they've lost, how could people live without art? Creating art means so much in this novel, the musicians in the traveling orchestra have given up their old names, becoming "third cello" or "tuba" or "clarinet" instead. It's not a bad idea.

Mandel has a number of POV characters in Station Eleven, all of them haunted by the desire to remember the bright world they've lost, a desire continually at odds with the need to forget things and survive. Clark, a corporate consultant in the days before the collapse, becomes a curator of history in the dark ages that follow, treasuring the ordinary objects he'd once passed by without a thought. Just before the flu pandemic strikes, he realizes he'd been sleepwalking through adulthood, hardly aware of his surroundings, disappointed in his life but unwilling to admit it, even to himself. "When was the last time he'd been truly moved by anything?" he asks himself. "When had he last felt awe or inspiration?" How could he have allowed himself to live without wonder, only "minimally present" to the beauty of this world?

Near the end of the novel, when Clark is an old man, his world entirely confined to an abandoned airport, he and Kristin share something that fills them with awe and inspiration. If we're lucky, we can share their sense of wonder. A brave new world lies before us, so how can we fail to be moved?
20 people found this helpful
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Not your typical end-of-the-world book!

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ / 5

Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel is not going to be for everyone, but I was just completely fascinated by it!

What it's about: In a world that has mostly been wiped out by something similar to the Georgia Flu, we follow a troupe of performers called the Traveling Symphony around what remains. There is violence, but mostly quiet, until they come in contact with a self-proclaimed prophet. This prophet is dangerous, and he will stop at nothing to take what he wants.

I know my summery makes Station Eleven sound like it is mostly about the prophet, but it is about so much more. I really liked how it didn't just focus on the present after the pandemic, but also has many flashbacks to the way the world was (as it is now). There are also a bunch of different viewpoints, and I really liked the style in which it was written.

While there isn't necessarily a fast pace to this book, and some readers may find it boring, I did not have that issue and was totally involved in what was going on. The ending was satisfying for me as well, although it may not be for everyone. One of the characters that I really liked was Kirsten and I was glad we were in her perspective quite a bit. There are a lot of unlikable characters in Station Eleven, but she was one I really enjoyed, and she made the book much more enjoyable.

I also loved when I would come upon a spot of humor in the book. That didn't happen very often, but when it did it was a lovely surprise. It is hard for me to find a proper way to describe Station Eleven in a way that can really convey my thoughts, but I think it is a great book for people that like unique writing styles and books about how people react to the world as we know it coming to an end.

Song/s the book brought to mind: Skyfall by Adele

Final Thought: Station Eleven is essentially about survival and how people react in times of crisis, but it is also about human nature, greed, and pride. Shakespeare and the arts play a large role in this novel and for me gave it something extra than your standard end-of-the-world type book. I really enjoyed this author's writing and can't wait to read more by her. I'm really just upset it took me so long to get to, and I can see why it was a finalist for the National Book Award. If Station Eleven sounds up your alley then I highly recommend it!
16 people found this helpful
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... halfway through the book and still didn't give a crap about what happened to the characters

I was halfway through the book and still didn't give a crap about what happened to the characters. Flat, boring, unoriginal.
16 people found this helpful
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A short story, at best.....

I don't believe I have ever given a book one star, but I have to make an exception in this case. For most of it, I felt like I was watching a bad soap opera. I had no interest in any of the characters; I didn't know or get a feel for any of them. (Other reviewers were thankful there weren't the usual post-apocalyptic zombies. I would have welcomed them......and I don't even like zombies.) I also felt like this was originally a short story that some editor or agent advised, for commercial value, to make into a novel ("just throw in a lot of description to flesh it out"). I didn't need the depth of detail in Jeevan's shopping cart or the details of Arthur and Miranda's dinner party. A good writer could have used a concise phrase or one paragraph to convey what this author took pages to say. I kept at this book because it was a book club selection. Otherwise, I would have dropped it. To be honest, I picked it up and put it down a hundred times. What a chore to finish it.....
16 people found this helpful
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A piece of junk

Don't even think about ordering this book even while quarantined for the COVID19. It's a real piece of junk. The characters were added merely to fill out insignificant narratives that are totally disconnected. The author tried to make it intriguing by aimlessly switching back and forth between 2 different periods. I stopped in the middle of the book. Give me a break!I
14 people found this helpful