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January 03 2019
A review of James Kunstler's 'World Made by Hand' [1] novels

I don't read a whole lot of fiction anymore but I was curious about
Kunstler's 'World Made by Hand' novels after listening to some of
his podcasts [2] and managed to borrow all four from the public
library which I read straight through.

Kunstler wrote the books between 2008 and 2016 and while one can
sort of see how unfolding events since the 2008 economic collapse
influenced his writing, the story and general tone stays fairly
consistent as it unfolds over the four books.

Essentially the story takes place over a one year period sometime
in the future, roughly 10 years after the US has collapsed and split
into several autonomous regions.  The worst of the chaos and violence
has past; many people have died from disease and/or starvation and
those that remain find themselves living much as the early American
settlers did, without electricity, mass-produced goods, nor foodstuffs
imported from far away places.  Coffee is a rare and special treat.
Much of the tract housing has already been salvaged for materials
and has been abandoned for locations that are closer to potable
water and other essentials.

One thing I liked was that each book is a season.  The series starts
in Summer and we see how people are coping with heat and lack of
refrigeration. Fall harvests are celebrated; Winter transitions
indoors and centers around the wood stove.  Spring brings anticipation
but also hunger as Winter stores run low before the first crops are
ready.  Throughout the year there is a renewed importance placed
on the various holidays for their role in bringing people together
for shared experience, what people sometimes call "community
building".

There is also the contrasting of various living arrangements. The
residents of Union Grove where the story is based (in upstate New
York; not a real town) are still somewhat demoralized; many still
wear mass-produced clothing from "the good times" which is getting
quite worn out.  Many of the men have beards; they've given up
shaving possibly due to the unavailability of safety razors.  Some
of these folks have relevant skills for the new times, carpentry,
agricultural or medical training.  Those that don't have found
themselves employed as serfs in some cases, unskilled farm hands
in others.  The farmers and other landholders have attained an
elevated status; they are providers of livelihood and food for the
regions inhabitants.  Some, as in the case of Bollock, have become
modern feudal lords. A gang of ex-bikers has reinvented itself as
it mines an old landfill for items of value.  The New Faith
Brotherhood, claiming to be followers of Jesus, live communally,
aren't squeamish about violence when deemed necessary, brew distilled
beverages and practice free love as a way to increase their numbers
(many people became sterile due to exposure to dirty bomb radiation
leading up to the collapse).

I don't wish to ruin the story for anyone wishing to read them.  I
will say that I enjoyed them very much and found the world depicted
as challenging but in many ways richer and more meaningful than the
one I'm currently living.  While technically dystopian, I discovered
much grounded optimism as to what a post oil age life might hold.

 --

Follow-up: Sam Mitchell of the Collapse Chronicles Youtuibe channel
has an hour-long in-person interview with Jame Kunstler [3], much of
it centered on the thinking behind the World Made by Hand novels.

 --

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_Made_By_Hand
[2] http://kunstler.com/writings/podcast/
[3] https://youtu.be/ARc-vmDpi6U