blog tour, books, reviews

Blog Tour: The Glass Field – Guy Burt

In 1986, with Chernobyl smouldering on the news and the Cold War casting a deep shadow, Scott becomes convinced that nuclear conflict is inevitable. Sensitive, watchful, and haunted by personal grief, he immerses himself in post-apocalyptic stories and survival games, drawn to the clarity they offer when the future feels out of control.

Jodie is brilliant, abrasive, damaged. Fiercely determined to keep the world at arm’s length, she wears loneliness like armour, trusting her solitude to protect her.

Drawn together by their fears, Jodie and Scott form an uneasy, wary alliance. But as time passes, their shared vision of cataclysm becomes increasingly seductive.

The Glass Field is an intimate, quietly unsettling novel about what we cling to when the world feels close to breaking.

My thoughts: I was born in 1986 so I can’t really imagine how the Chernobyl explosion impacted on people in the UK, far enough away from the fall out zone but close enough for deadly dust to drift over. I asked my mum and she said that for some it wasn’t really a big deal, plenty of other things to worry about but there were those who did think the world was close to nuclear annihilation.

Scott and Jodie fall into this second group. Two young teenagers, with mostly absent parents, left alone with the news, Scott’s Judge Dread comics and knowing some older young people in CND and similar groups. They also live close to an army base and Jodie’s dad works on a top secret missile building project, that she both knows too much about and not enough.

They’re lonely and the long summer stretches ahead of them. Scott quits his summer job and they begin to prepare for nuclear fallout and the horrors Scott’s comics warn them of. Finding an abandoned WWII bunker, they buy what they think they will need for the coming amageddon.

It’s a sad story in many ways, they find joy in their friendship yes, but their parents are too busy, too wrapped up in their own lives to notice their children and both are only children so no siblings to question what they’re up to either. Neither have many other friends, Scott’s best friend moved away, Jodie is the weird kid.

But it was also a really good read, the relationship between Scott and Jodie, their hobbies and interests before they became so focused on the end of the world, the dinner party Scott throws, these are all delights within the darkness.

Scott is still grieving his mother, his father has become so lost in his pain, he can’t be there for his son. Jodie’s mother worries about her but in an overbearing way that Jodie pushes against, her dad is always at work. Neither fit in with the other local teens, and their sense of isolation feeds their paranoia.

I found this book fascinating and compelling, a portrait of outsiders who hopefully grew up to find things aren’t always as bleak as they feel at times.

*I was kindly gifted a copy of this book in exchange for taking part in this blog tour, but all opinions remain my own.

Leave a comment