Camp Zero by Michelle Min Sterling

Camp Zero

by Michelle Min Sterling

'A cold, hungry adventure story about the power of choice and the strength of solidarity' SEAN MICHAELS

America, 2049: Summer temperatures are intolerably high, the fossil fuel industry has shut down, and humans are implanted with a 'Flick' at birth, which allows them to remain perpetually online. The wealthy live in the newly created Floating City off the coast, while people on the mainland struggle to get by. For Rose, a job as a hostess in the city's elite club feels like her best hope for a better future.

At a Cold War-era research station, a group of highly trained women with the code name White Alice are engaged in climate surveillance. But the terms of their employment become increasingly uncertain.

And in a former oil town in northern Canada called Dominion Lake, a camp is being built-Camp Zero. A rare source of fresh, clean air and cooler temperatures, it will be the beginning of a new community and a new way of life. Grant believes it will be the perfect place to atone for his family's dark legacy.

Everyone has an agenda. So who can you trust? Could falling in love be most the radical act of all?

Thrilling, immersive and disturbingly prescient, Camp Zero is about the world we've built and where we go from here.

Reviewed by Kim Deister on

3.5 of 5 stars

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I love a dystopian novel, especially one set in the near future. There’s something chilling about reading something grounded within the frame of my own reality. So from the moment I heard about it, I knew I needed to read Camp Zero.

But this was an extremely muddled read. A large part of the reason for the confusion was the sheer number of themes compressed into the story. It felt like too much, as if no one theme was fully explored or developed. Furthering the confusion was a back-and-forth timeline that was rarely easy to determine, as well as ever shifting perspectives. While the different perspectives and the shifts of time were germaine to the story, they lost something in the lack of clarity. It all just made for an often confusing read.

So many themes… a commentary on the effects of climate change, the effects of technology, misogyny, greed and corruption. Each of which is important, but again, underdeveloped. What I did like was the shades of Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale in the way the women were subjugated, almost used as a form of currency.

Perhaps the most disturbing aspect was the Flick, an implanted device that essentially acts as a server. It eliminates the need for everything from a computer to a cell phone to a library, providing everything via a virtual feed that appears in front of one’s eyes. It informs one’s life so completely that it forms almost an addiction. That is chilling.

While I appreciated the overal arc of good versus evil, the ending felt muddied and unfinished. It left more questions than it gave answers. While there’s no sense of a sequel, it felt as if the story just didn’t really end.

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Reading updates

  • 17 September, 2023: Started reading
  • 22 September, 2023: Finished reading
  • 4 November, 2023: Reviewed