Share for friends:

The Last Town On Earth (2006)

The Last Town on Earth (2006)

Book Info

Author
Genre
Rating
3.59 of 5 Votes: 1
Your rating
ISBN
1400065208 (ISBN13: 9781400065202)
Language
English
Publisher
random house

About book The Last Town On Earth (2006)

Working in a cube farm, I dread the cold & flu season because you’re surrounded by hacking, sneezing, phlegm-filled germ factories who insist on coming to work and spreading their misery because they don’t want to burn their sick days on ‘just a cold’. I’ve often thought that we should set up some kind of quarantine zone in the building and make any of the infected go there and work so that the rest of us may be spared. After reading The Last Town on Earth, I’m torn between thinking that it’s a bad idea or that we should post armed guards to keep the sickies out of the break room.Thomas Mullen took the 1918 flu epidemic that killed millions and has built a fictional story about one town’s response to the threat. Commonwealth is a logging town built by a man who turned his back on his rich and ruthless family to start a mill where he could prove that workers could be treated decently and still turn a profit. He and his wife, a political activist for women’s and workers' rights, have helped build a community in the woods that has attracted many loggers who have been the victims of unfair labor practices and violent strike breakers. Commonwealth is just starting to run in the black, mainly due to the increase in lumber demand from the government after the U.S. entry into World War I.However, when the deadly flu breaks out in neighboring towns, the leaders and citizens of Commonwealth decide that they’ll quarantine themselves since no one is sick and they’re already isolated. Anyone can leave, but no one will be allowed to enter until the flu has run its course. Armed guards are posted to prevent anyone from entering the town. It’s seems like a simple and straight forward plan, but when a starving soldier comes out the woods and wants to enter, it starts a series of events that will begin to tear the town apart. Commonwealth will also have to contend with a ‘patriotic’ group from a neighboring town who are suspicious of the ‘socialist’ enclave in the woods and want to break their quarantine to make sure that there are no draft dodgers or spies hiding there.This was an original and intriguing idea for a book, and it’s got a rich historical backdrop with the characters contending not only with the flu, but the labor movement of the era along with the political and social issues associated with both the pro- and anti-war movements. I also learned some chilling things about the U.S. during this time. For example, the government basically outlawed any dissent or forms of protest against the war. As he did with The Great Depression in The Many Deaths of the Firefly Brothers, Mullen makes the day-to-day life of a bygone era really come alive. His style is deceptively plain, but he still manages to make the characters complex. I didn’t like this one quite as much as Firefly Brothers, but still a really interesting story.

I was not aware that any town's had self quarantined themselves during any war. I never heard it mentioned before. So I tried a little research, I only found the one town in the USA, Gunnison Colorado in 1918 as the result of the Spanish flu and the author mentions this. Aside from finding that some indivuals were quarantined I found areas were set apart, but not a whole town.My research was not by any means thorough; I found in1900 in San Francisco a Chinese business was quarantined because of the bubonic plauge. They thought it had come in wood being shipped. Eventually white businesses also were quarantined. This resulted in a couple blocks only. A judge deemed it racially motivated and the quarantine was lifted. I found prostitutes during WW2 were held because they wanted the soldiers to be disease free before leaving to fight. That quarantine was never lifted.There are records of many being quarantined to islands throughout history (leprosy was one reason). Typhoid Mary was quarentined for 24 years.This story causes one to think with the current news story of the outbreak of the ebola virus in West Africa. The swine flu a couple of years ago. How would I react, the leaders of the city I live in. Having personally been in isolation for various infections myself, with the CDC involved, I know it would be a scary thing how something could be spread so quickly and taking lives. For myself I think information is key. For others I don't think so. I really wanted to love this book. I wanted to care more about Philip. I didn't though. I was halfway thru this book and thought, this isn't going to get better. I trudged on. It felt predictable. I guess because the author took a safe path. (spoiller) If there weren't those that lost their lives it wouldn't have the drama, and in this type of story we all know someone has to die. The premise is a good one. It was obvious who broke the rules and brought the virus in, long before people began to die.The back story on persons of the town and the soldiers were too long and detailed.

Do You like book The Last Town On Earth (2006)?

A very nicely written historical novel set in the American northwest during the 1918 flu epidemic. The town of Commonwealth is a small, backwoods mill town, founded by an idealistic mill owner and settled by a variety of workers, mostly fleeing from union strife and harder conditions in other mill towns. Their pleasant, egalitarian little town lives in peaceful isolation except for the lumber they send downriver, until the coming of World War I and the draft, and then the influenza.Thomas Mullen weaves many issues into this novel. By 1918, the Great War was well underway and thousands of Americans had already died in Europe, but it was not universally popular. There was a strong anti-war sentiment, but thanks to laws passed by Congress and President Wilson, it had become effectively illegal to protest against the war. This was also a time of violent labor strife, with workers fighting for better wages and safer conditions. Marxism, socialism, and anarchism were all popular in many circles. When the war came, business interests took the opportunity to label unionists and other civil rights agitators as unpatriotic and undermining the war effort.Commonwealth, "the last town on Earth," is a place that many people fled to to escape these troubles. Many of its male residents did not enlist for the draft. There are socialists and war protestors among them. No one cares much, except for a few rival mill owners in neighboring towns.Then comes the flu. It's been decimating towns across the country. Commonwealth's leaders decide to quarantine themselves: let no one in or out of the town until they think the flu has passed. (Mullen based this on rumors that some towns tried this in 1918, though apparently none were really successful.) They post guards to keep visitors out -- with guns if necessary. Then a soldier comes out of the woods, begging for food and shelter, and beginning a series of events that brings tragedy to the town.This isn't a book with a very happy ending, but everything follows logically from the choices people make, and the plotting just flows sensibly and smoothly. Violence happens, and there are consequences. No one gets away clean. Most of the time, you can understand all sides in the various conflicts.Mullen populates Commonwealth with a variety of characters, pausing the story to tell the histories of several of them. So this is also a somewhat leisurely book in that it's not non-stop action, though the story does move right along between brief passages of exposition.Great characterization and an interesting story with fine historical details. Highly recommended.
—David

I picked this up to read because the topic - a community dealing with plague - interested me. I soon discovered I had indeed read the book before. The story and characters, if not the title, made a lasting impression on me and I was eager to read it again particularly because, in the intervening years, I have become more educated about the craft of writing and can deeply appreciate the beauty of the prose. The topic is even more timely now than in 2006. With fears of pandemics looming it is useful to consider what others have done in similar circumstances - learn from history - that sort of thing.
—Patresa

A very good historical fiction that includes the 1918 Influenza epidemic, World War I disenters, and the tie between Socialism and unionization in the early 20th century. The story takes place in a logging town established on the principle that sharing the profits with everyone makes everyone profitable. When the "Spanish" flu breaks out in near by towns, the inhabitants agree that they will quarantine themselves until it passes by. Phillip, the adopted son of the owner of the mill is on guard when a starving soldier tries to enter the town, and when he finds himself unable to kill the soldier, the inhabitants true feelings about isolationism come to the surface. There's also the threat from a near by town that questions why so many able bodied lumberjacks managed to avoid going to war when their own sons are being killed in Europe. It's a good read about an event and political opinion that doesn't get a lot of attention, and the main characters have deep backstories that the author uses well to explain their feelings about their current situation.
—Djrmel

download or read online

Read Online

Write Review

(Review will shown on site after approval)

Other books by author Thomas Mullen

Other books in category Fiction