Quick Book Review: “Severance” by Ling Ma
A really great debut novel by Ling Ma. It’s a post-apocalyptic zombie novel about a millennial workaholic, Candace Chen, who works for a book publisher in Manhattan. When Shen Fever (a fatal plague that causes people to become non-violent zombie versions of themselves) begins spreading throughout the world, Candace, one of the fortunate few who manages to not become infected, joins up with a small group of other survivors, led by a power-hungry religious nut named Bob. The story weaves from Candace’s life before Shen Fever hits, to her childhood, to her complicated situation with the other survivors. The book tackles a lot of subjects along the way: the love-hate relationship millennials have with capitalism, the Chinese immigrant experience, the vicious ladder-climbing corporate experience, and Candace’s own coming of age, all deftly woven into a really good plot. The book is hard to put down. I sat in a diner for two hours and read about a hundred pages, completely absorbed, until they kicked me out. Equal parts serious and satirical. A real winner. (Last year, I read another millennial novel that received a lot of acclaim, Sweetbitter, which I didn’t like at all. Severance puts it to shame.)