The End We Start From by Megan Hunter
Friday, December 8, 2017 at 6:51AM 
First published in Great Britain in 2017; published by Grove Press on November 7, 2017
The End We Start From imagines that a mother gave birth to a baby, known  in the novel as Z, during an apocalyptic event that, at the moment of  birth, is characterized by rising flood waters. The brief novel combines  mommy lit with post-apocalyptic fiction, two popular genres that, in  this case at least, do not merge well. Babies are not interesting  characters and the mother who narrates the novel doesn’t have much more  personality than Z.
The exact nature of the catastrophe is  ill-defined. The flooding might have been brought about by global  warming, but it seems quite sudden and there are bullet holes in  buildings, which might or might not have something to do with the  crisis. Television persists for a time, but the news has suddenly become  depressingly relevant to the characters’ lives, so they take a brief  pause from watching the talent show channel to get a sense of what’s  happening in the world. Floods lead to famine and the loss of internet  and cellular service. Why? We’re never told.
The end of life as  she knows it has apparently been coming for some time and, while the  narrator lived in fear of it, she thought that having a baby would make  the fear go away. It might have been more rational to fear bringing a  baby into a world that is ending. Or to establish a residence in higher ground.
Eventually the protagonist and Z  and Z’s daddy R all travel north from London, where they find refugee  camps. R goes off in search of a better place to raise the  family, leaving the narrator and their baby to make it on their own.  After that, the narrator misses R, although I wondered why since  abandoning his family in a crisis seems unhelpful.
The narrator  starts to travel with O and O’s baby C. O knows about a boat they can  take (presumably to Scotland). How she knows where and when to meet the  boat in the absence of cell service is one of many mysteries the novel  fails to explain.
Given the apocalyptic setting, the journey from  London to Scotland seems remarkably easy, as does the eventual  resolution of the crisis. The narrator spends most of her time fretting,  but her fretting is more about motherhood than starvation or flooding  or gang violence or the other terrors that vaguely lurk in the novel’s  background but that never seem to pose an actual threat. Those distant concerns appear to have no impact on our intrepid mommy  as she waits for baby’s next bowel movement.
There is something to be said  for exploring the mundane (baby’s first tooth, baby's first step) in a chaotic  environment, to focus the reader on a new mother’s myopic focus on her  baby as a defining characteristic of motherhood. Motherhood has  apparently opened the narrator’s heart to love; she loves everyone she  does not fear. The novel has some value in the way it delivers messages  about motherhood, but the messages would have been more powerful if the  external world had been more fully or carefully developed.
The  novel also doles out mommy wisdom, like “There is no skill. There is  only another person, smaller than you.” Mommy lit is replete with similar mommy  wisdom; no fresh insights are to be found here.
The  novel is short, the story told in snippets. The minimalist style is  probably meant to cut out all that is unimportant in favor of  descriptions of how Z feels to the narrator while Z is drinking from the  narrator’s nipple, or how Z’s eyes are starting to look like R’s, or  the things that Z picks up and drops. I got the sense that some of the  gaps in information would have been a good bit more interesting than  what the narrator chose to tell us. I also got the sense that the  missing information is missing because Megan Hunter couldn’t imagine  plausible details with which to plug the gaps, or didn’t want to be  bothered. The snippet form of storytelling sometimes works well (I  recently read Ultraluminous, where the form is used to great advantage),  but The End We Start From puts so little flesh on the skeleton that it  feels like an outline for a novel, not a finished product.
The novel’s strength is its prose. In Scotland, where seeds still grow, the narrator remarks, “We have arrived at the non-happening, it seems: the invisible growth of Z’s body, the tiny increments of our meals coming out of the soil.” But in the end, the book seems like a collection of strong sentences that never give birth to a living story.
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