
Title: The Book of Etta
Author: Meg Elison
Genre: dystopian
The sequel to The Book of the Unnamed Midwife takes place 100 years after Unnamed, so there aren’t going to be a lot of spoilers for the first book. Just a reminder of the plot though: a fever strikes the world, mostly attacking women and children. The Unnamed Midwife keeps a diary of her travels through the country, living as a man to survive. Okay, so Etta is a raider, and like the UM, she travels as a man she calls Eddy. As Eddy, she feels much more like herself, which confuses her, and is very discouraged by others. As a woman, she is a gift to the world and is expected to be either a midwife or a mother. Etta/Eddy has no desire to be either.
From Goodreads: Etta comes from Nowhere, a village of survivors of the great plague that wiped away the world that was. In the world that is, women are scarce and childbearing is dangerous…yet desperately necessary for humankind’s future. Mothers and midwives are sacred, but Etta has a different calling. As a scavenger. Loyal to the village but living on her own terms, Etta roams the desolate territory beyond: salvaging useful relics of the ruined past and braving the threat of brutal slave traders, who are seeking women and girls to sell and subjugate.
I’m leaving off the end of the blurb because it’s a giant spoiler, which was a huge bummer to me. As Eddy roams the world, freeing women from slavers, she also trades with other cities and learns from them. I loved how Elison handled the switch between Etta and Eddy, who each have their own pronouns, sometimes going back and forth between them within the same sentence or paragraph. But that’s how Etta/Eddy feels. Very much like two people at once. I was glad to revisit the world that the Unnamed left us and see how things changed in the past century (hint: all is not perfect). I have one more book in this series, The Book of Flora, which I’m really curious about. Flora was a character in Etta, assuming it’s the same person. So I’m curious to see where Flora’s story picks up. Overall, these seem to be hidden gems of the dystopian world, but I’m really enjoying them and definitely recommend them to others.






