A stunning Sapphic dystopia set in the aftermath of a climate change apocalypse, The Last Bookstore on Earth finds love blossom as the end of the world approaches.
A heartbreaking and high-stakes story of queer love and survival set against the backdrop of a climate change apocalypse, this book is Station Eleven and The Last of Us meets All That’s Left in the World by Erik J. Brown.
'The world is about to end. Again.'
It’s been a year since a devastating storm ripped Liz’s world apart. Haunted by the memories of those she couldn’t save, Liz is holed up in the only place she felt safe before her world fell away: the bookstore where she used to work. Now she spends her days trading books for supplies and collecting stories from the remaining survivors who pass by.
Until she learns that another earth-shattering Storm is coming . . . and everything changes.
Enter Maeve, a spiky out-of-towner who breaks into the bookstore looking for shelter one night. When Maeve’s secrets and Liz’s inner demons come back to haunt them both, they find themselves fighting for their lives and asking themselves one big question.
As the end of the world approaches, is there time for one final love story?
Publisher: Penguin Random House Children's UK
ISBN: 9780241701553
Number of pages: 320
Weight: 223 g
Dimensions: 197 x 127 x 19 mm
I was hooked from the first page. The Last Bookstore on Earth has the kind of protagonist that you could follow anywhere. I fell in love. Not just with Liz and Maeve and the bookstore setting, but with the beautifully nuanced sibling relationship of Liz and Thea. This book is life, death and the perfect amount of humour. So beautifully written - Jenny Ireland
A thoroughly original, intimate and sometimes harrowing meditation on survival, forgiveness and learning how to love again at the almost end of the world - Nicola Yoon
This stellar debut is filled with cynical and witty characters exploring the nature of and need for human connection. Contains just the right amount of action, a blossoming queer romance, and a well-executed slow doomsday reveal - Kirkus
A hauntingly beautiful story of love, loss and the raw fight for survival - Jarrod Shusterman, New York Times bestselling author of Dry
A vivid homage to books, music, and their power to unify and comfort - Publishers Weekly
I have been craving a wonderful sapphic book FOREVER. Nothings been sorting that itch y'know? But oh this book did it. Very grateful to House of YA for sending a copy to the bookshop I work at, I screeched in... More
Quick, easy, post apocalyptic read. Definitely made for a young adult audience but with just enough horror to make it, at times, brutal.
Liz was mildly annoying in her overall naivety but to be fair I am 37 and most...
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This was a cute and short intimate read which explored survival, forgiveness, and love in a post-apocalyptic setting. It's sapphic focus was also a refreshing take as a lot of these type of books recently have a... More
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