The Girl in the Road: A Novel

paperback, 352 pages

Published Feb. 17, 2015 by Broadway Books.

ISBN:
978-0-8041-3886-4
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A brutally honest journey novel

Trigger warning: This book touches on almost all the way old cultures, meaning patriarchies, have devastated women.

This is an amazing book. It starts out with two women characters, unflinching in their inner thoughts. Then it moves into a tough journey novel. From there it gets even more brutal in its honesty.

But it is so cathartic. The characters investigate themselves in ways I hadn't imagined for myself.

A tale of slavery, sexual violence, and prejudice set in the nearish future.

This was Monica Byrne's debut novel and wow! She doesn't screw around!

This is the gripping tale of a climate-tipping-point future where India has much more economic clout in the world, and is expanding its power and influence (with China) into Africa. Among many interesting technologies that have been developed, a huge wave-energy power generator has been constructed from India to Africa, consisting of a long chain of floating inverted pyramids, each about a metre square, which form a road between continents; the 'Trail'. Although it's illegal to walk on, travellers do it anyway.

Meena is one such traveller, who is fleeing something in India, although we don't know the details, only that she's got snake bites on her chest, she's fled her home, and is totally paranoid about being followed.

We learn that she's an orphan raised by the parents of her doctor father, who was …