Birnam Wood by Eleanor Catton-Book

From a Google image Search – Shondaland.com

For me the jury is still out on Birnam Wood by Eleanor Catton. Our first impressions when we finish a book may change with time, either increasing or decreasing our favorability rating of the book. The title comes from the play Macbeth by William Shakespeare, and I must say that Shakespeare understood human nature and would most likely have not been shocked by these folks. I will also say that if you plan to be evil you should at least be good at it. 

Lady Jill Darvish and the newly knighted Sir Owen Darvish own the property and the farmhouse where Jill Darvish grew up. It is near the New Zealand town of Thorndike. A recent avalanche has made it more difficult to access the farm and the land, although not impossible if you go in through the national park land adjacent to the property. 

This hard-to-reach piece of land ends up hosting an astonishing array of people and machines. An American, Robert Lemoine, made an offer to buy the property, without the farmhouse, before the avalanche. He’s a billionaire who says he wants to build a bunker to survive the coming climate apocalypse. Some people are disgusted by this display of wealth, others feel that it’s a dumb plan because supply lines will become problematic, but almost all people who are aware of the project are curious about what the bunker will look like. But does a bunker project require armed security guards? What is Robert Lemoine really up to?

Birnam Wood is a collective of environmentalists. They are gardeners who plant crops on any untended land they can find, and they are sometimes guerilla gardeners, planting on land owned by others without their permission. The group attracts young idealists who travel light and live cheaply. They meet regularly to plan their stealth planting operations. They sell the produce they grow to help finance tools, seeds, and transportation. The group also accepts donations. We meet two young women who are the current leaders of the group, Mira, and Shelley. When they learn about the land at the Darvish farm, cut off as it is from the world, it seems an ideal place to do some real farming. When they meet Robert Lemoine, who still seems to want to buy the property, and who in fact says he has bought the property, he wants them to come to the land and farm it. He even deposits upfront money in the Birnam Woods account, ten thousand dollars. 

What could go wrong?

Of course, I cannot tell you the details, but a series of chain reactions is set in motion which would do justice to any book by George R. R. Martin. After all greed is one of the seven deadly sins and, in one way or another it affects every character in this novel. Again, I had to listen on Audible until my eyes get corrected, and the story flew by. The connection to Shakespeare I found rather tenuous although Macbeth and Robert Lemoine have a few things in common.

Did the author go overboard on the complications involved in her plot? Did it have to end the way it did? Was the ending much too abrupt? The way the author contrived to get the entire cast of characters all together on a property that was cut off by an avalanche should interest any fiction writer. I enjoyed it but did I love it? Time will tell.