Prisoners
by
Book Details
About the Book
Compelling and foreboding, “Prisoners” darkly portrays the “lives” of ordinary people—what they eat, their wars, their losses, their abysmal poverty—in the aftermath of the breakdown of civilization—the result of centuries of warfare, greed and environmental destruction. Unnamed grandfather, father, mother, deformed child, and baby symbolize every family struggling to survive in an infi nite desert wasteland. This land, the family remembers, was once a verdant countryside with shimmering streams and lakes. With no food to eat in their richly decorated home, the family subsists on a powdered drink mixed with what little polluted water their well will provide. In the distance, the armed mobs are advancing in search of food, water, gold, and human blood. The family can only wait, surrounded by paintings of lush landscape that was once theirs—the land and water they wasted for material possessions.