Doggerland' by Ben Smith is this haunting, lyrical take on climate fiction that feels so different from the usual doom-and-gloom narratives. While a lot of cli-fi leans hard into apocalyptic chaos or heavy-handed moralizing, 'Doggerland' strips things down to this sparse, almost mythic quality. It’s set in this decaying offshore wind farm where an old man and a boy are trapped in this monotonous cycle of maintenance, surrounded by rising waters and the ghosts of a drowned world. The vibe reminds me of 'The Road' by Cormac McCarthy in its bleakness, but where 'The Road' feels like a relentless march, 'Doggerland' has this eerie stillness, like the ocean itself—slow, inevitable, and strangely beautiful.
What really sets it apart from other cli-fi, though, is how it avoids info-dumping or grandstanding about climate change. Books like '
the ministry for the future' by
Kim Stanley Robinson dive deep into policy and solutions, while '
flight behavior' by Barbara Kingsolver zooms in on individual communities. 'Doggerland' doesn’t bother with explanations or hope; it just immerses you in this suffocating reality where the past is already lost, and the future isn’t even worth discussing. It’s more like a tone poem than a novel at times, which might frustrate readers who prefer plot-driven stories, but for me, that ambiguity made it linger in my mind for weeks. The way Smith uses language—those repetitive, rhythmic descriptions of rust and waves—feels like being lulled into the same numbness as the characters. It’s not a book you 'enjoy,' exactly, but one that claws under your skin.
Compared to something like 'Oryx and Crake' by Margaret Atwood, which is packed with satire and wild sci-fi twists, 'Doggerland' is minimalist to the point of abstraction. Atwood’s work is like a fireworks display of ideas, while Smith’s is a single, sustained note. Even the dialogue is sparse, with most of the emotion conveyed through the old man’s folktales and the boy’s silent resentment. I’d say it’s closer in spirit to 'The Drowned World' by J.G. Ballard, but where Ballard’s landscapes feel surreal and psychedelic, Smith’s are just… weary. It’s a book that makes you feel the weight of time and the ocean’s indifference, and that’s a rare trick in a genre that often shouts instead of whispers. After reading it, I found myself staring at rain puddles differently—like they were tiny, creeping warnings.