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Naomi Alderman's The Power runs a single biological twist to its limit: teenage girls wake up able to loose electricity from their hands, and within a few years the whole architecture of the world has to be rebuilt around them. It's speculative fiction that uses one ruthless premise to ask how power actually behaves once it changes hands.
The Review
It starts in the body. A strip of muscle wakes up along a girl's collarbone, and with it comes the ability to send a jolt through anyone she touches — a caress or a killing, depending on intent. Alderman is unsentimental about what that means. She doesn't treat the change as a fantasy of empowerment so much as a fact of biology that the species now has to live inside, and the early chapters have the queasy excitement of watching a rule get discovered, tested, and then weaponized faster than anyone can pass a law about it.
The novel braids several lives across continents to map the aftershocks: Roxy, a London gangster's daughter with more current in her than most; Margot, an American politician who learns to hide and then to use what she can do; Allie, a runaway who reinvents herself as the prophet Mother Eve; and Tunde, a Nigerian journalist who keeps filming as the order of things inverts. Some of the book's most indelible scenes belong to Tunde's camera — uprisings in Riyadh, a breakaway state run by women, footage of a world reordering itself in real time while the old powers scramble to understand the rules. Framing the whole thing is a sly correspondence between two writers in the far future, presenting the book as a recovered historical novel — a device that looks like decoration until the final pages turn it into the sharpest joke in the book.
What Alderman is really building is an argument, and she pursues it with a cold rigor that's the best thing here. The premise isn't 'what if women ran the world and it was kinder.' It's that power corrupts the people who hold it regardless of who they are, that violence learns the shape of whatever hand picks it up. The internal logic holds remarkably well; she follows the incentives, the new churches, the new pornography, the new geopolitics, with the patience of someone who has thought it all the way through. When the book is firing, it's genuinely unsettling in the way the best speculative fiction is — it shows you your own world by tilting it ten degrees.
It isn't flawless in the getting there. For a long middle stretch the four strands run parallel rather than converging, and the book can feel like an accumulation of vivid incidents in search of a plot, building its world more eagerly than it advances a story. And Alderman occasionally presses her thesis hard enough that you feel the authorial thumb on the scale, the point made once too often. But the last act snaps the pieces together and earns its bleakness, and the ending — the one readers come out of the book arguing about — lands like a verdict rather than a twist. This is fiction with a thesis and the nerve to follow it somewhere genuinely uncomfortable.
Reviewed by Rowan
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