Forever Young

Omnibus Edition (Parts 1-4)

Fiction - Science Fiction
317 Pages
Reviewed on 06/03/2014
Buy on Amazon

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    Book Review

Reviewed by Lit Amri for Readers' Favorite

Claude Nougat’s Forever Young (Omnibus Edition) is a serialized novel in four parts, set 200 years from now. The world is divided into two groups. The One Percent is wealthy people who can afford and benefit from the advances of technology, particularly the exclusive Age Prevention Program (APP), which enables them to expand their life span and look young till the day they die. The other group is the 99 Percent; their fate is the opposite of the One Percent and they suffer the full onslaught of pollution and climate change. In Part One, Gateway to Forever, Emma is a 122-year-old One Percenter who is programmed to die within 12 hours. She is madly in love with a young man named Sergio, a 99 Percenter, who doesn't know how old she is or that she belongs to the APP. Will she give the APP membership to Sergio or will she let her sister’s grandson, Jamie, inherit it as initially planned?

As it intertwines with other continuous but standalone plot lines, readers will also follow Jamie’s story, an ambitious reporter, Alice the young Swiss nurse, and Lizzie, a talented golf player descended from Tiger Woods. In Part Two, The Immortality Trip, Jamie, Lizzie and Alice have the opportunity to join a group of One Percenters to settle on a nearest planet to escape extinction. In Part Three, The Hibernation Party, another option to the One Percenters is to take refuge on Antarctica, the last virgin continent. Part Four, The Longevity Gene, serves as a closing chapter that also reveals the future that awaits the group. Having read Claude Nougat’s previous version of the novel, 2213: Forever Young, I looked forward to reading this omnibus edition and wasn't disappointed. She expands the essence of the story, one that might well serve as a prophetic view of our future. Compelling from start to finish, the prose is crystal clear and the dialogue is sharp. Forever Young bends the polar axis of death and immortality into a blurry circle, casting the magnifying glass on our desires as humans.

Cheryl E. Rodriguez

Forever young is a sci-fi thriller written by Claude Nougat. Two hundred years into the future, as a result of global warming, Earth is nearing its sixth extinction. The elite of the world’s citizens are making plans, many of them members of the APP (Age Preserving Program), known as the Forever Young. The great social divide remains. The “Forevers” are a select group, considered only one percent of the world’s population. They wear the status symbol - the “life watch,” a watch that monitors their life and programs their death. When notified, you die a simple, painless death. One group plans an expedition, an immortality trip, to another planet (Earth’s twin) over one thousand light years away. Starting over on the Forever Planet, they hope to build a perfect society. While yet another group, a privately established enterprise known as the Hibernation Party, sets up a hibernation center on the continent of Antarctica. They plan to re-settle the earth after the extinction period. The Hibernation Party isn’t interested in your social status, but in your genetics. They seek those with the longevity gene. “Life suddenly turns into a game and you have to play it. If you don’t, you’re out, you’re a loser.” The game is to survive the earth extinction and its contestants engage in the well-known battle between the elite (haves) and the less fortunate (the have-nots). Time is running out, the earth is falling apart. Who will survive the end, who will be Forever Young?

Claude Nougat writes an interesting account of the extinction of earth in Forever Young. Keeping with the sci-fi genre, it is full of holograms, hovercrafts, laser guns, food on demand (f-o-d) dispensers and advanced scientific knowledge, namely space travel and hibernation. Moreover, the author steps into the new literary genre of Climate Fiction or cli-fi with ease. Claude Nougat states that her objective was to write the “mostly likely future of humanity, given present social and economic trends.” She also felt compelled to include issues regarding climate change, namely global warming, as the cause of earth’s future demise. Time and again, she refers to pollution as the cause of earth’s imminent destruction. Ms. Nougat writes her four-part cli-fi thriller in third person narrative, using vivid descriptions aided by an in-depth, but not overly scientific, vocabulary. She portrays a convincing technical end of the world plot. The development of the core cast of characters grows within each chapter. The reader feels the growing tension among the main characters as the fatal end approaches. As with all “end-of-the-world” stories, it has its surprises; not all characters (likable and unlikable) make it to the end. Forever Young leaves you desiring more because there is no real resolution. You, like its characters are left to hibernate, wondering about the final outcome. This creates anticipation for a sequel.