In Jeanne MartinetβsΒ Etiquette for the End of the World, Tess Eliotβs world as she knows it has ended β sheβs suddenly without a boyfriend or a job.Β Low on funds, she takes an offer to ghost-write a how-to manual for a survivalist group who believes the world as everyone knows it will end on December 21, 2012.Β Although she doesnβt start the project as a believer, doing research leads her to information that could prove thatΒ society may be in jeopardy after all.
The cover touts this asΒ βBridget Jones for the New Millineumβ andΒ IΒ see the similarities.Β Both are full of quirky characters and outrageous situations.Β And like Bridget, Tess starts her journey with a new relationship involving a man that seems too good to be true and who is definitely hiding something.Β TheΒ romanceΒ is secondary, though.Β TheΒ main plot ofΒ Etiquette for the End of the WorldΒ involves a mystery over the feasability of one of the ways civilization may end and how WOOSH, the group that hired Tess, may be involved.
The funniest parts of the book are the snippets of Tessβs how-to manual that are scattered throughout β with titles like βHow to Rob Someone with Styleβ and βDating as if Your Life Depended on It (Which it Acutally Does)β.Β Although told with a large dose of snark and humorous from the perspective of a post-apocalyptic world, there is some great advice in them, especially βTwelve Rules to Live and Die Byβ found at the end of the book.
Etiquette for the End of the WorldΒ is a humorous, light-hearted book that takes on the latest doomsday theory β the end of the Mayan calendar.Β Martinet does a good job of keeping the story moving quickly and making it playful without it getting ridiculous.Β If you are looking for a fun distraction, this is the book for you.
