, 'These are troubling times. The world is a dangerous place, ' the
voice of the Chairman said. 'I can continue to assure you of this:
within the Wall you are perfectly safe.'
Christine could not sleep, she could not wake, she could not think. She
stared, half-blind, at the cold screen of her smartphone. She was told
the Agency was keeping them safe from the dangers outside, an outside
world she would never see.
She never imagined questioning what she was told, what she was allowed
to know, what she was permitted to think. She never even thought there
were questions to ask.
The enclave was the only world she knew, the world outside was not safe.
Staying or leaving was not a choice she had the power to make. But then
Christine dared start thinking . . . and from that moment, danger was
everywhere.
In our turbulent times, Claire G. Coleman's Enclave is a powerful
dystopian allegory that confronts the ugly realities of racism,
homophobia, surveillance, greed and privilege and the self-destructive
distortions that occur when we ignore our shared humanity.
'A brilliant, engrossing, necessary read' COURIER MAIL
'Much of this novel feels frighteningly plausible ... Coleman's world
shimmers on the page like a heat haze' ARTS HUB
'If you liked Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale or Charlotte
Woods' The Natural Way of Things, this one is clearly for you'
SYDNEY MORNING HERALD
'The book holds up a thoughtful mirror showing us to ourselves using an
all too real future' KILL YOUR DARLINGS
'Enclave is a novel that inclines towards hope ... offers us an
alternative: a world in which people, in meeting the demands of the
present with curiosity, courage and conviction, can bring about a more
just and inclusive future' NEW DAILY
'Coleman can turn a deft phrase ... She writes a mean chase sequence,
ramping up the suspense when she wants, with fight scenes and great
narrative propulsion' THE AGE
'Coleman offers an urgent critique of bigotry and, implicitly, of
colonialism, writing with conviction about the ways technology can be
misused by those in power, but also how it might be deployed for good.
Indeed, despite its dystopian tenor, Enclave is ultimately a hopeful
novel, and one which suggests it is far from futile to aspire to a
better future' MANJIMUP-BRIDGETOWN TIMES
'If Margaret Atwood's dystopian Handmaid's Tale ignited a spark,
you'll rip through Claire Coleman's new novel like a forest fire'
MARIE CLAIRE
'She is toying with the canon, but also placing menacing signposts of
the unsustainability of the settlement's brutal, exclusionary politics.
Enclave is a clarion shout against demonising the unfamiliar, and the
temptation to withdraw into a bubble' THE GUARDIAN,