The Chemical Garden Trilogy

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

The Chemical Garden Trilogy is a post-apocalyptic dystopia novel by Lauren DeStefano. Currently, the first two books, Wither and Fever, have been released.

By age sixteen, Rhine Ellery has four years left to live. A botched effort to create a perfect race has left all males born with a lifespan of 25 years, and females a lifespan of 20 years--leaving the world in a state of panic. Geneticists seek a miracle antidote to restore the human race, desperate orphans crowd the population, crime and poverty have skyrocketed, and young girls are being kidnapped and sold as polygamous brides to bear more children.


Tropes used in The Chemical Garden Trilogy include:
  • Artistic License: Biology:
    • Men outlive women, which is the reverse of what is biologically inclined to happen. This is especially egregious because the reason for the shortened lifespans is a virus -- women, having an extra X chromosome, would have more genetic material to copy from and would therefore be less vulnerable to a virus altering their genome.
    • The book can't seem to decide if the cause for the Depopulation Bomb is a virus or genetic engineering, which are two very different things.
      • Furthermore, the nice thing about genetic engineering is that it's almost always reversible, since there's always a copy of the original genome floating around somewhere. It would be easy for the geneticists to reverse the changes after people started dying.
  • Artistic License Geography: Apparently, among other things, World War Three caused the ice caps to melt and now everything but America is underwater. However, Manhattan and America's coastline are somehow completely fine. Furthermore, all of the countries and continents are rubble, destroyed during the war. Rhine mentions that all that's left are tiny uninhabitable islands and the continent of North America. All of this destruction has absolutely no ill effects on the ecosystem, weather, sea level, or anything else in America.
    • Antarctica is also included as a casualty. Antarctica. The one place where a nuke would be completely unnecessary under any and all circumstances.
    • Sci-Fi Writers Have No Sense of Scale: Rhine mentions that the remains of the destroyed areas are so small they can't be seen by satellite. Satellites can actually see really small things -- sandbars, for example.
  • And Now You Must Marry Me: Happens to the kidnapped women.
  • Arranged Marriage: Rhine is kidnapped and forced to marry Linden.
  • Abduction Is Love: Actually seems to work.
  • Cozy Catastrophe: Sort of; after Rhine is kidnapped, the world is still falling apart, but she's insulated from it all.
  • Creator Provincialism: Extreme example; everywhere except America has been destroyed offstage.
  • Disposable Woman: How all women are treated in the setting.
  • Damsel in Distress: Rhine and her sister-wives.
  • Infant Immortality: Averted to ridiculous levels; kids die more often than adults.
  • The Jailbait Wait: Horribly averted.
  • Let's Read: Here.
  • Mad Scientist: The grandfather seems to be one.
  • Mad Scientist Laboratory: There's one beneath the house.
  • Marital Rape License: Weirdly, seems to be a Type B.
  • No Transhumanism Allowed: Genetic enhancement is causing the extinction of the human race.
  • Old Man Marrying a Child: Standard in this world -- all the Arranged Marriages are to older, rich men. In particular, one of Linden's wives is 13.
  • Only Fatal to Adults: The disease that plagues Rhine's generation.
  • Too Dumb to Live: The Gathers, and arguably the society in general. All the women in this world drop dead at the age of 20, and all the men at the age of 25. Rather than keeping every woman alive for as long as possible so they can reproduce and keep the human species from going extinct, the Gathers kill all the young women who aren't chosen as a brides for their employers.