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Discussion Guide

The Thousand Steps

When 16-year-old Ebba Den Eeden is unexpectedly released from the underground bunker where she and 2,000 of South Africa’s last surviving teenagers have spent their lives. But when she comes to the surface, she discovers that the bunker’s leaders have been lying for years, and that Cape Town— supposedly inhabitable after a nuclear holocaust caused massive sea level rise and flooded the city—is alive and well.  

 

Soon, she finds out she’s the heir to a massive fortune, and the subject of an ancient prophecy that makes her the last hope to save the remaining human race. In a new world she doesn’t understand and surrounded by strangers each intent on gaining something from her, Ebba is forced to navigate her newfound power and the schemes of the evil High Priest and his handsome son Hal, while trying to unite four supernatural amulets and prevent a second global apocalypse. And when her three best friends are condemned to execution in the bunker, Ebba must uncover the secrets of her family lineage and return to the one place she spent her whole life hoping to escape.

 

A dystopian, climate fiction trilogy with a hint of the mythological, The Thousand Steps is the exhilarating first chapter of Helen Brain’s Fiery Spiral trilogy – and a testament to the power of a single human life to prevent the widespread destruction of the planet we call home.

 

Book club questions for The Thousand Steps by Helen Brain

Use these discussion questions to guide your next book club meeting.

Why is fantasy a good genre to talk about real-life issues?
Ebba is tasked with a great responsibility when she is elevated from the bunker. Do you think that she's taken that responsibility well? What does good leadership look like?
How are power, class, and privilege defined in the world Ebba finds when she is elevated?
What does this story tell us about South African society? Is its structure different than where you live? Why or why not?
What does this book say about the definition of family? Who would Ebba define as her family? Who do you define as your family, and do you think family members have responsibilities towards each other?
The Cape Town Ebba lives in has changed dramatically as a result of flooding and deforestation. What does the author's world creation have to say about climate change? Does it affirm fears, or give hope, or both?
Gender and age both play a big role in the story, as Ebba is consistently underestimated as a result of being a young girl. How does Ebba's story upend our assumptions about gender and age?

The Thousand Steps Book Club Questions PDF

Click here for a printable PDF of the The Thousand Steps discussion questions


This recommended reading and discussion guide are shared in partnership with Catalyst Press.