Genre
Speculative Fiction
Setting and Context
In a future dystopian world in which water has become exceptionally scarce.
Narrator and Point of View
The novel is told from the perspective of its protagonist, Noria, a young woman who must contend with the fallout from the climate emergency (and the lack of water).
Tone and Mood
The novel is solemn, scientific, violent, serene, and dystopian.
Protagonist and Antagonist
Noria is the protagonist of the novel; Sanja is the antagonist of the novel.
Major Conflict
The major conflict of the novel revolves around Noria's struggle to balance her role as a tea master and her desire to remain physically safe.
Climax
The climax of the novel occurs when Noria goes through the ceremony to become a tea master, following in the footsteps of her father.
Foreshadowing
Noria's choice to become a tea master rather than flee for her safety is foreshadowed early on in the novel.
Understatement
The sheer difficulty of Noria (and her father's) job is initially understated in the novel.
Allusions
There are a number of allusions to other dystopian literature and film, the geography and history of Europe (particularly the Nordic countries), science, religion, and Greek and Roman mythology.
Imagery
Itäranta uses intense and violent imagery to reinforce the sheer danger that Noria is in.
Paradox
Without the tea master (who know where the stores of water are) in a town, the residents of the town would die of thirst. A single point of failure is paradoxical; if something happened to the tea master countless people would die.
Parallelism
Noria's journey and the journey of other tea masters is paralleled with each other.
Metonymy and Synecdoche
n/a
Personification
Water is personified and given human characteristics in the novel.