The story’s got a great premise, but it’s not exactly a page-turner. I wasn’t waiting to see how events would turn out, in fact, a lot of the time, I wasn’t even sure the scenes were going or which details were background. Instead, I continued reading because Cash conveys a dreamlike state, where things are just not quite right, and I was intrigued by this half-world, which began to seem like a possible afterlife.
While we’re having a wider conversation about content warnings and consideration in academics, it was interesting to read about a student being reminded, through course content, of dark secrets in her past. Aristotle (or a semi-Aristotle, like many times in this book I wasn’t entirely sure what was real and what was a spirit) teaches a strange history class, and he was kind of a pompous dick, which is pretty much how I imagine him.
Overall, this book went in many different directions, ending as more of an intriguing world and interesting thoughts about an afterlife, than a traditional plot.
I received a copy of this book to review, all opinion are my own, as always.
Glass Houses, by Madeline Ashby, blends a lot of elements I like into a thriller,…
The Incredible Story of Cooking: From Prehistory to Today, 500,000 Years of Adventure is written…
The Secret People is John Wyndham's first novel, a pulpy adventure story about the civilization…
Written about 100 years ago, We, by Yevgeny Zamyatin, is often considered the first dystopian…
The Visit is a specfic short story by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie as part of the…
The British Invasion!, by French author and illustrator Hervé Bourhis, offers a fun visual year-by-year…