I thoroughly enjoyed Crouch’s super-charged sci fi thriller Dark Matter – see my review – and so was keen to get hold of this one, as many folks whose opinion I respect said Recursion was better than Dark Matter. So I was absolutely delighted to discover that I’d won a beautiful hardback copy in a giveaway organised by Tammy of Books, Bones and Buffy.
BLURB: What if someone could rewrite your entire life?
‘My son has been erased.’Those are the last words the woman tells Barry Sutton before she leaps from the Manhattan rooftop. Deeply unnerved, Barry begins to investigate her death only to learn that this wasn’t an isolated case. All across the country, people are waking up to lives different from the ones they fell asleep to. Are they suffering from False Memory Syndrome, a mysterious, new disease that afflicts people with vivid memories of a life they never lived? Or is something far more sinister behind the fracturing of reality all around him?
This one starts with a bang and doesn’t let up. Like Dark Matter, Crouch gives his sci fi premise a real contemporary thriller feel with the punchy pacing and driving narrative. The surprise-filled, twisting plot sucks you in and doesn’t let go until the last page, so that I read this one in two greedy gulps and judging from the comments of other reviewers, I’m not alone in being unable to put this one down until the end. One of Crouch’s strengths is that I really cared about the two main protagonists. Both Barry and Helena are good people, trying to do their best in increasingly dreadful circumstances and I held my breath, hoping against hope that – somehow – they’d prevail.
I was pleased to see that even the main antagonist had strong reasons for doing what he’d done, so that while I couldn’t condone his actions, I could at least understand them. I really liked the way the stakes around this huge discovery kept getting greater, until that terrible climactic scene in the middle of New York… I had to put the book down for a while at that point, as I needed to draw breath.
Of course, the catch with raising the stakes so very high, is that the denouement and ending have to be able to match them. While it hadn’t been a dealbreaker, I wasn’t wholly happy with the end of Dark Matter. However this time around, Crouch brings the story to a great conclusion, with plenty of poignancy and heartache along the way. Far too often, apocalyptic sci fi focuses on the geeky consequences of the catastrophe, leaving characters with all the charisma of cardboard cutouts – not so Crouch. I minded what happened to these people and felt very invested in their ultimate wellbeing. As I rather shakily closed this book for the last time, I took a couple of deep breaths, feeling very relieved that I wasn’t a character in one of Crouch’s worlds.
10/10
So glad you loved this, Sarah. Crouch is a brilliant writer, and I wish he would write faster! Now you MUST read Anyone by Charles Soule at some point. It’s very must in the vein of Recursion but completely different, and just as thrilling!
Thank you for the lovely giveaway prize:)). And thank you also for the helpful recommendation!
I really REALLY loved this book. I devoured it in audiobook. So good!
Ooo… I can imagine this was a cracking audiobook, too:).
I can’t remember if you’ve read DARK MATTER or not, but that one is also good!
Thank you for the recommendation, SJ, yes… I’ve also read that one, too:)
Ah, so happy you enjoyed this! 🙂
And you put your finger on a very important detail: the antagonist was depicted as a villain, granted, but he was not the cardboard cutout, mustache-twirling kind, and this made him all the more believable. And dangerous…
Thanks for sharing!
Thank you, Maddalena:). Oh yes – while I enjoyed Dark Matter, I LOVED this one… And wasn’t he a great antagonist?
It was the same for me: I enjoyed Dark Matter, but this one held my attention 100% – it was no effort at all to suspend my disbelief, even if it was an important requirement to be able to read the story… 😉
This sounds so, so like the 90s movie Dark City. Hmm. Guess I should look it up!
If someone makes it into a film, it will absolutely rock… It has that cinematic quality.
Like you, I enjoyed Recursion recently. To explain what’s going on I put together a plot explanation, FAQ and chart of all the timelines here:
https://www.starvind.com/bookreviews/recursion-explained/
I’m hoping to help other readers who have questions about the book. It took me a re-read to appreciate it. Would you please add a plug to my explainer post in yours?
I think the chart is great:). I’ve approved your pingback so that anyone visiting here can take a look, Ash. Thank you for swinging by:)
Thank you Sarah. Feel free to reference it in your post if you think your readers might appreciate the explainer. I’m subscribing to your blog for future post updates 🙂
Thank you, Ash:)
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