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Master Class by Christina Dalcher

May 22, 2020

master

Christina Dalcher’s debut novel, Vox, established her as one of those writers who can layer present events onto the future and make it grim, but plausible. In the novel, separation of church and state disappear and one of the first acts of the new government is to restrict the number of words a woman can speak each day. Yeah. Now, she’s back and she sets Master Class in a ... Read More...

4 Comments
Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: dystopia, science fiction, thriller

The Road by Cormac McCarthy

March 2, 2020

road

You forget what you want to remember and you remember what you want to forget. A man and his young son are walking on a desolate road surrounded by burnt trees and ashes. In the distance fires still burn. They are headed…where? To safety would seem to be the answer, but in Cormac McCarthy’s The Road there is no safe place. The world as we know it has gone up in flames. ... Read More...

14 Comments
Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: book clubs, dystopia, horror, literary, Pulitzer Prize, science fiction

Recursion

December 16, 2019

recursion

Blake Crouch’s new novel, Recursion, has left me stumped. In order to review a book, I need to be able, to some degree, to understand it and in this case I’m not sure I do. It’s about time travel and its impact. Sort of. Maybe. I think… It’s 2007 and Helena Smith is a neuroscientist whose mother has Alzheimer’s. She has spent years trying to devise a way to capture and map ... Read More...

8 Comments
Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: book clubs, Crown, dystopia, science fiction, suspense, thriller

Three Dystopian Worlds: Mini-Reviews

November 11, 2019

dystopian

  Somehow, in the midst of my own chaos I found myself reading three dystopian novels that painted a bleak picture for humans. You’d think I would have chosen soothing books about rainbows and unicorns, but in their own way each of these books worked to take my mind out of my life and into realities I’d never considered. Which is always fun, even when it's ... Read More...

7 Comments
Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: dystopia, science fiction

The Testaments by Margaret Atwood

October 28, 2019

testaments

It begins with the gathering up of the women. They are herded into what used to be a sports stadium and separated into groups. Based on what? Not race. Not age. No, profession. Doctors recognize fellow practitioners, teachers band together, lawyers huddle. They’re kept for days, even weeks. And then, the executions start. This is the chilling introduction to The Testaments, ... Read More...

10 Comments
Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: book clubs, dystopia, literary, science fiction, women

Vessel: A Novel by Lisa Nichols

May 24, 2019

vessel

When Catherine Wells returns to Earth after 6 years of being presumed dead in space, it’s a big deal. And a great premise for a sci-fi novel, especially because she returns alone, without her five team members, AND she has no memory at all of what happened. She is the captain of a space vessel that not only went past Earth’s solar system, but landed on a planet beyond any we ... Read More...

4 Comments
Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: Atria Books, debut, science fiction

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