Why? Why do I feel compelled to finish books? The world is full of books, my time on this earth is limited, and there is no reason on earth to spend any of it reading books that I'm not really enjoying. (Other than my recent obsession with meeting my Goodreads/Storygraph annual reading goals. Four books ahead of schedule as of today!)
Yes, I struggled to finish this one. Yes, I did finish it.
Was it a bad book? Not at all. The cover quotes reviews saying things like "Mind-bendingly clever and utterly gripping" and "Ingenious" and I can see where those comments come from. It's well-written too.
What's my problem? A number of things. The book has to overcome the fact that it leans into a couple of tropes/conventions that are not generally my favourites:
- Multiple characters, multiple timelines, multiple storylines that have no clear connection
- Reader is lost amongst a random, confusing set of situations in a universe where much of what happens makes little sense. Rules of the world need to be inferred over many pages (Reader only begins to understand the overall situation about 125 pages in.)
Basically, Psalms 'buries the lede'. Which is not all bad. Not every book needs to be (or should be!) an adventure full of characters saying "As you know Bob, if the graffelgrommit fails we're all DOOOOOOMED!"
Equally though, does any book need to be stuffed full of graphic descriptions of post-WWII torture murders of Nazis? Alongside conquistador murders and slavery torments and beatings by racist cops? Especially when all of these gruesome storylines are actually pretty peripheral to the main plot? They're more in the line of illustrations of the fact that we are operating in a universe with <spoiler> many parallel and interconnecting simulated worlds </spoiler>.
Why did I finish? Because the 125 pages point was well-calibrated. (Any later and sorry, I'm not intrigued, I'm frustrated and bored.) Because the writing was vivid, and the situations were gripping and/or intriguing (especially the ones that didn't feature graphic violence). Because I wanted to see how everything came together. (Hallelujah. It did! In books like this it doesn't always.) Because the book had an editor (my guess :-) who insisted on the rare chapters that included clear explanations. Because I could skip the most graphic descriptions of horrible things.
But mostly, because I'm stubborn. Otherwise I'd have stopped at about page 250 (of 538).
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