[book-info]
This was not a good book t b h. This was one of my first reads of the new year; I’d requested it late last year because the description intrigued me but the novel wasn’t at all what I’d expected, and not in a good way either. Basically the plot describes a phenomenon in which the dead return to life – instead of an undead uprising, this novel presents the dead as they were in life. Government authorities are formed to deal with the phenomenon, mostly to return the dead to their families, which presents many unforeseen problems. Our main characters, Harold and Lucille, an aged married couple face this issue – their eight old year son, drowned in an accident many years ago, is returned to them. The plot drags literally from the first page; literally nothing interesting happens, then something mildly interesting happens but don’t worry it soon becomes boring again, until the end in which bemusing shenanigans occur before boredom gets settled again. Soooooooo much talking, by characters I didn’t care about, and not much doing. I just…
I just didn’t care about any of the characters, and that’s kind of sad because this book really needs you to be emotionally attached to them in order to feel anything for what happens. Alas, Harold, Lucille and many of the other characters were just so flat that I found myself wondering, more than once, how much I had left until the end of the book. I should also point out that most of the book takes place in a very small town in the US, filled with the kind of people whose parents and grandparents were ‘deeply committed to racism’. So. Much. Fun. Phrases like ‘coloured people’ and the ‘coloureds’ are dropped into the dialogue like it’s no big thing but dude, I just found it increasingly grating and it definitely contributed to my inability to care about anything that happened in this novel. Let’s not forget that these characters are also deeply religious, which meant that there were a tonne of fun scenes in churches in which everyone shouted about damnation and Hell, and it all just felt a little bit too much like bible belt race relations tbh. I’m not sure if this was actually meant to be a parallel but if it was, it was just not done well enough. Rather than a true parallel filled with meaning, the writing just doesn’t feel self-aware, if that makes sense. It reads like unconscious nostalgia and it made me really uncomfortable. These characters are presented as good people but nearly all of them come across as borderline racist, deeply religious and very narrow-minded – not a good combination at all.
I also found the switch between POVs really jarring, and the change in font was unnecessary and annoying. There were smaller stories interspersed throughout the novel about the Returned all over the world and while I liked a few of them – the story about the Nazi teenagers being protected by Jewish people old enough to remember the Holocaust was especially poignant and would have made a better story than the main one – what was the point of them? I just don’t know.
I wouldn’t go into this novel expecting answers because you will find yourself disappointed. The phenomenon of the Returned is never explained but is rather, annoyingly, brushed under the carpet because ~miracles~ and the ending of the book was so ridiculous I actually laughed. Look, I love novels about philosophy and the question of religion but this book seems to expect the reader to take everything at face value and not question anything which I just cannot do. Do not recommend.
Amber (Books of Amber) says
I’m surprised you still gave this two stars.
Geybie Eisen says
Great review! I’m following you guys on Goodreads, GFC and Twitters. I will appreciate if you will follow me back. Have a great weekend.
You can find me here: http://www.geybie.net (Geybie’s Book Blog)
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