Starred Review for Kirkus Reviews
(Thu Apr 28 00:00:00 CDT 2022)
In a dystopian world of heavy fog, Nazi demonstrations, and a creeping virus, photographer Cass Neary searches for an ancient book that might have supernatural power.Cass is a wreck. She's lost her camera; she hasn't heard from the love of her life, ex-con Quinn O'Boyle, in several days; and she's jonesing for alcohol, speed, or anything else she can get her hands on. When she runs into rare-book runner Gryffin Haselton in London, he confesses that he's about to make the sale of a lifetime to up-and-coming tech genius Tindra Bergstrand: a mysterious, arcane book that may have been written by Aristotle. Of course, things go horribly wrong: The middleman is murdered, and Cass and Gryffin escape only to be picked up by Tindra's people. It turns out that Tindra wants the Aristotle text to scan into an app she's developing that's supposed to heal the brains of people suffering from PTSD-but when Cass gets a glimpse of the Ludus Mentis app, she flashes back viscerally to the greatest trauma of her life. Reunited with Quinn, Cass is soon on the run, dodging neo-Nazis as they rally in London and following clues to a remote Scandinavian island, hoping that if she recovers the book it could pay her and Quinn's way to a new start. Cass is walking wounded; still she views the world through the eyes of a true artist, an artist who feels the full weight of her calling. "Because what is a photographer," she asks, "but a chooser of the slain, someone who decides who or what is destined for immortality?" Cass Neary is a tough, self-destructive character who still exudes compassion, courage, and love for the beauty and the pain of life-even more so because she recognizes its impermanence.Part The Club Dumas, part The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo, all punk attitude and beautiful ache.
Kirkus Reviews
(Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)
In a dystopian world of heavy fog, Nazi demonstrations, and a creeping virus, photographer Cass Neary searches for an ancient book that might have supernatural power.Cass is a wreck. She's lost her camera; she hasn't heard from the love of her life, ex-con Quinn O'Boyle, in several days; and she's jonesing for alcohol, speed, or anything else she can get her hands on. When she runs into rare-book runner Gryffin Haselton in London, he confesses that he's about to make the sale of a lifetime to up-and-coming tech genius Tindra Bergstrand: a mysterious, arcane book that may have been written by Aristotle. Of course, things go horribly wrong: The middleman is murdered, and Cass and Gryffin escape only to be picked up by Tindra's people. It turns out that Tindra wants the Aristotle text to scan into an app she's developing that's supposed to heal the brains of people suffering from PTSD-but when Cass gets a glimpse of the Ludus Mentis app, she flashes back viscerally to the greatest trauma of her life. Reunited with Quinn, Cass is soon on the run, dodging neo-Nazis as they rally in London and following clues to a remote Scandinavian island, hoping that if she recovers the book it could pay her and Quinn's way to a new start. Cass is walking wounded; still she views the world through the eyes of a true artist, an artist who feels the full weight of her calling. "Because what is a photographer," she asks, "but a chooser of the slain, someone who decides who or what is destined for immortality?" Cass Neary is a tough, self-destructive character who still exudes compassion, courage, and love for the beauty and the pain of life-even more so because she recognizes its impermanence.Part The Club Dumas, part The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo, all punk attitude and beautiful ache.