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A review by novi
Sea of Tranquility by Emily St. John Mandel
emotional
mysterious
sad
medium-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? Plot
4.0
if you like reading about time travel, you should read this book.
honestly i started reading this because i really like the first part of this book, which was of edwin, a pragmatic and woke guy from 1912. it was cozy. but this book is not cozy.
one of the things that i don't like from science fiction genre is the futuristic and desert-y settings. this book has it, that atmosphere was really thick in the year of 2203. it was so monotonous but after that it's fine. actually the part after that was where the actual plot was finally clear and i couldn't stop reading from that point.
there are twists and turns in this book, because the timeline of this book is literally not linear. some of the twists gave me goosebumps. i would say that to made those twists, there are some plot holes, and there are things that i still don't understand or not explained in this book.
but all in all it's a book about time travel that explores how that affect humans' lives, and "are we living in a simulation?". Some parts of the book got depressing (war, pandemic, imprisonment), which is not my favorite, but it's a literary so it's kind of a given, and this is a short book, so those moments didn't lasts very long, at least.
honestly i started reading this because i really like the first part of this book, which was of edwin, a pragmatic and woke guy from 1912. it was cozy. but this book is not cozy.
one of the things that i don't like from science fiction genre is the futuristic and desert-y settings. this book has it, that atmosphere was really thick in the year of 2203. it was so monotonous but after that it's fine. actually the part after that was where the actual plot was finally clear and i couldn't stop reading from that point.
there are twists and turns in this book, because the timeline of this book is literally not linear. some of the twists gave me goosebumps. i would say that to made those twists, there are some plot holes, and there are things that i still don't understand or not explained in this book.
but all in all it's a book about time travel that explores how that affect humans' lives, and "are we living in a simulation?". Some parts of the book got depressing (war, pandemic, imprisonment), which is not my favorite, but it's a literary so it's kind of a given, and this is a short book, so those moments didn't lasts very long, at least.
Moderate: Confinement and War