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A review by peasandpancakes
The Unmaking of June Farrow by Adrienne Young
adventurous
emotional
mysterious
reflective
tense
medium-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? A mix
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? Yes
- Diverse cast of characters? No
- Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes
3.0
Initially I gave this a much higher rating because I read it in a couple of days and wanted to keep reading reading reading! But there was one crucial part of the story that could have been worked out better in my opinion (major spoiler, obviously)(seriously stop reading if you haven’t read the book): The time travel paradox. In the book, 2024 June made sure 2023 June would travel to 1951 by ensuring the letter and locket would be given to her. However, for this to happen 2024 June should have already have been sent back to 1951. And if 2024 June never travelled to 1946, there would also be no reason for her to fix the unravelling and send 2023 June to 1951, because she then never married and never had Annie. The endless loop that June talks about in the end cannot exist because in their new and only timeline, she only travels to 1951 and no other June should then be there or have been there, so Eamon and Annie shouldn’t exist. Furthermore, I do not see how and why the thread would not unravel as there is still a timeloop. I was just very disappointed in the end with the wrap-up. Also with Annies role in the story. She was truly a plot device. The more I keep thinking about this book, the less I like the story. Though it remains well written!
Graphic: Death, Mental illness, Death of parent, Murder, and Abandonment
Moderate: Sexual content and Grief
Minor: Vomit