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Book Review: And Then I Woke Up by Malcolm Devlin

 

 

And Then I Woke Up by Malcolm Devlin. (Bookshop.org  | Amazon.com)

Tor.com. 2022

ISBN: ‎978-1250798077

Available: Paperbsck, Kindle edition.

 

 

This was an PDF ARC provided to me by Ellen Datlow so changes may have been made prior to publication.

 

And Then I Woke Up has an unreliable narrator, a middle-aged man named Spence, who (we are told) is at a mental facility for people who have been “infected” by a virus that caused a mass delusion that made them believe people around them were flesh-eating zombies, reinforced by a media narrative, and by infected charismatic leaders who emerged from the chaos to take control of small groups of “survivors”.

 

Spence notices Leila, a new patient, is not fitting in. After accidentally seeing a snippet of a news report she decides to break out and Spence goes with her. We learn Spence’s story– or do we? The story he remembers is not the one other infected people remember, or the one the Army reported, or the account in the news, or the one the families of people he attacked remember. And only one of those stories is the one the therapist wants to hear him repeat.

 

Leila wants to return to join her group because it was easier to understand the world in black and white, but needs a different narrative to justify her survival so Spence comes up with one, or maybe a second, or maybe a third– he’s not sure what actually happens, although he hopes her story will be enough to influence the narrative positively so infected, cured, and uninfected can coexist peacefully.

 

But Spence’s imagination will no longer allow him to believe in a single narrative and as he dreams of both past events and possible futures he loses his grip on reality.

 

What’s interesting about Spence is his lack of interest in the media or politics. His reaction to the infection establishes him as a “believer” fully enough that it completely alters his perceptions despite that. Rather than simply a story about a zombie invasion or pandemic, Devlin has written a critique of how narrative can be shaped to influence even people who don’t start out with an interest in it.

 

And Then I Woke Up is a short piece that will appeal to readers who appreciate unreliable narrators, but those looking for a straightforward narrative will want to look elsewhere.

 

There’s a lot about storytelling, narrative, othering, grief, guilt, and what makes a believer. This felt political, but makes its mark on a very personal, heartbreaking, and terrifying level.

 

Reviewed by Kirsten Kowalewski

Book Review: The Next Time I Die by Jason Starr

The Next Time I Die by Jason Starr

The Next Time I Die by Jason Starr. ( Bookshop.org. |  Amazon.com )

Hard Case Crime, 2022

ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1789099515

Available: Paperback, Kindle edition

 

 

I received an unfinished ARC of this from Hard Case Crime.

 

Steven Blitz is the defense lawyer for serial killer Jeffrey Hammond, a high profile case. He is working on the case at home when out of seemingly nowhere his mentally Ill wife demands a divorce, says she’s in love with a woman, and locks him out in a snowstorm. He is driving through the snow when the car skids and he is nearly in an accident. He stops for gas and intervenes in a domestic dispute that ends with him getting stabbed and bleeding out.

 

Or is that really what happened? He wakes up in the hospital with a concussion to a loving wife, and a daughter and dog he never owned, wealthy, a survivor of brain cancer, and with a good life… but he is not a good person. The world has changed and nobody believes him.

 

Steven is a bizarrely unreliable narrator and I was glued to the pages trying to figure out what crazy turn the story would take next, and if it could be believed. The Next Time I Die has been optioned for a movie, and if it’s made, it will be interesting to see how it turns out. Recommended.

 

Reviewed by Kirsten Kowalewski

Book Review: The School for Good Mothers by Jessamine Chan

The School for Good Mothers by Jessamine Chan

 

The School for Good Mothers by Jessamine Chan Amazon.com Bookshop.org )

Simon & Schuster, 2022

ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1982156121

Available: Hardcover, paperback, Kindle edition, audiobook

 

This book was like living through a nightmare trainwreck.

 

Single working mother Frida is separated from her two year old daughter Harriet after she leaves her home alone for more than two hours with the back door open. She is sentenced to a year at the School of Good Mothers, a new program that monitors neglectful parents as they work through a sadistic and brutal parenting curriculum that requires them to mother human-appearing child robots while depriving them of actual contact with their children. Mothers who don’t finish or pass will have their parental rights terminated and appear on a neglectful parent registry.

 

This has a similar feel to The Handmaid’s Tale, and the teachers, social workers, and administrators are the absolute worst versions you could come up with for those roles. The difference is, it is set in the present day, and it’s not impossible to imagine something similar actually taking place. The individual characters don’t matter as much.as the overall picture.

 

Frida is lucky in that her parents, ex, and his wife are all supportive of her, but even so, the end is inevitable.

 

Obviously no one  should leave a toddler at home unsupervised for two hours, but the state shouldn’t be rigidly and arbitrarily prescriptive and cruelly controlling of the ways we parent our children. The lessons of The School for Good Mothers are more damaging to Frida and her daughter than reparative.

 

The story flowed well, but it is chilling, a difficult read in our real world environment that is colder to women, and children, every day. Highly recommended.

 

Contains: suicide, suicidal ideation, murderous thoughts, racial slurs, solitary confinement, violence, mentions of pedophilia.

 

 

Reviewed by Kirsten Kowalewski