A special thank you to NetGalley and Bloomsbury USA/Publishing for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.
It is 1986 and eleven-year-old Nedda Papas is obsessed with becoming an astronaut. Her father, Theo, is a scientist who has recently been laid off from his job at NASA. Theo is being consumed by an idea of his own making as a result of never getting over the loss of his newborn son—he has invented something that will alter time.
This is a story of women, of fathers and daughters, and of sacrifice.
I've been a fan of Swyler's writing since reviewing The Mermaid Girl, which is the prequel to The Book of Speculation. While I enjoyed the exploration of the father-daughter relationship, this story missed the mark. I feel party responsible for the mediocrity I felt while reading this book because I didn't realize it was science fiction. That's not a criticism of the genre, it is just simply not for me and had I realized this, I would not have requested the book.
The story is framed in two time periods—at the time of the Challenger explosion and then in the future. It was the futuristic timeline/time in space that was disengaging and I was happy to be immersed in the earlier timeline.
What I did enjoy was the writing, there is no doubt that Swyler is a talented author, but I felt bogged down by the terminology and high level of detail and therefore was emotionally disconnected.
ERIKA SWYLER is a graduate of New York University. She is a writer and playwright whose work has appeared in literary journals and anthologies. Born and raised on Long Island's north shore, Erika is also a baker, photographer and blogger.
It is 1986 and eleven-year-old Nedda Papas is obsessed with becoming an astronaut. Her father, Theo, is a scientist who has recently been laid off from his job at NASA. Theo is being consumed by an idea of his own making as a result of never getting over the loss of his newborn son—he has invented something that will alter time.
This is a story of women, of fathers and daughters, and of sacrifice.
I've been a fan of Swyler's writing since reviewing The Mermaid Girl, which is the prequel to The Book of Speculation. While I enjoyed the exploration of the father-daughter relationship, this story missed the mark. I feel party responsible for the mediocrity I felt while reading this book because I didn't realize it was science fiction. That's not a criticism of the genre, it is just simply not for me and had I realized this, I would not have requested the book.
The story is framed in two time periods—at the time of the Challenger explosion and then in the future. It was the futuristic timeline/time in space that was disengaging and I was happy to be immersed in the earlier timeline.
What I did enjoy was the writing, there is no doubt that Swyler is a talented author, but I felt bogged down by the terminology and high level of detail and therefore was emotionally disconnected.
ERIKA SWYLER is a graduate of New York University. She is a writer and playwright whose work has appeared in literary journals and anthologies. Born and raised on Long Island's north shore, Erika is also a baker, photographer and blogger.
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