Reviews tagging 'Death of parent'

Unanimity by Alexandra Almeida

2 reviews

tinyelfarcanist's review

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dark mysterious reflective slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.5

Full of parallelisms to Le Petit Prince and delivered in lush prose, Unanimity supplies hard truths and defies the status quo. Spiral Worlds is a relevant story in today’s social climate and a cautionary tale of the future.

At first, the characters seem stereotypical, but their flaws and motivations become apparent as we delve into their pasts. Their lives are intertwined through decades of events, and their relationships are filled with as much pain as love.

The reluctance of the characters to curse (frack, ship, Leo the second) peeved me a little. And it isn’t ideal that the only nonbinary character is a non-human originally designed as androgynous. 

I don’t usually read sci-fi or stories in contemporary settings, but this book is a great reminder to read out of my comfort zone: good stories are independent of genre. 

Read my full review: https://tinyelfarcanist.wordpress.com/2023/03/07/unanimity-alexandra-almeida/

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azrah786's review

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3.25

 [This review can also be found on my BLOG]

**I was provided with a copy of the book for a blog tour with The Write Reads Tours in exchange for an honest review**

CW: violence, blood, suicidal ideation, suicide, death, death of parent, animal cruelty, war, alcohol/alcoholism, addiction, mental illness, cursing, sexual content, homophobia
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Unanimity, the thrilling first instalment of the Spiral Worlds series introduces us to a future variant of the world where an augmented reality programme has been created to help make life better on Earth. Two young minds – renowned screenwriter Thomas Astley-Byron and AI expert Henryk Nowak – created Down Below/Spiral Worlds to put humans through simulations that allow them to come face to face with the consequences of their actions, particularly those of the unsavoury kind, and the success of the technology gave the two programmers a God like status.
However, 40 years on – a fair few years since the dismal nature of the work has led to the demise of both Tom and Harry – they have been revived as their digital personas in order to stop the metaverse they have created from collapsing and destroying humanity.

With a cast of morally ambiguous characters, technology that is equally fascinating and frightening and some thought-provoking social commentary this is a fast paced and engaging story. Though it takes some time to get to grips with fully understanding the world and the predicament that the characters are facing, Almeida’s does really well at weaving a dual timeline narrative. We follow a present timeline that in this first book of the series takes place over 1 day and then chapters which lay out the past, spanning over decades and catching us up on how the characters have got to where they are.

Tom/Shadow is the principal protagonist that everything revolves around however, we follow 5 other key players too whose lives intertwine with his. The narration is ambitious with how many threads there are to follow and I will say that this made the story a little confusing at first especially with the chapters taking place in the present. We’re immediately thrown into the mix and there are a lot of names and shifting loyalties to get accustomed too but the more you read the more interesting each of these characters get.

That being said I didn’t feel like I was able to fully connect to any of the characters as despite the bouts of action and stakes of the present timeline keeping things flowing everything taking place over 1 day didn’t allow for much character development. Everyone’s decision making and motivations seemed nonsensical and some relationships that were present in the book definitely felt stronger and more fleshed out than others.

What I did really enjoy though was the concepts behind the technology, and the worldbuilding that brought it all together thus I was hooked by the chapters set in the past. The author’s background in technology really shines through but I was just as intrigued by the ethical discussions and deliberation on morality that comes into the story.

All in all this was an entertaining read that nicely sets the pieces on the gameboard for the greater “save the day” plot that is to come.
Final Rating – 3.25/5 Stars 

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