A review by cathyatratedreads
All Our Wrong Todays by Elan Mastai

3.0

By the end, I liked this book pretty well. But for most of it, it seemed like a lot of narrator navel-gazing. I was almost wondering if this was a self-published book. It seemed like the writer didn't have an editor to rein him in and not just write whatever he pleased as his brain went off on all kinds of tangents and thoughts. The book is more philosophical than sci-fi, though it starts feeling more like it really gets into the nitty-gritty of what could happen with time travel by the end (and then there's a segment that's pretty out-there and circuitous and almost a bit much, but it ends up making some sense for the plot). The tone is kind of strange, too. I wasn't sure what to think for so much of it, and I somehow lack the proper words and literary comparisons to get it all across. But I appreciated what the author pulled off at the end.
*I received an advance e-copy of this book from NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.

Read my full review, including a rating for content, at RatedReads.com: https://ratedreads.com/all-our-wrong-todays-fiction-book-review/