Kim Deister
Written on Apr 8, 2017
Alicia lives alone with her mother, her father long gone. But during her birthday party, he shows up and explains to her that she isn't crazy, that there is nothing wrong with her. Her hallucinations are real, glimpses into other universes, a gift that not everyone has but that many want to use for their own purposes.
I love multiverse books, and this one was no different. The multiverse theory, while theoretical at best, is thought-provoking. Are the parallel universes as real is the original, the people as important? This question is at the center of the novel. Where is the line of ethics when it comes to the multiverse? That, too, is at the center of the book, relying heavily on the answer to the first question.
It is interesting to read books like this and compare the ways in which they make the multiverse real and viable. In one series, a device is used to take a traveler from universe to universe. In another, the traveler slips between the threads of frequencies that make up the "walls" between universes. In this book, it is physical triggers of pain applied in specific places that does the trick.
As a fan of the multiverse genre, I really enjoyed this book. The authors added some unique twists to the theory.