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SheltieLover

(59,462 posts)
Fri Oct 28, 2022, 09:03 AM Oct 2022

Guardian: Moon Sugar by Angela Meyer review - blending the wonder of fantasy with the thrill of crim

https://amp.theguardian.com/books/2022/oct/28/moon-sugar-by-angela-meyer-review-blending-the-wonder-of-fantasy-with-the-thrill-of-fiction

They say that funerals are for the living. Similarly, the ghosts that haunt Angela Meyer’s second novel exist in the same way – revived as they’re remembered by the living. Meyer’s ghosts are famed, glittering figures from history – David Bowie, Marlene Dietrich – alongside inventors and philosophers, whose work and ideas coalesce in the background of Moon Sugar.

The book begins with death, although as a whole Moon Sugar is radiantly life-affirming. On a trip to Europe, free-spirited Josh disappears in Berlin. Although no body is found, his family receives a suicide note via text, which is enough to shut down any potential investigation. But it’s not enough to quell the curiosity of his best friend, Kyle, or one of his lovers, Mila. Desperate to know the truth about the last moments of the man both desired to know better, Kyle and Mila independently journey to Berlin, where they meet, and start to piece together Josh’s final days. Their search brings more questions than it answers, about Josh and about the mysterious experiment he and Mila had participated in together some months before he left.

Meyer writes in a sort of literary surrealist hybrid, obviously troubled by the fate of humanity and the world itself. Thematically and stylistically her work echoes books like David Mitchell’s Cloud Atlas or The Bone Clocks – all of these works employing a more flexible, non-linear narrative framework than straightforward realism to grapple with the challenges of the future. But Moon Sugar is deeply concerned with the events of the very recent past – with isolation, the pandemic, and the climate crisis – and the way these mirror events from the deeper past. Are we, as humans, unable to escape the cycle of wanton destruction and greedy capitalism that is turning our attention so far away from the things that really matter?

More at link. Sounds likd a delicious read to me, so I thought it best to share. Enjoy!
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