

A clone wakes up with someone else’s memories and seventy-two hours to solve her murder. I had no idea how much I needed this premise until I read it.
Carma Two has to investigate a crime, grapple with what it means to exist as a copy, wrestle with the feelings her original carried for the boy she loved…all while trying to ensure her survival.
This book has such angst, philosophical bite, and intrigue! The clone technology feels plausible, the ethical questions feel urgent, and the mystery was perfect: a blindsiding, yet perfectly sensical reveal.
I’ve read hundreds of books, and only two have ever made me cry. This is one of them. And it ended the story in a gut-punch of first sorrow, then…extraordinary hope.
I received a copy from the author via the LibraryThing Early Reviewers program. All opinions are mine alone.
A clone wakes up with someone else’s memories and seventy-two hours to solve her murder. I had no idea how much I needed this premise until I read it.
Carma Two has to investigate a crime, grapple with what it means to exist as a copy, wrestle with the feelings her original carried for the boy she loved…all while trying to ensure her survival.
This book has such angst, philosophical bite, and intrigue! The clone technology feels plausible, the ethical questions feel urgent, and the mystery was perfect: a blindsiding, yet perfectly sensical reveal.
I’ve read hundreds of books, and only two have ever made me cry. This is one of them. And it ended the story in a gut-punch of first sorrow, then…extraordinary hope.
I received a copy from the author via the LibraryThing Early Reviewers program. All opinions are mine alone.