Emily Eternal

Emily Eternal

2019 • 294 pages

Ratings11

Average rating3.2

15

** I received a copy of this book from the publisher.

I really wanted to enjoy Emily Eternal because the premise sounded really interesting. An artificial consciousness trauma counsellor trying to figure out their purpose during the end of the world. But there was so much I didn't like about the book which overshadowed it.

Firstly Emily's characterisation which was downright weird. It felt like I was seeing the story through the eyes of a teenager. This came across as a serious story written (I'm guessing) for adults. Then you have Emily with all sorts of interesting quotes like “I've felt no return to my expanded (and totes goddess-of-information-like) abilities”.

If you like YA romance books I guess you'll like this because thats basically what it is. Emily isn't like other girls (literally). And she gets her totally hot boyfriend. The whole intimacy thing between Emily and ?? (I'm going to say Kevin) was really weird. Emily doesn't physically exists, she's like a hologram projected onto the character's brain. But they manage to have sex. I'm not going to ask how.

I think the most annoying part of the plot was how it set up the rules for how the world works and then proceeds to break them. Even though Emily is a trauma counsellor she can manipulate cells and DNA. But apparently curing cancer is a step too far. In the space of two chapters she also taught herself how to swim and fight. Don't even ask me how the story ends because I read the ending three times and I still couldn't tell you.

The world just didn't seem believable. Too many science things were explained away with its basically just magic. I've literally read stories about moving an entire planet which felt more believable than this because it was grounded in science.

Basically its like Seveneves. If Seveneves was a YA fantasy book rather than hard science fiction.

May 31, 2019Report this review