Man, this book is BLEAK.
This is the story of Evelyn and Richard, a newly married couple who absolutely HATE each other. She thinks he is boring and spoiled, he thinks she is narcissistic and "slutty". They are terrible people who are even worse together. As their story unfolds, it becomes clear that they have a horrible, dark connection to each other's past that neither of them wants to discuss.
The author adopts a kind of meta view on everything... At one point, she references Chekov's advice to always drop the end of the story. This probably explains why her story doesn't actually have a definitive ending. It's also clear that Evelyn and Richard are meant to be "the sleepwalkers" referenced in the title (at multiple points in the story when the "sleepwalker" couple is being discussed, a character actually says to Evelyn "this seems like more of your story"), however, it's never really clear why that was the case.
Death hangs heavy over the entire story. The author includes gory descriptions of animals dismembering each other and frequently describes colors in terms of blood or rotting meat. There are a lot of references to pomegranates and pomegranate seeds, including the main narrator eating a single pomegranate seed, à la Persephone. It's clear that someone will end up dead by the end of the book but we aren't certain who it will be. As we got to know each of the characters better, I found myself hoping that none of these jerks survived.
There are a lot of things that I came to dislike about The Sleepwalkers, although when it first started, I was fully on board. I liked the author's use of descriptive language and imagery to really paint every setting. Sometimes this kind of thing can feel expository but it was beautifully effective here. Unfortunately, as the story shifted between various narrators and points of view, the voice didn't. Each of the characters seemed to have this same flare for language, which almost led to the feeling that the original narrator was pretending to speak from the point of view of these other characters.
Because the story was told in the form of letters that had been collected, torn apart and burned, there were certain places in each narration where there were big gaps in the actual prose: large chunks missing, then single sentences dropped on the page with no context. I know it was meant to add flashes of insight but it became distracting and tedious as it continued to occur over and over again. I noticed that other reviewers also found that to be confusing and took it as a glitch in the digital version of the book, which means that it obviously did not add very much to the story.
Overall, this book wanted to speak on so many hot button topics that it ended up losing its way. Off the top of my head, I can think of plot points involving murder, domestic abuse, PTSD, human trafficking, infidelity, sexual assault, the Me Too movement, Covid, immigration and xenophobia, gang rape, cancel culture, mental illness, class warfare, systems designed to protect the guilty, and appropriation of trauma. It also dabbles in tropes like Fame At Any Cost, A Daring Escape, Being On The Run, Finding God, and Living Your Truth.
The Chekhov-esque ending was very muddled. Did anyone make it out alive? Did everyone make it out alive? Who knows. Who cares... the author obviously didn't. The villain's motive is hastily slapped on at the last minute in order to draw the story to a close, with no prior groundwork having been laid. Nothing is ever resolved, no consequences are ever applied. The lead character never deals with her trauma. And then the book is over.
The book blurb was described as Highsmith meets White Lotus. I'm guessing this is because both of those stories take place on Mediterranean islands. Otherwise, there's no overlap. It is also described as "very funny", and this is a STRAIGHT UP LIE. There is nothing funny about this book. It's dark and depressing and I don't think I ever even cracked a smile reading it.
I believe this author is talented but this project was too ambitious.
I appreciate NetGalley and the publisher for access to a digital ARC. My honest review is my own opinion.