What if you could record your dreams? What if you could experience someone else’s dreams? And what if stepping into those dreams was a complete emotional and sensory experience? Would you buy a dream? That is the the premise behind Playback Effect.
People purchase dreams in order to experience different aspects of human life. Want to know what it’s like to ski but are too uncoordinated? You can experience what’s it’s like without breaking your neck! There are also dreamers who can control their dreams to give their clients exactly what they want. But then something goes wrong and the way society and the government have been using dreams is called into question. Let’s get to the review!
Synopsis (from Goodreads):
New technology records the highlights of emotional experience for others to share. Buy a helmet and you can feel the exhilaration of an Olympic ski jumper, or the heat of a lucid dreamer’s erotic imaginings. Commit a crime, and you may be sentenced to endure the suffering you inflicted on others.
But such recordings may carry more information than the public has realized. What will criminals learn about their victims? When a husband is wrongfully convicted of injuring his wife, how will their marriage change? And what uses will a sociopath find for recordings of the experience of death?
Wynne and Hal’s marriage is not doing well but they are meeting for lunch nonetheless. They’re supposed to meet at the fountain in the square and it happens to be the same fountain her husband created a few years earlier. She is waiting for him when everything explodes. Someone put a bomb in the fountain and set it off, injuring or killing anyone who was close by, Wynne being one of the injured.
Hal is almost to the fountain when he sees the bomb go off and his first thoughts are for his wife. He soon finds out that she is still alive, but that doesn’t make the next days better for him. For Hal, they are a living hell. At first, he can’t get anywhere near Wynn because she is one of the victims, but in the days after that, he can’t get near her because he has been arrested for the bombing. It was his fountain after all.
He is eventually found guilty and his punishment is to put on a dream helmet and experience everything the victims went through, including his own wife. He picks her experience to go through first. It’s worse than he could have ever imagined but right before he is meant to move on to the next traumatic experience, he is saved. It is proven that he wasn’t the one involved and he is finally able to see Wynne.
Once she begins healing, Wynne and Hal are able to go home. But something is different. Yes, they are both experiencing nightmares from what they went through and what Hal saw Wynne experience, but that’s not it. Before, Hal was insensitive and barely listened to Wynne. Now, he seems to get her in a way he never did. But as it seems to have put a new spark into their relationship, they are not too worried about it.
While they are trying to get to life back to normal, Arthur Kellie, a police investigator, is looking into who is responsible for the bomb. At first, his sights were deadset on Hal. Hal was the man who “stole” Wynne away from him (or at least that’s how he sees it). But once that is disproved, Arthur searches everywhere he can for the culprit. Even after he is taken off the case, he still continues to work on it, even breaking the law to take down the villain despite how much he hates breaking the rules.
But even with how much he works, Arthur still needs the help of the last person he wants to go to: Hal. They don’t like each other AT ALL but it takes the both of them, along with Arthur’s assistant Hannah, to break open the case. One of the first things they find out is that there is a slight issue with the dreams everyone is watching. The dreamer and the one who watches the dream are connected in some way.
So, say the victim of a crime puts on a helmet after going through a traumatic event. If the perpetrator of that crime puts on a helmet and watches that dream, the two people become connected. This is actually something that happens in the story and results in numerous prison weddings as the victims feel connected to the person who hurt them in a way that ultimately leads them to believe they are in love. (yikes!)
While that doesn’t exactly help them find the bomber, it is an interesting side effect to this dreaming phenomenon. They have to work harder, get Wynn involved, and ultimately, a teenage hacker to finally find the man behind the fountain bomb.
You will be surprised who it ends up being despite that one of the POVs in the book is the bomber.
Playback Effect by Karen A. Wyle is a wild ride. From what the characters have to go through to the dreams they experience to the ways certain characters develop relationships with each other all make this a compelling story. I loved how Wynne and Hal’s relationship developed over the book as well as Hal and Arthur’s. Their reluctant friendship was possibly my favorite part in the book.
My only critique is that there are certain scenes I wanted more of. More specifically, I wanted the scene where they finally meet and arrest the killer to be expanded. It is arguably the most important scene in the book and it felt a little glossed over. I wanted a bit more dialogue with the killer and Arthur or Hal or just more emotion from the characters in that moment. It felt a little too quick of a resolution.
I also thought there were maybe one too many POVS covered. I liked getting the POV of the four main characters but I don’t think we necessarily needed the POV of some of the supporting characters.
That being said, I really enjoyed Playback Effect. I don’t read much sci-fi, so this was definitely a new concept to me but I found it really interesting and hard to put down. This was very much a book that I said I was just going to read one chapter and then I read four lol! I am giving Playback Effect by Karen A. Wyle 3 out of 5 stars. If you like sci-fi or just really interesting thrillers, you should definitely give this book a try!
Playback Effect is available now on Amazon.
Thank you to the author for the free copy of the book in exchange for an honest review.