Just a day at work, what can go wrong?
Everything about this book sounded like exactly what I like. A weird workplace, some weird events, expansion project, Severence vibes? I really liked the premise of this book and complete impossibility to categorize the style of it. It started as fiction, just a weird day with some unusual happenings that are easy to write off as, well, mental health stuff? But quite quickly it gets weird in the sci-fi direction but absolutely unlike what sci-fi usually does, it’s going much more into the uncanny valley territory. The book also quickly stops following just the main character, Tom, and presents a bunch of other perspectives from workers all around the company in the form of interviews as well as descriptions of the events from the perspective of an observer, cctv style. The narrative seems to really follow the expansion project itself, almost like a character, experienced by the workers. I really liked how bizarre it got, it kept getting more and more strange but it also meant that I felt like I wasn’t able to fully understand what was going on. As soon as I finished, I thought that I maybe wasn’t focused enough and second reading would clear things up but I wasn’t sure I wanted to invest the time again. In the end I think this book was doing a lot of interesting things but didn’t hold any particular intellectual value to justify needing multiple reads just to understand what it was trying to convey. On the other hand, I do love books that are so impossible to place, that stand out among all the other reads but they do need some anchor, something truly memorable and The Expansion Project was lacking it.
This book surprises with a lot of interesting narrative styles but seems to lack focus. In parts it felt more like interconnected short stories which were hard to piece together. It does have unique ideas that stand out among other fiction and I’ll be looking forward to this author’s future projects.
Thank you to Granta Publications and NetGalley for the eARC!