I'm not exactly sure where to rate this. I hovered around a 4 for most of the book and wavered between a 3.5 to 4.125, so 4 stars it is.
This is an indie f/f sci-fi novel with a sort of non-denominational spiritual bent. Personally, I'm a big fan of indie as long as the book is solidly written (ie, typos minimal, formatting correct, strong story, etc) and this book does fit that criteria. It's clear that the author put a lot of care and effort into 'Spectral' and that earns my respect.
Skye and Vale are both intriguing characters and the book starts out seemingly normal, rooted in reality, but the sci-fi elements slowly leak in until they consume the whole book. In other words, it feels as if we're in a typical f/f love story until weird stuff starts happening.
The science behind the sci-fi aspect isn't really explained, but time, multiple dimensions, echoes of oneself are the focus. I thought the author was clever in how she weaved the strange into the normal.
The main and surrounding cast of characters are well done and, at the very least, are quite distinguishable from each other. As the story gets stranger, the main character Skye, is someone the reader can latch onto...and, for me, I definitely needed that.
The story is original and held my interest but, quite frankly dipped into the downright bizarre around the 70/80% mark and I had to really focus to keep up. At that point, all aspects of normality were completely obliterated and everything was new so I couldn't help but be in a state of 'wtf'? The author did bring me back to Earth in the last chapter, though, redeeming any misgivings and ending on a high note...so, yeah, overall I liked it.
The book is a weird mix of romance, darkness, erotica, anguish, family, normality, bizarre, and...alien. It's just very alien. lol
I think this is worth a read, especially as a kindle unlimited, but I will say I don't think this is a book for everyone.
There's a lot of explicit sex right from the beginning of the book and continues to the end. For me that was fine and I thought it served the plot and/or the development of the characters. There is insta-love, as well, but the sci-fi aspect explains that piece so I forgave it. The author was skilled enough to not make the insta-love empty and there was enough nuance and a foundation in place for it to feel intimate.
Profanity is dropped throughout, as well. It went with the characters and wasn't out of place in the dialogue...but, yeah it's prolific.
The sci-fi aspect also makes some of the characters futanari. Again, not an issue for me but if it's not your thing, you've been warned...
The only things I didn't care for was the word "sidelong" being used so often, *sometimes* having a hard time picturing the action, and a small drug scene which did serve the plot so okay, forgiven. There's also a feel of meandering plot or unnecessary characters in some areas but, looking back, all scenes did tie in to reveal something about Skye or Vale's character or ultimately informed the story so it's something that a reader needs to just ride with through the journey.
The cover is, amazingly, the author's own art. And, there's also a sequel in the works.
Overall, I recommend the read especially for f/f sci-fi lovers. I'm also happy to promote a talented indie author.