There's something about the blurb of this book that really grabbed me, and I had it on my wishlist for quite some time, before I got it on Kindle, to read during a (rare) quiet shift at work.
I was so close to giving up on this book, but I persevered, as it was only 106 pages long, but honestly, it's not worth it. It's based around the story of a boy, called Julian, told from his point of view, and he is definitely on the autistic spectrum. He has excellent memory recall (something that his grandfather also has, but this wasn't expanded in any detail, which I thought would have been quite an interesting concept) and has a traumatic event on his thirteenth birthday.
After that, the book goes quite strange. Julian starts having memories which are not his - some are from the past, and then go into the future. He conveniently finds out a lot of details about the person who's memories he has accessed, which leads to him searching for their Facebook pages and trying to prevent a significant event from happening.
But trying to stop this significant event from happening, there's no sense of urgency to the book, and for 106 pages, it really does drag. I couldn't get a grasp of Julian in my head, and I didn't feel that the storytelling was particularly good. This book is getting excellent reviews, which also was a major attraction for me, but I wouldn't recommend it. It goes into quite complicated territory, and I am not confident that in the end, I understood what had just happened. If the book had stood a chance to be fully fleshed out, to a standard length paperback, it might have stood a better chance. This has put me off reading any more by this author, and puzzled as to what everyone else read, that I clearly didn't get.