I believe I’ve owned this book since roughly March 10 2018. But didn’t decide to try it until December 7 2019. Simple enough reason for the delay, I forgot I owned it, and I own a ton of books I got for free. When I learned of the LGBT connection this book had, it moved up possible reads. Then I read it.
A woman awakens in a hospital. There’s some woman who doesn’t appear to belong in the room, a doctor near her, and more doctors and nurses in the distance. She’s being evaluated. It quickly becomes clear to herself and those in attendance that: a) she has an odd form of amnesia that has removed nothing but herself (or: her skills, training, physical abilities, ability to remember (other than whatever personality/person she was before the accident), everything about the place she is currently stationed, the ‘stuff’ she needs to know to ‘do her job’, etc. etc., is still in her brain, but the memories/feelings/etc. that make her her appear to be missing); b) I already mentioned it, but it is important to the rest of the story: it is quickly established that she still knows her own job, revealed when she calmly went to one of the screens in the hospital, input a bunch of codes, and began examining what she found.
Emé Fallon is the woman who awoke in the hospital. The other woman was her wife of six months, Wren. Emé, as noted, has no knowledge of this ‘Wren’ and finds her presence to be confusing. Fairly quickly during her awakening, Emé learns that she is the security chef on the space station. And has been for roughly a year. I think. Six months? The timing got a little confusing for me, doesn’t matter though.
First half of the book has Emé trying to regain her memories. Trying to adapt to having another person in her quarters who is her wife. Trying to adapt to her job and her boss, who seems to hate her for some unknown reason. Even from the beginning, though, there were these ‘off’ things that made her question everything. Like how she seemed ‘better’ than her record indicated (like combat related matters, like knife throwing). A significant event occurs around that 50% mark that redirects the book, based on some stuff she found out hidden in files; then another significant event slightly later redirects things again. I’m being purposefully vague.
I’ve a vague idea that I read something that said that this was something like Total Recall mixed with Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. There are similarities, but also massive differences.
For those who care about such things: this is a universe that includes an Earth that is known, remembered, and still ‘operating’, though not visited in this story. There a massive number of different humanoids around.
Also for those who care about such things: there is no graphic depictions of sex. A few depictions of violence, but not much in the way of action/violence.
I enjoyed the book, which I got for free, and immediately acquired the next two books in the series. Helps that the next two books are Kindle Unlimited books, and I had some room to add books. But, still, I was going to buy the next book before I saw I could get it for free.
I know I haven’t said anything but it is hard to say anything without diving into spoilers. Plus I keep having ‘Odo’ thoughts bounce around my brain, distracting me. And while Emé is a security chef on a space station, like Odo, that’s the sum total of their similarities. Well, both also do not know their back history, to start with. I’m fairly certain, though, that Odo keeps bouncing around in my brain, because the actor who played the role just died.
Rating: 4.44
December 9, 2019