It really makes me sad when I read a book with an amazing premise but the execution falls flat.
This is how I felt after reading
Reincarnation Blues.
Milo has been reincarnated almost 10,000 times. Each time, he is supposed to learn something existential that will allow him to be one with the universe but he fails each and every time.
When he learns he has only five more chances to make his goal before he is snuffed out forever, he has to make a choice to get it right one last time or forfeit it all for the love of his life, Death herself, aka Suzie.
What a great concept! The existential questions that arise from such a conundrum holds so many fascinating possibilities.
Can we ever live a fulfilling life? What does that mean exactly?
Does all lives lived mean suffering, loss and tragedy?
Can we ever get living right...right?
Unfortunately, these possibilities are never touched upon because of the following reasons:
1. Milo is a slacker, a lackluster hero who you really do not root for but end up wondering what his existence means.
2. I feel we could have done without the random romance and relationship between Milo and Suzie.
Hey, I'm not against romance, no sirree, Bob, but I wished they had some chemistry, some spark, some...kavorka to help me understand why they clicked. I wasn’t feeling their “feelings” so I didn't get why they liked/loved each other.
To make matters worse, I did not like them, not separate and not as an unit.
3. What's up with all the dystopian lives?
I get the feeling Mr. Poore really wanted to write a dystopian novel and incorporated those threads into this book instead so he got the best of both worlds.
We witness Milo in various reincarnations and nearly more than half of them feature him in a stereotypical sci-fi wasteland where the poor have nothing and the rich have it all. Sort of like modern society so that hasn't changed.
I don't understand the point of all these sci-fi reincarnations because they all sound the same. Milo is dumped in a wasteland and has to hustle for the wealthy and the rich.
He is abused, beaten, shamed and treated cruelly. He learns to stand up to the oppressors and teaches his family and friends to do the same. Then, he dies.
This goes on indeterminably. And all the lives began to blur together.
The fact that Milo comes off as kind of a dummy doesn't help his cause, either. I neither liked him nor rooted for him.
His personality and behavior was one dimensional, there was no exposition or anything that explained a little about who he was.
Considering how many lives he's led, I was disappointed he came off as such a moron at times.
Did he not learn anything in his previous 9,995 lives?
If the author had given Milo a life he remembered the most, the best, something he recalled in times of fear and despair, it may have given Milo some context and I may have understood him a little better, got to know him or like him, even just a little.
All we got were random ramblings about Milo bitching about the last five lives he's got, how much he missed Suzie, how often they shacked up and got it on, her refusal to be Death any longer and her banishment to live life as ethereal mist.
And that's another point I have to make.
Who is Suzie?
She is Death. What an incredible life she must lead. Imagine all the stories she has to tell!
What did she do before? Was she ever not Death?
We get nothing on her. No exposition, no teases of her past, no backstory.
I didn't like nor dislike Suzie. She was just there, Milo's motivation to make his last life count, to be with her, but we never know who Suzie is and I could not understand why Milo liked her in the first place. Or why she likes him, not to mention.
I really wanted to give this three stars, at least, but I really can't.