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408 pages, Paperback
First published June 7, 2016
Thanks to NetGalley and Bloomsbury Publishing for the ARC!
The Many Selves of Katherine North caught my eye because of the beautiful cover. I have an affinity for foxes, sci-fi, and female leads. The cover alone ticked all of those boxes for me and the synopsis pulled me in the rest of the way.

Katherine North, aka Kit, is a phenomenaut. In this universe, what that means is that she can project her consciousness to other animals. Basically, her human body is hooked up to a machine that takes care of her vitals while she becomes whatever animal her employer, ShenCorp, has told her to be.
Of course, as is with any corporation in a science fiction kind of world, ShenCorp is up to shady things. Kit is exposed to the shenanigans early on in the novel, but refuses to talk about what actually happened until the second half of the book. Since the book is narrated in first person, this was something that annoyed me until I found out what happened.
The story is told in parallel between the present and future. In the present, we have Kit running away and hiding from ShenCorp, chilling with a fox she's pretty sure she rolled with back in her fox-being days, and refusing to talk about why she's run away in the first place. The past is told via her sharing stories with the fox, or just reflecting on the things that have happened to her in the seven years she's been "jumping."
The first half of the story is taken as an opportunity to build this new world where humans can become almost any type of animal. We get to see Kit at work, live with her through experiences as a fox, spider, and a snake. We get to have the mechanics of how projecting works, how it affects the jumpers, and how Kit and ShenCorp ended up on bad terms.
The second half of the book is where the action is. My main complaint about the story (besides the narrator hiding information from the reader)is how slow the first half of the book went.

That being said, overall the book was absolutely wonderful. Kit's experiences as different animals were so descriptive I would be absolutely shocked if they weren't as accurate as could be. The writing was all at once beautiful and blunt, hilarious and heart breaking. We went from thoughtful lines such as this:
It still amazes me that consciousness can come from such brute biology, from these tiny individual cells. But perhaps that's the truth of anything: one is nothing, connection is everything.
To hilarious lines such as this (describing Kit's experience as a whale):
The squirt of water from my sphincter feels like a wet fart.
Or when Kit summed exactly why meetings at work suck:
I can't remember her name. Introductions were made at the start of the meeting, yet there is a fungibility to all these smug, beautiful and young-looking faces. And they all turn out the same shit.
5 Stars — The Many Selves of Katherine North took me on a journey that, for the most part, I was expecting, but surprised me along the way with wonderful imagery, characters, and a hero worth cheering for.
The premise of this book, teenage children working as "phenomenauts", researching the reality of being a fox or a whale, or an eagle, by projecting their consciousness into constructed versions of the creatures and experiencing their lives in the wild, is so original, that it took me a long time to see that the book is really about a strong but damaged teenager who is, literally, trying to find herself.
At nineteen, with seven years of working for ShenCorp, jumping into the minds and senses of other creatures behind her, Kit North is the world's most experienced phenomenaut. She loves what she does. She needs to do it. It is fundamental to her sense of who she is.
Kit does not love ShenCorp and what they want to do with her abilities, The book opens with Kit hiding from ShenCorp in the streets and parks of Bristol, hungry, cold and alone. Most of the rest of the novel is spent flipping between that timeline and the events that led up to it. This structure misled me into thinking that the book is a thriller, but it isn't really, it's a personal journey into memory and identity being made by a vulnerable girl at the edge of her ability to hold herself together.
There was a lot to like about this book. The plot is original and well thought through. The descriptions of Kit's experience of being different animals, perceiving the world through their senses, being driven by their urges, having the joy of their ability to fly or swim or sing or hunt, are beautifully done.
The description of the difficulty of "coming home", of being just human with all those memories of being yourself in other bodies, is subtle and effective.
The novel captures the corrosive anxiety of not knowing if you can depend on your own perceptions, of being unable to be certain of whether you're paranoid or whether you're being hunted, of whether your sense of self is fractured or simply expanded beyond most people's experience.
There are things in the novel that didn't work well for me. The ShenCorp bad guys are thinly drawn and unremittingly bad without any real explanation of why they behave that way. The pace could have been tighter, especially if I read this with the expectation of it being a thriller. Sometimes the same facility for complex description that made the animal experiences vivid, clogged up the scenes that were there just to move the plot along.
The ending was well done if this is a book about a personal journey but a little anti-climatic if it's meant as a thriller.
This was an enjoyable read with an original premise but it got a little caught between thriller and personal journey, or, at least, my reading got stuck on that.
@vegandaemon btw, the pro-lifers are religious protesters who attack phenomautism on the grounds that Ressies are technically alive
— Emma Geen (@EmmaCGeen) May 28, 2016
@vegandaemon & therefore precious to God, regardless of whether they're conscious/feeling or not, hence same name as real-world pro-lifers
— Emma Geen (@EmmaCGeen) May 28, 2016