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320 pages, Paperback
First published August 10, 2021
Doesn’t the body remember, even after the mind has been wiped clean?The Shimmering State opens with a quote from Proust about the only true voyage being to see with other people’s eyes. What if you could?

”…to truly leave yourself, the one place you can never escape, and to experience a moment as someone else. That is the ultimate luxury.”Which makes one wonder how, if success is something of such value, so many of the successful seek to escape themselves.
He holds it, his grandmother’s life, between two fingers. He is sad for Florence [grandma], so trapped inside her body. Her life lost while still alive. But he is also jealous. She disappears into moments where his mother still lives, and where he exists, before all this. What could be the harm, in seeing what she sees? What damage would it do her to share? He needs to see her again. Just once would be enough.Yeah, you keep on thinkin’ that, Sparky. Sophie gets a great job, then runs into a stream of shit luck, and bad or uncaring people, and is dragged under.
For Graham, “blood memory” is the innate knowledge we have of the physical experiences lived by our ancestors. - from the Garage Museum siteBut what does it all matter if we don’t care or relate enough to at least one of our leads to keep us turning the pages? While I would not put either character portrayal on the top tier, they were both relatable enough to merit the investment of some reading time. Sophie is hard-working, and offers us a painful perspective on the crap women have to take, and the misery some inflict on themselves. She was the more fully realized of the pair, maybe for her connection to the real world. I did take issue with one particular decision she made that seemed out of character to me, and not very smart. Don’t read this if you have not read the book. Lucien seemed more singularly concerned with his mother and grandmother. While that may make him a decent guy, it also made him feel a bit flat as a character. There is one redemptive scene late in the book portraying how he sees, artistically, that worked wonderfully to counterbalance that.