When a young monk escapes his monastery with an all-powerful secret, he implements it on a town whose inhabitants reap the benefits - and hidden disasters - of its potent, but dangerous knowledge. Eli Deo is a young monk who finds himself spending less and less time at his monastery. During most of his days he walks to the forest's edge and thinks about what the world is like beyond his simple life of prayer and aestheticism; he longs to go out and see the vast places beyond the forest and live as a regular person. But there is a Deo belongs to a sacred order - a powerful, yet unknown brotherhood that protects a great secret.
This was such a compelling novel. Readers easily will get lost in this rich and dynamic world, filled with magical realism, theology, and mythology all rolled into one explosive narrative. The imagery the author’s writing produced allowed the novel to take on a cinematic quality, allowing the reader to see the story play out in their mind’s eye. The themes of morality, belief, and the mysteries that life has to offer all played a big role in the story, and kept the reader invested in the novel.
For me, the character development and the world-building were the biggest draws of the narrative. The story immediately brings the reader into this isolated, religious community and monastery that houses a powerful secret, and then quickly jumps into the action as time passes and the town begins to build up all around them. The tension that builds from the former monk’s return and the way magic plays a major role in these characters’ development was remarkable to read.
The Verdict
Entertaining, thought-provoking, and thrilling, author Joseph Atman’s “Something Known” is a must-read magical realism novel. The rich characters and dynamic world-building meshed well with the themes and mythos the author built and made this a compelling novel to get lost in.
This could have been a good book but it failed to tell a coherent story. Instead, the author spent too much time going off on preachy diatribes rather than getting his point across with the story. Character development was so poor that even the author called them by the wrong names at times. The editing was also poor, with multiple misspellings and use of incorrect words. The terrible grammar (e.g. "he had came") is reason enough to forego this book and, likely, this author.
Great read! It's a human story centering around various characters all connected by a common happening within the town that they live in. There's a lot of philosophy and spiritualism, but I didn't think that detracted from the story at all - most of which moved very quickly and was extremely engaging. Overall, I found it very well-written on top of making me think quite a bit.