"By being alive now, at this time, when there are too many of us, you are part of a great machine that is destroying the world. Every bit of happiness you take, every breath you take, contributes to burning the world. It doesn't matter how you try to change that. You can't. It's too late. It was too late a hundred years ago."
If I could distill all my thoughts and opinions on this book into one single adjective, it would be....inventive. This was undoubtedly a creative take on a worldwide pandemic, a sort of transmissible depression, that takes a couple different forms. The closest analog I can think of was that movie 'The Happening' back earlier in the 2000's, where a biological weapon causes people to commit suicide in wild ways. It was suspenseful, unique, a little bit magical, and well-written.
'The Grey', the appropriately named disease that has plagued the world post COVID, is a seemingly incurable form of depression that takes a few different forms - One of which is a general bleakness and sadness, one of which is more acute and often leads to suicide, and yet another seems to lock people into a manic state, in which they join up with a vigilante crew, determined to burn the world down and essentially hasten the end of civilization.
The Endless Vessel is split into 3 parts, the majority of which focus on Lily, a British materials engineer based in Hong Kong, who works for an environmental startup. She has managed to avoid the plague that has slowed and derailed much of the world, and works diligently towards developing solutions for carbon scrubbing - having an objective or goal is one of the keys in avoiding The Grey, and Lily has it in spades, until her boss comes in with a new piece of technology, seemingly impossible in nature, that revolutionizes the industry, and results in Lily losing her job.
In following the origins of this mysterious device(which she may or may not have pilfered from the facility she was fired from), Lily is led along what is colloquially referred to as 'The Wonder Path', a mysterious organization following an equally mysterious, ethereal series of unaccredited, seemingly superhuman inventions across the centuries that have propelled society forward.
It is here that the novel finds its legs, and we are introduced to other side characters, including her Grey-Afflicted former boyfriend, and Peter Match, a former rockstar who is also following the Wonder Path.
The second part of the book focuses centuries in the past, at a small community built around a mill in Post-Revolution America. This portion took a little bit to get going for me, and felt very disconnected, but the pieces did fall into place in a major way. It invokes a love story, with one Molly Calder going to incredible lengths to reunite with her recently deceased husband, including literally trying to defeat and reverse death, invoking help from characters that include but are not limited to Ben Franklin's former aide, who is a forgery expert, and a seemingly immortal Portuguese man who was touched by a spirit from another dimension. They shift the mill from textiles to inventing, from cloth to conquering the afterlife, enlisting mystics, scientists, doctors, engineers, etc. - right up my alley! Their story culminates in a trip offshore, partially forced, on a technologically advanced boat, where their free-thinking crew are free to continue to culminate their ideas and inventions indefinitely
Part three was the only one I struggled to get into a bit, partly due to jolting back to Lily, Peter, and the Lazarene(inventor-filled megaship) in present day. Without giving away or ruining too too much, there are a number of twists and turns in this portion of the novel that really added to the suspense. Additionally, the Lazarene, in no small part due to Molly's discoveries back in the day, has opened what have essentially been doors to other dimensions, including the Echolands, a seemingly endless forest of trees, that represent the mortality, memories, and relationships of every human on Planet Earth. Only, there is a blight spreading in the forest - The Grey.
There were several things about this book that I really, really enjoyed, and it mainly stems from the intrigue that Soule was able to create. The idea of The Wonder Path, and these interloping inventors, is such a great foil to a worldwide depression disease. Additionally, the books strays juuuust enough into magic/impossibility to keep things sufficiently crazy and weird. I can't say that any of the characters really drew me in, it was more the world-building and intrigue that followed in each story. There was a point in the second and third portions of the novel, which I kinda touched on before, where I had my doubts, but Soule was definitely able to reign things in and tie them together in a satisfying way.
I think of the genres I enjoy, and the types of books that tickle my literary fancy, and this one ticks off quite a few boxes: Eco-thriller, sci-fi, post-apocalyptic/dystopian, a dash of historical fiction, etc. There is a lot of varied reading within these volumes, and by the end, it's even pretty heartwarming! A page turner to be sure.
When I try and list out overarching themes for a book that's primary protagonist is crippling depression, it's hard to think of the positive, but I thought that, despite our afflicted, manic antagonists, the message to be kind and be understanding really shone through, particularly in the third volume. Additionally, the view of death, reunion, and how the author used the Echolands to convey loss was beautiful.
As a whole, I greatly enjoyed this novel, particularly the creative nature of what happened to everyone, and the 'wonder' path that Lily finds herself on. Great suspense, good sci-fi and dystopian vibes, overall an awesome read!