The figurehead of the Trinity breaks through another timeline only to find himself going back to 1986 to fix everything that went wrong with his world.
Birch seeks to finally end his perpetual turmoil and inadvertently lands himself one-hundred-and-twenty-five years in the past. Finally able to undo all the Evil that led to the events of Demise of the Trinity, Birch quickly discovers he cannot remain content in happiness. This book features intense scenes of violence, references to self-harm, graphic sexual imagery, and adult language.
This is the fourth novel by Attaway I've read, and I wasn't let down. May I say that his others are a bit more grounded in reality in comparison to Birch, which deals with time travel, though it's possible none of that actually happens. From the first page, I'm asking myself whether or not the events of the book are reality or fantasy. The moment I saw some hint of normalcy, something happened to mess it all up for Birch.