Bookshelf reread.
This book follows two different characters in separate realities that parallel each other. The first is Idea Deity, who is on the run from people who work for his parents. He meets Eunice Truant, who helps him, and he explains that his parents started a weird church and decided to kill themselves online to fulfill their beliefs or something, so he’s on his way to stop them but other church members were tasked with preventing him.
He also reveals he created a hoax band to see if he could, making a website for them with fake pictures, status updates, song lyrics, concert info, etc. He even posts made up sightings with names for places that don’t exist that get twisted and soon the message spreads. The band has become very popular, even though no songs were released, yet people know song titles and somehow an actual song gets leaked. Similarly, Eunice created a digihoroscope that can predict things that will happen and answer questions if enough info is provided.
Idea suffers from Deity Syndrome, named after himself, where he believes he’s a character in a book and his life is being controlled. Whenever extreme coincidences happen, this tells him the strings are being pulled and make him panic.
Eunice finds it strange that despite his urgency to save his parents, as soon as real merch and tickets and other stuff related to the fake band start popping up, he decides to chase after those and delays going to his parents. He admits the thing with his parents was a lie, and actually they’re lawyers or something who are obsessed with power and money, so they had teachers raise him to train him into being a business extraordinaire. His life was under immense control, explaining the source of his syndrome, and he managed to escape. The tutors are the ones chasing him.
The pair decide to go to the location where they heard the band’s official debut concert will be, which Idea never wrote about. He thinks people are taking advantage of his hoax to become the band and benefit from his work. The concert is in Pennsyltucky, which doesn’t exist, but he goes to Kentucky instead.
The other main character is Reacher Mirage, the lead singer of Youforia, the made up band. He lives in the universe where Pennsyltucky and other such states exist, along with months with altered names. He created the band, but hasn’t let them go public because he has a fear of failure ingrained in him from his own family. All their performances have been in costume. He wants it to feel right before he’ll agree to go public.
The band is frustrated with him, and also with the website they didn’t make that keeps posting all their information they never revealed and is making them famous even though they haven’t debuted yet. Then a magazine offers to pay anyone who can bring the band members to them for an interview prior to the concert. The band didn’t schedule the concert either.
Reacher gets kidnapped by fans who want the money, thinking the magazine will deliver him to the concert afterwards. This sets him on the path there, and he gets one fan to help him and is then rescued by his girlfriend, Eurydice Terantula. This should showcase the strange names of the book. It’s quite creative.
So both boys are on a course for the mystery concert of their own creations, a concert neither of them set up.
Alongside this storyline is a book both happen to be reading at the same time: Fireskull’s Revenant. It starts at chapter 30-something, where Fireskull, whose name is literal, and Johnny Without, who has an ever-changing body, have been at war with each other forever and are secretly cousins, which has no relevance. Both receive a prophecy from the same mysterious visitor warning them to never face each other, for that will end the world. Instead they can kill each other from afar.
Both go to Scrier, an apathetic prophet of their own, who calls that prophecy a fraud and tells them they must unite to prevent world destruction. This is difficult, since they both hate each other. Each has a separate Scrier: one with white hair and one with black.
This matches with Eurydice and Eunice. Eunice is blond with a black-hared face tattooed on the back of her head, and Eurydice has black hair with a blond-haired face in tattoo on the back of her head. I couldn’t fully understand this, like, are they both bald in the back? Anyway, it’s implied the fake faces can talk to people under certain circumstances.
Both girls wear clothing that has two fronts and no backs, so being seen from behind looks like the front of a person.
Johnny is willing to try a truce, but Fireskull warps the warning in his favor to suggest war is the answer, and he launches an attack. Johnny retaliates, and the two sides go into a bigger battle than ever before that kills off most of their armies. Both try to avoid seeing each other though. Scrier scolds.
That book coincides with the girls also telling Idea and Reacher to join with their enemy and unite, as Idea thinks the band are fakes stealing his hard work, and Reacher thinks the website creator is taking credit for the band and exposing their secrets.
After they reach the concert, both cross into the other’s world and get mistaken for each other by the other’s family’s despite having different haircuts, hair colors, and birthmarks. Both are rescued by the other’s girl and taken to a diner to meet, except they have to rely on the girls to translate for them since they’re in opposite realities and can’t see or hear each other, so it’s like they’re talking to air.
In one reality, the waitress is a grumpy smoker while the cook is friendly. In the other, the cook is strict and harsh while the waitress is super sweet.
The girls tried to get the boys to meet, but it instead crossed them into the wrong realities and so they had to resort to this instead. They offer the boys the chance to change their lives, but they’ll have to take the initiative to make it a happy ending.
Also, Idea and Eunice became a couple earlier. And the two girls go by various E names when they’re in different settings with new people.
The boys agree and get transferred into the book. Idea becomes Fireskull and Reacher becomes Johnny. A Scrier appears to both of them and tells them to find the other. Before their arrival, the prophet who warned them not to meet invaded their weakened kingdoms with his own army, as he’s been taking over all the lands by giving false prophecies. He plans to kill both leaders to guarantee his success.
The Scriers decide the boys are still too crippled by their personal struggles and sends them through the Gauntlet of Realities to help Reacher get over his fear of failure and Idea get over his certainty his life is being controlled. It puts Reacher on various stages then shows him his mom and reveals his dad wasn’t who he thought and his real parents had believed in him and loved him. Idea goes to a reality where his parents are loving and supportive, then sent elsewhere where he finds the computer writing out his life and tries to alter the story only for it to trap him in old age on a space rock with limited oxygen until he takes control of his own path.
They return to battle after overcoming these things, but get captured by the enemy who looks like Reacher’s band manager and one of Idea’s tutors, since there’s a lot of overlap between the realities. Actually, when they crossed into each other’s worlds, Reacher met both of Idea’s tutors, and though the descriptions match, he never noticed or said anything about the man resembling his manager, so I’m confused about that.
The enemy fakes attacking Johnny so he can target the Scriers instead, who reveals they were keepers of the Chain Of Realities, and so was the enemy, but he was more skilled and decided to break the chain so he could create his own Moment. No explanation on this, and I don’t care because I didn’t want to hear it. All the other keepers were killed except her and the author. Fireskull’s Revenant was a fail safe that exists the same way unchanging in all realities.
Because Idea/Reacher is someone who could pass through realities or something since the breaking split him in half and his two halves were gravitating toward each other despite the different worlds, that made him someone who could repair things. They’re actually the same person. So are Eurydice and Eunice, the Scriers, who split into two so she could go to a boy each and help guide him. She starts merging back with herself and tells him to do the same.
This makes them all float out of reach of the enemy soldiers, a symbolic death to match Idea’s belief that he would die in Chapter 64, as was the title of one of Reacher’s songs, which happened to be a rock opera about a boy who believed he was trapped in a book. Idea concludes this is chapter 64, but it was 63. Whatever.
Once they’re merged, they follow Scrier’s instructions on how to repair the chain, and that whole description was needless because I couldn’t visualize it or understand or be entertained. They succeed, then an epilogue reveals he named himself Johnny Fireskull and became a legendary musician, but hates the other elements of that so he faked his dead and moved into the Amazon but allows true fans to track him down by solving puzzles and answering hard questions. When a group succeeds, he tells them they’ll be his band tonight at a performance.
Maybe this was all a metaphor for how these really were book characters, I don’t know.
I don’t get why the boys were different ages, or why Fireskull’s Revenant by Milt Ifthen was supposed to be so riveting, since those were my least favorite chapters and the narration was giving new information that should have already been established if we were supposed to be halfway through the book. The concept is good, how all three stories overlap and parallel and connect and might just be the same people, though I theorized for a long time that Idea and Reacher were Johnny’s lost sons. That was probably intentional.
It was hard to get invested because none of it felt like it was supposed to be real even within the universe of the story. The different realities they had to flash through just disconnected it more. Everything they were fighting toward for most of the book was irrelevant. Aside from Reacher’s fear of failure, which I couldn’t even feel because he was clearly talented, was the only relevance to him performing on stage, so whether he ever did that or not became obsolete in terms of the band. Idea’s obstacles to overcome his lack of control felt farfetched and I didn’t understand how they would help. The computer with his story could have, but it didn’t go in a satisfying direction, though I do get how meeting nice versions of his parents would benefit him.
Reacher even learns he can alter his lyrics on the spot and people sing along in perfect time as if those were always the lyrics. Like there are no real consequences to this aspect of his life. Or maybe he was supposed to notice that to help him realize failure wasn’t even possible, but the book never said this.
Too much felt like it was written in just to take up space. There was a disconnect. The overall idea with the different realities and parallels was really cool though. Though I can’t enjoy the head tattoos of the girls because I don’t understand and it doesn’t sound pleasant, it is creative and I wonder what the author actually had in mind and how it differs to how I envision it. And the different month and states names have always stuck with me since I first read this book.
Quotes:
“By the way, what’s your sign?”
“Gemini. What’s yours?”
“Virgitarius.”
“Do you mean Virgo or Sagittarius?”
“Yes.”
I like this because it was written before answering yes to multiple choice questions was a thing.
”Wouldn’t it be more important for us to stop your parents from killing themselves?”
“Uh-huh.”
“Then, why are we doing this right now?”
“Don’t worry about it. Make a right.”
Although Reacher hadn’t been mistreated, apart from being bound and gagged and zipped into a garment bad, he’d had enough of being a captive.
Simultaneously pampered and driven insane–” I just like this concept. I’ma keep it.
”We’d better get going. His kidnapper’s waiting in the parking lot.”
“I love ya, son. Now turn around so I can tie you up.”