We follow Steven Smith, an ex-con with a tangled past, as he tries to unravel the mystery of a children’s book and the possible code buried within it. But more than that, it’s a story about misremembering, about what stories we tell ourselves to survive, and what gets lost in translation - not just in language, but in time, in shame, in silence.
I found the format fascinating. As someone who’s spent long hours with imperfect records and half-legible margins, I was pulled in by the layers - what’s said, what’s guessed, what’s omitted entirely. There’s something generous in how it invites the reader to fill the gaps.
🌿 Favourite takeaway: the idea that the most important messages might be hiding in the errors. In what’s wrongly heard. That felt deeply human.
That said, I didn’t quite fall in love. The emotional distance kept me hovering at the edges. While the twist (and there are several) was brilliantly handled, I wanted just a little more stillness, more space to breathe between the turns.
🌙 Three and three-quarter stars. Formally fascinating, thematically rich, but not quite one I’ll carry with me. A well-made thing, admired through glass.
Would recommend for: fans of cryptic crosswords and found documents, readers who enjoy form as mystery, those interested in the fragility of memory.