This book is very different than Lani’s other books—sci fi thriller instead of fantasy—but it is still so very Lani. In Lani’s bio, she talks about being the daughter of a drug lord, and this background comes out in Master of Memories.
Margot is the daughter of a drug lord, which not only gave her a very traumatic backstory as she had to navigate dangerous and scary interactions with her father’s clientele when she was a child, but also affects her as an adult trying to distance herself from her father. She goes into memory editing, a special technology that allows people to delete and change memories, but what she desperately wants is to be able to delete her own memories when she comes of age so she can forget her trauma. When she helps with a memory editing project for prominent senator’s son, Isaac, she finds herself uncovering a conspiracy that goes far deeper than she could have imagined.
I think my favorite part was reading about the memory editing technology. It was fascinating. I love the concept of being able to change and delete and re-insert memories into heads.
I can’t believe this is our final Lani book. I found myself wanting to give Lani a hug as I read pieces that were clearly inspired by her own life. She went through so much tragedy, and still she was the amazing, strong person that she was. And that’s really what this book is about. How trauma doesn’t have to define us and how hiding from our memories isn’t healing. It’s facing the trauma that heals it.