"There were two ways of arriving at the truth. I decided to follow them both." -- Georges Lemaitre, cosmologist and priest
18-year-old Atalanta, much better known as Tally, budding astronomer, believes in the empirical world. If she can't measure it, it's probably not real, and certainly not to be trusted. Mysticism, witchcraft, poetry, art, emotions ... these things are for other people. Like Tally's crazy extended family, who love her but maybe don't quite get her.
When the story opens, Tally is awash in feelings she doesn't want to think about, much less try to deal with, especially as they involve a confusing situation with her best friend. So when a neighbor offers her the chance to literally fly away and look for information about her biological parents, whom she has never known, she jumps at the chance.
Then she washes up in a place where people go to forget; not to get a fresh start, but to find oblivion. She, and the reader, end up amazed at what you can learn about yourself in a place like that.
I loved this book. It's not perfect -- the middle is a little slow, what with all the forgetfulness. But I personally found this the most accessible of the three books in this trilogy, and I enjoyed feeling at home in the Greek mythology. As usual with Sarah McCarry, the writing is beautiful, deeply observant, and emotionally resonant. I loved Tally and her stiff, righteous, judgemental self -- she is such a typical bright teen who's used to being the smartest kid in the room. Her journey to allowing herself to be vulnerable was touching and believable. The twining of fantasy and reality felt completely organic to the story to me. And it ends up illustrating the Georges Lemaitre quote, which is in the book, perfectly.
My only quibbles with this trilogy are: (A) The timeline doesn't work at all. Cass and Maia, Tally's grandmothers, talk about the Pixies in their book, which places them as being 17 in 1987 or so. Which means that Tally would have been born around 2006, and sets her story in 2024. But (B), you can't tell what year it is in these books, because they take place in an alternate universe where cell phones and email seem not to exist. This gives the books a sort of timeless feel that I like, but which also annoys me a little.
I loved these books enough that I bought the whole set for my best friend, and I'm going to buy them all for myself, too. And I can't wait to read whatever Sarah McCarry writes next. These definitely aren't to everyone's tastes, but they are mine. Even though I've given each book a 4-star rating, I'd give the trilogy as a whole 5 stars.
I think the trilogy can be tied together by these lines near the end of this final volume:
Now I understood the thing I'd never been able to see before: that our stories are our own, even when they overlap with other people's, and that sometimes keeping them safe is a part of keeping ourselves whole.
Amen.