The Atlas Six
Book
When the world’s best magicians are offered an extraordinary opportunity, saying yes is easy. Each...
The Other Side of Mrs Wood
Book
Mrs Wood is London’s most celebrated medium. She’s managed to survive decades in the competitive...
Historical fiction Victorian Seances
A Spider in the Garden
Book
Aranha is the last of her kind, a spider shifter who preys upon the dregs of society in an attempt...
Paranormal Romance Shifters Vampires
Lyndsey Gollogly (2893 KP) rated Fractured: Part 2 ( Soviet book 12) in Books
Mar 21, 2023
Kindle
Fractured:part 2 ( Society book 12)
By Mason Sabre
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
The second and final instalment of Fractured. When Cade MacDonald made a bargain with his father—his alpha, he never suspected he was sacrificing the very person who meant the world to him. Torn between his love for Gemma, and his loyalty to Natalie, Cade must choose. His life, or the one thing he wants more than anything, Gemma? Especially when he is investigating the murder of a young shifter who was slaughtered for the same secret Cade holds close to his own heart, he must face more truths than his soul can stand.
I freaking loved it!!!! This is what I was looking forward to. Finally seeing something play out with Cade and Gemma and wow is this going to be interesting going forward. The ending had me almost cheering and waking my husband as it’s 2am! Can’t wait to see where we go from here.
Defects (The Reverians #1)
Book
In the happy, clean community of Austin Valley, everything appears to be perfect. Seventeen-year-old...
Young Adult Dystopian Paranormal Romance
Deviant
Book
This was the reason he was here. This perfect creature he’d heard so much about. She had no clue...
The Queen of Fives
Book
They whisper her name in every corner of town. The lady with a hundred faces, a thousand lives. ...
Historical fiction
Lady Darling Inquires After a Killer
Book
Lady Bridgerton meets The Thursday Murder Club in the first of a charming, Victorian-set mystery...
The Many Lives & Loves of Hazel Lavery
Book
In the heart of tumultuous times, amidst the grandeur of Victorian opulence, there existed an...
Historical Fiction Biographical Fiction Women in History
Phil Leader (619 KP) rated Perfect Genesis: Adolescence in Books
Nov 21, 2019
The plot follows Leonardo Khalid, a genetically engineered genius who has dedicated his life to improving life for mankind. However when he is taken critically ill he agrees to undergo a procedure to scan and record is brain. He is warned that during the process he will appear to inhabit a very real and long lasting dream as his brain is stimulated.
The dream is extremely vivid - so much so that we don't see it just from Leonardo's point of view. So is it a dream? Or a very real future world that he has somehow been projected into? Leonardo certainly believes he is in a dream, but does that condone some of his more morally questionable actions?
There are plenty of questions raised by this book. As Hogan says in a brief introduction, this book is supposed to stay with the reader long after they have read it, and it will certainly do that. At times it is an uncomfortable read - the dream societies place little value on human life and women in particular are treated very badly. Death, violence and sexual exploitation are daily hazards for the members of the societies described, but these are engineered places, not designed to benefit the individual human but to ensure the longevity of the society itself. They have been created with cold and clinical efficiency with no regard for the individual members of the citizenry.
This is a huge dichotomy and the heart of the book. The story itself - Leonardo exploring the land of his dream and overcoming the various obstacles that hinder him and his companions - skates along the top at a good pace, fizzing between plot points and twists, summoning the reader on to read just one more page. But underneath the dark heart will be throwing up awkward questions.
Exploitation of all sorts abounds, particularly sexual exploitation (not all of it men exploiting women). These sections can be an uncomfortable read but they are supposed to be - the questions around power and the abuse of power are valid and the reader is not supposed to be entirely sympathetic with any of the characters or their actions - even Leornardo. The civilisations are frequently brutal, either because of a dangerous environment or a ruthless ruler. People get hurt, people get abused, people die (sometimes horribly) but always the society lives on.
Read this book if you want to have a fantastic story exploring different places but at the same time have something to think about. By the end you will have seen what can happen if the concept of an ideal society is pursued to its limits. And it's not a utopia.
And yes this book will stay with me for a while. Definitely one of the best reads of 2014. Thoroughly recommended.
Rating: Sexual scenes, sexual violence and some torture.

