Ratings15
Average rating4.1
Following the suicide of a seventeen-year-old Toronto street girl who used a new brain-altering drug called Numinous, Lyda Rose, one of the original scientists who developed the drug, sets out to find the other three survivors of the five who made the Numinous in a quest to set things right.
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Marion and I have discussed this at FanLit: http://www.fantasyliterature.com/reviews/afterparty/
MARION: Daryl Gregory???s pharma-tech novel Afterparty is good entertainment with many wonderful moments. At times it is wildly inventive ??? filled with images like an apartment full of tiny genetically-engineered bison roaming the ???range??? of wall to wall grass, or an angel named Dr. Gloria who wears a business suit, white coat, glasses, carries a clipboard and has wings.
Kat and I read this book about the same time. We both gave it four stars but we may have liked different things, so we???re going to discuss the book together. Kat???s comments are in red.
Here???s a brief synopsis of the story.
In the near future, a neuroscientist with a deity in her head checks herself out of an institution and goes searching for the people who are distributing the street drug called Numinous (or sometimes, Logos). Lyda Rose is intimately familiar with the drug because she helped invent it, as a treatment for schizophrenia??? and, because of an overdose of the drug at a disastrous ???afterparty,??? she is intimately familiar with its effects. Specifically, it puts a god in your head. Dr. Gloria is Lyda???s personal god.
Kat, you???re a neuroscientist, and this book is packed with neuroscience. What did you think about it? Was it realistic?
READ THE REST: http://www.fantasyliterature.com/reviews/afterparty/
Pros: complicated & diverse characters, interesting plot
Cons: some far fetched action
Several years ago Lyda was part of a scientific company looking for a drug to cure schizophrenia. But on the night of their success, the team was drugged, and the resultant overdose left one of them dead and the others seeing god. Now in a mental hospital for delusions, Lyda encounters a young woman who's symptoms resemble those of the drug her team created, NME 110, numenous. In order to stop the drug from spreading in this new world where designer drugs can be printed onto paper and drug parties are de rigueur, Lyda gets herself released to hunt down the remaining members of the team and find out who's behind it.
Be prepared to reread sections of this book in order to figure out what's going on. The author cleverly leaves out information that forces you - when you finally realize what's missing - to reevaluate what's happening. The first one of these comes at the end of chapter one.
One aspect of the plot was easy to figure out, but other aspects kept me guessing until the very end.
I loved the diversity of the characters and how they each deal with their own... issues. Most of the main characters have a mental problem of some sort, and these get exacerbated by the use - and abuse - of drugs. Lyda, a middle aged black lesbian, is the point of view character for the majority of the book, and has a guardian angel thanks to NME 110. As an atheist and scientist she knows the angel is part of her own psyche, but has to constantly remind herself that it's not real. Ollie is an ex-intelligence officer, whose abuse of drugs made her paranoid. To counter those effects she must stay on different drugs, ones that dull her senses making it difficult for her to see as well as think analytically. I loved Sasha as a character who overcomes the challenges she faces - both physical and mental - using technology.
With the exception of Sasha, who only comes in towards the end, and perhaps Dr. Gloria, the characters weren't particularly likeable. They were people dealing with difficult circumstances in realistic ways. Lyda is often angry and demanding, not willing to listen to her conscience if it gets in the way of what she feels she needs to do. At the same time, I didn't dislike anyone, though Rovil is a bit irritating in how much of a pushover he is when faced with Lyda's demands.
While I enjoyed watching Lyda get around her medical implant and deal with the Millies, I didn't believe how things worked out with her getting into the US. It seemed far fetched and over the top. Though, I'm left wondering if Lyda was meant to be an unreliable narrator, and if so, whether her version of events is wilder than what actually happened.
This is an interesting book that looks into drug use, mental disorders, extreme belief systems and more.
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