I alternated between being intrigued, feeling lost and wanting to be done with it. The world building is quite good, and if you don't read up too much about it before, then there's an interesting twist ahead for you. And I also quite liked the characters Dey created, they're dreamers and rebels and lovers, locked into a frozen bubble of a world. But there was so much jumping around in time, and characters with multiple names, that I got quite confused, obviously also due to my higher distraction rate with audiobooks. At the very end I finally connected that The Heavy's best friend was the boy's father, but I don't know if that knowledge was kept as a reveal or if I just failed at tracking those family details from earlier descriptions. Because there obviously also were certain other revelations, that clearly were set up as reveals. So in total, I'd note this one down as intriguing, but maybe not fully successful.