A simple and moving story of a father and son trying to get from point A to point B in a post-apocalyptic world. The punctuation and structure of the text itself has a bleak and razed feel, abbreviations and quotations burned away.
It's a quick read. Somewhat depressing, since it's about the world after it has ended, but well worth reading.
An interesting examination of “historicity” and “authenticity” of artifacts, in the context of an alternate timeline where America lost WWII.
A good mystery. The first half of the book is slow but then picks up speed. I like a mystery where enough information is presented that the reader can puzzle it out themselves, yet not so obvious that the characters look stupid for not seeing it. I was able to figure out most of it along the way, but some of my guesses were wrong, so this book seems to have hit that balance nicely.