Moon Soul
2024

Ratings2

Average rating5

15

"How nice it is to be two happy people on a purple moon."

You guys.

You guys.

For the short story fans out there, for the grounded sci-fi lovers on my list, even for the “I need a short book to pad out my Goodreads goal already” people, I ask that you keep this one on your list or in your mind for March. I’m going through a rough mental patch this last week or two, and this book was everything I needed to hear in all the right ways.

August lives in a Spire on a world of purple sand. A Spire is essentially a self-contained tower of people, like a vertical city. If you’re familiar with the term “arcology”, it’s like that. August herself is a rarity, in that she’s half human, half spyren, an alien race who are spiritually and physically connected with the world, and share memories and emotions through the sand around them. Her mother (the spyren) left the Spire when she was very little to return to her people, while her father left as soon as August was old enough to live on her own. They’ve remained out of her life since. She’s since made a living on the Spire as a sand reader, someone the residents can go to to have memories in the sand read for them (like a medium), but the job is taking a terrible toll on her mental health. She opts to take a sabbatical and find something new to do with her life. It’s through this that she meets Alix, a painter, and Lekka, a gardener who maintains the plants on the outside of the Spire (like a window washer, but…plant maintainer). As she slowly starts connecting with these two and finding where she belongs now that she feels she can’t go back to sand reading, the past intrudes on her new happiness.

It bills itself as a cozy science fantasy novella, and I agree with that assessment. It’s sci-fi in setting, fantasy in terms of sand reading, and grounded in the feelings of fear, inadequacy, and awkwardness we all feel when leaving something familiar behind and branching out into something new. The writing is stellar (badumtssss), and very quiet and deliberate in terms of setting the scene. I absolutely want to live on the Spire as described. It’s more family drama than action packed, so temper your expectations accordingly, but it really was the thing I needed to read right now.

Thank you to BookSirens and the publisher for providing me with a free eBook copy in exchange for an honest review.

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January 8, 2024Report this review