
Did Not Finish 40 percent
Please note that I received this book via NetGalley. This did not affect my rating or review.
I tried. But with the world and my current job the way it is. I am not doing one blessed thing this year that is not bringing me joy. Heck, sometimes I can read a book that I am not exactly hate reading, but I go into a “I am finishing this because what in the world is happening here and where is the author going?” mode. But sometimes, like this, I hit an, “I just don’t care. I don’t care about the characters, the journey, the ending. I refuse to keep reading this because it’s doing my head in.” mode.
I really did love the cover of this book when I saw it. I don’t know with the world the way it is right now, it spoke to me. The book synopsis did too. I liked the idea of following four people in really separate timelines that end up being the key from humankind moving on from an Earth that is growing more inhabitable to a settlement on Mars.
“Terrestrial History” follows Hannah, who is working off the coast of Scotland and is a scientist working on fusion. Roban lives in the Colony (big C every time it is discussed which was jarring) where he dreams of Earth. And then you have Andrew and his daughter Kenzie who are taking up different sides about whether Earth can really come back the way it needs to for humankind to survive. Throw some time travel in (which honestly this book did not need that at all) and that’s this book.
I have to say this upfront. This book was pretentious as hell. I don’t know. It didn’t hit me the right way at all. And I got tired of honestly just wading though paragraphs upon paragraphs about ethics, morality, etc. It didn’t help the story is out of order. Just to let you readers know, the book plot is not written chronologically which made it hard to follow. I had to hunt to to look for who was speaking and what year it was at all times which was jarring. For example, Hannah is in whatever year. I can’t tell you. At one point it just says Hannah no year so I assume that’s present day? Roban is in year 2103, Kenzie and Andrew are in year 2071.
Hannah’s chapters/perspectives were easier to wade into than Roban/Andrew/Kenzie. Each character perspective is told first person point of view and yet they all sound the same. And honestly that is what really did me in. I would assume these people in different points of time would “sound different” and they did not. At the 40 percent mark I gave up.