The Ferryman
A Novel
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Narrated by:
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Scott Brick
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Suzanne Elise Freeman
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By:
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Justin Cronin
From the author of The Passage comes a riveting standalone novel about a group of survivors on a hidden island utopia—where the truth isn’t what it seems.
A POLYGON BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR
The islands of Prospera lie in a vast ocean, in splendid isolation from the rest of humanity—or whatever remains of it.
Citizens of the main island enjoy privileged lives. They are attended to by support staff who live on a cramped neighboring island, where whispers of revolt are brewing—but for the Prosperans, life is perfection. And when the end of life approaches, they’re sent to a mysterious third island, where their bodies are refreshed, their memories are wiped away, and they return to start life anew.
Proctor Bennett is a ferryman, whose job it is to enforce the retirement process when necessary. He never questions his work, until the day he receives a cryptic message:
“The world is not the world.”
These simple words unlock something he has secretly suspected. They seep into strange dreams of the stars and the sea. They give him the unshakable feeling that someone is trying to tell him something important.
Something no one could possibly imagine, something that could change the fate of humanity itself.
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Gone is the action and unrelenting pace of The Passage. Instead Cronin takes his readers into a new and completely different sci-fi tale that is full of heady ideas and rich philosophy. The Ferryman is a slower simmer than The Passage trilogy. Cronin takes his time to develop the characters in a way that can leave you out of breath when the inevitable twists come. The book is mostly told from the narrative perspective of Proctor Bennett, and his confusion when he realizes his own assumptions about his life may be incorrect are your confusions too.
Cronin drops enough breadcrumbs throughout the tale that you never feel cheated by the twists and turns of the story, but not so many that you can always anticipate what’s coming next. This book is masterfully written by someone who is proving to be a compelling storyteller and world builder.
Part mystery, part sci-fi, part philosophy, this is a book that will leave you thinking and wishing for more when the story ends. The narrators are compelling and it’s one of the few audiobooks I had trouble hitting pause on. This is also one of the few books, like The Martian, that I will likely read more than once.
Don’t miss this surprising gem!
Excellent Change of Form From The Passage
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The twists and surprises were a little bit too much for me and it feels like 3 stories mashed into one, which it really kind of is.
The narrator, whom I have liked on other books in the past, was way too strong in this one. He over stressed every emotion to a point where it made me weary. Every sentence was delivered with full-blown emotional pronunciation and often in places where it wasn't necessary.
The story is too long and there are too many stories going on within the same novel.
I really wanted to like this novel but, I found myself wamting it to end sooner rather than later. it's an decent book for all of its flaws and I do like the concept but, as is his style, he has more fun working on the world building and complex characters than he does telling a concise and interesting story.
With some changes, this could have been a great novel.
A little bit too much in just about every way
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Overall a great story
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