The book was set in a mid-pandemic retreat for a set of, mostly, friends who immigrated to the United States. Both their experiences as immigrants and living during the pandemic were major plot points of this novel. In addition, the novel also included multiple aspects that brought up the "woke" world we currently live in. As such, this was certainly the most topical novel I probably have ever read. The plot was fairly simple - a half dozen friends (some close and some more extended) landed at a largeish bungalow retreat to isolate in the early part of the COVID pandemic. While there, their relationships develop while also are further challenged.
On a positive, the author does a great job detailing the main characters and their varying motivations. Two Russians, two Koreans, an Indian, and two Americans make up the major players throughout the story. Unfortunately, though purposefully, none are much likeable, save one or two in certain situations. The book includes a lot of excess - food, alcohol, sex, relationship questions, etc. And, while the first third to half of the story is fairly captivating, it struggles to keep up into the last half of the novel.
While the book has some funny parts and can be tongue-in-cheek, I found it struggled to gain momentum and the cutesiness of the beginning struggled to hold up over the final 100 pages. While I know the intent was to really look at the small details of the normal lives of the characters, I found it difficult to maintain attention to these, sometimes, annoying individuals. Again, not a ton of action was taking place, and while the writing was engaging to read, the plot really struggled to move forward. Sadly, the last 10% of the novel most struggled. As I was hoping for an exciting ending or something to move the novel forward, the author decided to offer multiple dream like sequences (which didn't really exist anywhere else in the novel) as he killed off the most likeable character.
So, not my favorite book but it wasn't so boring I couldn't put it down. Perhaps if I had known going in that it was be a less eventful book and more of a think piece, I would have enjoyed more fully. Perhaps I helped a future reader out....
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