Infinite

March 6, 2021 |  No Comments

Infinite

by Brian Freeman

Date Published: March 1, 2021
Published By: Thomas and Mercer
Page Count: 328


Publisher’s Description:

From bestselling author Brian Freeman comes an explosive new psychological thriller that pushes the limits of reality as we know it.

One rainy night, the unthinkable happens: Dylan Moran’s car plunges off the road into a raging river, his beautiful wife drowning as he struggles to shore.

In the aftermath, through his grief, Dylan experiences sudden, strange visions: wherever he goes, he’s haunted by glimpses of himself. Dylan initially chalks it up to trauma, but that changes when he runs into a psychiatrist who claims he’s her patient. She says he has been undergoing a unique hypnotherapy treatment built on the idea that with every choice, he creates an infinite number of parallel universes.

Now those parallel universes are unlocked—and Dylan’s doppelgänger has staked a claim to his world. Can Dylan use these alternate realities to get a second chance at the life that was stolen from him? Or will he lose himself…to himself?


My Star Rating:

4 of 5 stars

My Review:

InfiniteInfinite by Brian Freeman
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I liked it. Interesting premise. Another take on the Schroedinger’s Cat theory of multiple universes, and this one has a nice spin. This guy actually finds a way to meet his other selves and live in his alternate realities or universes or what-have-you. He even gets to interact with them without some cataclysmic, cosmic consequence.

It’s always interesting in stories with this trope to see how the other lives are being lived and what is different. This guy Dylan Moran apparently had a dark side in all his lives. Apparently he wasn’t above murder in any of them, but he still managed to be a redeemable character.

The end was good the way it circled back and felt satisfying. The very very end, made me wonder all over again.

Overall, cool story. I tend to think this is a book with an intended audience that’s a little more male. The cover didn’t really speak to me in that sense, and the women in the story all seemed to be in love with the main character in some way. Me being the feministic type that I am notices things like this, but it’s not anything overpowering and may not be something others would pick up on.

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