Dark Matter Review
| Published | 2016-07-26 |
| Series | Standalone |
| Genre | Science Fiction, Thriller |
| Language | English |
| Publisher | Crown |
| ISBN-10 | 1101904224 |
| ISBN-13 | 9781101904220 |
πDark Matter β My Honest Review
Written and reviewed by Shadab Alam. The opinions and rating in this review are my own.
Summary:
Physics professor Jason Dessen is abducted and wakes in a life shaped by a different choice, forcing him through alternate realities toward his family. At the center of the book, Jason's devotion is straightforward, but multiplying versions of him turn love into a more difficult question of entitlement. Its main concerns include choice, identity, regret, love, ambition, family, and whether a desired life can be claimed by force, though the plot keeps those ideas tied to relationships and consequence.
β What I Liked
The best material for me was the box-based multiverse, rapid escalation, and the tension created when alternate selves become competitors. I also responded to the way Jason's devotion is straightforward, but multiplying versions of him turn love into a more difficult question of entitlement. Together, those choices made the people in Dark Matter feel more important than the premise.
β What Could Be Better
I was less convinced because the prose is functional, the family is idealized, and philosophical questions receive less space than the chase. I could understand the intention in Dark Matter, yet the execution felt easier than the surrounding material.
Physics professor Jason Dessen is abducted and wakes in a life shaped by a different choice, forcing him through alternate realities toward his family. What interested me was the gap between the rule of the story and the private price of choice, visible most clearly in the box-based multiverse.
I was most attentive during the box-based multiverse, rapid escalation, and the tension created when alternate selves become competitors. The book is most persuasive when the box-based multiverse stays close to physical detail and conversation.
The people gave choice its real pressure through the box-based multiverse. Jason's devotion is straightforward, but multiplying versions of him turn love into a more difficult question of entitlement. The best scenes let action expose what the character cannot say about identity.
I did lose confidence when the prose is functional, the family is idealized, and philosophical questions receive less space than the chase. My hesitation comes from execution rather than the idea itself, especially where choice should carry scenes built around the box-based multiverse.
The larger subject is choice, identity, regret, love, ambition, family, and whether a desired life can be claimed by force. I appreciated that choice is tied to money, family, work, and the box-based multiverse rather than left as an abstract idea.
I also noticed how often choice appears through routine while identity remains unspoken.
My rating is 4.4/5. The ending left me with choice, not with a neat sense that every problem had been solved.
πShadab's Rating
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