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The 100 Year Miracle: A Novel de Ashley Ream
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The 100 Year Miracle: A Novel (edição: 2017)

de Ashley Ream (Autor)

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566459,673 (3.86)Nenhum(a)
Fiction. Literature. Suspense. Thriller. HTML:

"Ashley Ream has an absolutely astounding voice??she is one of the most compelling, sharpest writers working today. The 100 Year Miracle is already one of my favorite novels of 2016." ??Gillian Flynn, #1 New York Times bestselling author of Gone Girl

Once a century, for only six days, the bay around a small Washington island glows like a water-bound aurora. Dr. Rachel Bell, a scientist studying the 100-Year Miracle and the tiny sea creatures that create it, knows a secret about the phenomenon that inspired the region's myths and folklore: the rare green water may contain a power that could save Rachel's own life (and change the world). When Rachel connects with Harry and Tilda, a divorced couple cohabiting once again as Harry enters the last stages of a debilitating disease, Harry is pulled into Rachel's obsession and hope as they both grasp at this once-in-a-lifetime chance to save themselves.

But the Miracle does things to people. Strange and mysterious things. And as these things begin to happen, Rachel has only six days to uncover and control the Miracle's secrets before the waters go dark for another hundred years.

This audiobook includes an interview between the author and the narrator.… (mais)

Membro:MarigoldsInMay
Título:The 100 Year Miracle: A Novel
Autores:Ashley Ream (Autor)
Informação:Flatiron Books (2017), Edition: Reprint, 320 pages
Coleções:Sua biblioteca
Avaliação:
Etiquetas:Fiction

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The 100 Year Miracle: A Novel de Ashley Ream

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Mostrando 1-5 de 6 (seguinte | mostrar todas)
I liked the author's efforts, as she explains in the notes, to be as accurate as possible with some of the things she portrayed. It was a good story --- it left me wanting more about some of the characters, which to me is a positive thought about a book. ( )
  nyiper | Jan 20, 2017 |
Rather an interesting read. Sort of makes a person want to start to eat bright and shinny things from the ocean. This is a fast read, as I read it in one sitting. ( )
  Billiam107 | Sep 28, 2016 |
Once every one hundred years, the waters of Olloo’et Bay glow green for six days as tiny bioluminescent arthropods hatch and live their six-day lives.
Doctor Rachel Bell, part of a team studying the phenomenon, is convinced the tiny creatures can save her life and sets up her own set of illicit experiments to find the answer she so desperately seeks.

The intriguing premise that forms the foundation of the plot establishes its own sense of urgency and provides ever-building tension for anxious readers. The compelling writing sets an atmospheric stage that is sometimes dark, sometimes creepy, and often quite lonely.
Unfortunately, the unrelenting self-absorption and snarkiness of the main characters subjugates their vulnerability and the underlying premise of dealing with physical or emotional pain struggles to maintain its hold on the reader. ( )
  jfe16 | May 16, 2016 |
Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean they aren't after you...

(Full disclosure: I received a free electronic ARC for review through NetGalley. Trigger warning for suicide and child abuse.)

It did things to people, this miracle. Strange and not wholly wonderful things.

“Do you know what it’s like to be terrified of a shower?” Harry asked. Rachel did know. Unfamiliar showers sometimes had abrupt changes in temperature, which hurt her back terribly, but she did not say this to Harry, who had continued talking without her. [...]

Most people, Rachel knew, didn’t want you to talk about your pain, not unless it was temporary like a twisted ankle or hitting your thumb with a hammer. If you did not hold up your end of the bargain and get better, things fell apart quickly. People would avoid you. It was easier to keep hidden, and she felt sorry for Harry because he could not hide.


Every hundred years, the Artemia lucis - tiny, eight millimeter long arthropods - come alive. They hatch from ancient eggs and spend the next six days mating, or trying to, before laying the next generation of eggs and dying. During the nighttime, they emit a neon green glow, turning the whole of Olloo’et Bay - their only known habitat - into a wondrous light show. The phenomenon is known as The 100 Year Miracle.

Yet, despite the colloquialism, few people are aware of the insects' more miraculous properties. The (fictional) Olloo’et - southern Northwest Coast peoples who resided on (the fictional) Olloo’et Island until they were forcibly relocated in the 1920s - believed the (fictional) Artemia lucis sacred. During their infrequent periods of activity, the Olloo’et men partook in a ceremony: accompanied by a shaman and tribal leader, the men spent six days and nights drinking the bay's water (complete with insects), which had hallucinogenic effects. The men reported having visions, slipped into trances, experienced great physical pleasure - and even claimed that the bugs cured their physical illnesses. Occasionally someone died; "usually by walking out into the water and never coming back."

The shaman's presence was necessary for everyone's safety, as the ingestion of the insects created a sort of window between this world and the next:

According to the missionaries, the glowing green ribbon that appeared around the island once every one hundred years represented to the Olloo’et either a path from the ancestral world to this one or the other way around, depending on how it was translated. So those who drank of the bay’s waters would either receive spectral visitors— a sort of personal haunting—or their souls would be transported to a spectral plane, which is an entirely different kind of thing.


The Artemia lucis doesn't just hold a professional interest for Dr. Rachel Bell, but a personal one too. When she was six year old, her mother's boyfriend threw a pot of boiling water at her, leaving thick, painful, disfiguring scars from the back of her neck down to her waist. Her days are filled with unrelenting, chronic pain. Though painkillers take the edge off (if she's lucky), the Vicodin has already started to damage her liver and, by her count, will lead to respiratory and/or heart failure in a year. Rachel has contemplated suicide many times since the accident, but for the past two years - since she was put on the research team tasked with studying them - the Artemia lucis has been the only thing keeping her going.

If only she can test their purported analgesic effect on herself. If only she can study them, keep them alive and breeding in captivity, identify and isolate the active compounds, synthesize them in a lab. Then, maybe, she could live. If only.

Rachel goes rogue, as it were, pursuing her own agenda under the radar. Along the way, she pulls Harry Streatfield and his family into her scheme. Harry has a progressive neurological disease that's slowly killing him - along with an extra room that will afford Rachel more privacy with which to conduct her illicit experiments. But his ex-wife Tilda, a former state senator who's moved back in to care for him, isn't as trusting of this woman who kinda-sorta vaguely resembles their dead daughter Becca. Nor is John, a local ecologist and a descendant of the Olloo’et who joined the research project at the last minute.

It's not just time Rachel is racing against as she struggles to decode the secret of the Artemia lucis - but also those wishing to protect the endangered insects (or profit from them themselves), and her own increasing paranoia and fear.

The 100 Year Miracle is a surprisingly dark read: creepy, atmospheric, and increasingly manic as the Artemia lucis near the end of their cycle. Yet the most haunting aspects concern Rachel and Harry's disabilities - and the chronic, unrelenting, unspeakable pain they cause - rather than the paranoia and hallucinations caused by the insects.

Both characters are made vulnerable by their illnesses and injuries - a condition they both struggle against, with varying success. Harry and Tilda's interactions are an emotionally fraught dance: Tilda tries to assist him when possible, without either of them acknowledging the reality of it. Harry looks away from his plate, and when he turns back, his shrimp have magically dissected themselves into bite-sized pieces. Harry is going to die - just as surely as the Artemia lucis - and yet it's an inevitability he cannot entertain, even as he must. There seems to be a ton of compartmentalization going on there.

Likewise, the only people who know about Rachel's scars are her doctors. During her waking life, she keeps them covered - with shirts, high-necked jackets, her hair - and refuses to reveal the physical impairment they cause. Given her lack of mobility, not to mention how much pain she's in, this is a testament to Rachel's will and determination. In Harry, Rachel could find a kindred spirit and confidant: if only she were up for some personal disclosure. We see a hint of this when Harry complains about how difficult it's become for him to navigate the shower - a problem to which Rachel can relate - but, alas, she doesn't take the bait, no matter how much I wanted her to. I can't help but think that things might have turned out different, if only she'd opened up to Harry. Or found a good support group. Something.

In any case, it's this - the possibility of being betrayed by your own body - that's really the scariest part of The 100 Year Miracle. Pain, whether physical or emotional (or both), is a sort of shadow MC in this story, lurking in the background but rarely, if ever, spoken of aloud.

But Rachel's descent into madness takes a close second. Told from multiple viewpoints, The 100 Year Miracle features a plethora of unreliable narrators - both unwittingly and intentionally so - who further muddy the waters, as it were. Like Rachel, by story's end you won't know who to trust - or even who the "real" villain is. (I'm still not 100% on the ending.)

And yet: I found myself empathizing with many of the characters, even as I feared (or feared for) them. They're all complicated and flawed, but in a way that tugs at the heartstrings. Well, except for Tip and Hooper. Eff those guys.

Read it if: You crave a dark, suspenseful, and weird-but-not-too-weird story.

http://www.easyvegan.info/2016/06/01/the-100-year-miracle-by-ashley-ream/ ( )
  smiteme | May 7, 2016 |
Enjoyable fast-paced novel with well-developed characters. I was rooting for one of the main characters all the way to the end. The colorful descriptions of nature transport the reader so that you feel the cold and wish you could really see the brilliant green waters. ( )
  standhenry | May 1, 2016 |
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Fiction. Literature. Suspense. Thriller. HTML:

"Ashley Ream has an absolutely astounding voice??she is one of the most compelling, sharpest writers working today. The 100 Year Miracle is already one of my favorite novels of 2016." ??Gillian Flynn, #1 New York Times bestselling author of Gone Girl

Once a century, for only six days, the bay around a small Washington island glows like a water-bound aurora. Dr. Rachel Bell, a scientist studying the 100-Year Miracle and the tiny sea creatures that create it, knows a secret about the phenomenon that inspired the region's myths and folklore: the rare green water may contain a power that could save Rachel's own life (and change the world). When Rachel connects with Harry and Tilda, a divorced couple cohabiting once again as Harry enters the last stages of a debilitating disease, Harry is pulled into Rachel's obsession and hope as they both grasp at this once-in-a-lifetime chance to save themselves.

But the Miracle does things to people. Strange and mysterious things. And as these things begin to happen, Rachel has only six days to uncover and control the Miracle's secrets before the waters go dark for another hundred years.

This audiobook includes an interview between the author and the narrator.

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