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Necropolis
Necropolis | Michael Dempsey
2 posts | 2 read | 1 to read
In a world where death is a thing of the past, how far would you go to solve your own murder? NYPD detective Paul Donner and his wife Elise were killed in a hold-up gone wrong. Fifty years later, Donner is back: revived courtesy of the Shift. Supposedly the unintended side-effect of a botched biological terrorist attack and carried by a ubiquitous retrovirus, the Shift jump-starts dead DNA and throws the life cycle into reverse, so reborns like Donner must cope with the fact that they are not only slowly youthing toward a new childhood, but have become New York's most hated minority. With New York quarantined beneath a geodesic blister, government and basic services have been outsourced by a private security corporation named Surazal. Reborns and infected norms alike struggle in a counterclockwise world, where everybody gets younger, you can see Elvis every night at Radio City Music Hall, and nobody has any hope of ever seeing the outside world. Lost in a sea of nostalgia, NYC becomes an inwardly focused schizophrenic culture of alienation and loss. In this backwards-looking culture where only some of the dead have returned, Donner is haunted by revivers guilt, and becomes obsessed with finding out who killed him and his non-returning wife. Little does he know, strange forces have already begun tracking him. Donner isn't the only one obsessed with the past.
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review
BeansPage
Necropolis | Michael Dempsey
post image
Mehso-so

I would definitely recommend this book to anybody who enjoyed stories like The Crow as well as dystopian, sci-fi and cops and robbers.
Please read my full review here:
TamaraTheReadingMermaid.weebly.com

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quote
Calmedmind
Necropolis | Michael Dempsey
post image

Once we had to read...The way the previous owner had loved and cared for the book, the worn down the edges with frequent readings, or the chocolate finger print right at the point when the Artful Dodger lifts the gentlemen‘s pocketbook?... would it really be the same if I didn‘t feel the weight of it in my hand?... It conveys the labor that went into its creation. The effort of filling each page, word by word, thought by thought.

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