The Possessions by Sara Flannery Murphy
The boundaries between reality and the supernatural are
pushed in this original debut novel in which “bodies” at the Elysian Society
take a proprietary pill know as a lotus which allows them to slip out of their
body which becomes a repository for the client’s deceased loved one for a short
time. Eurydice, Edie, has worked as a
body for over five years and has disassociated herself not only from her job
but from her life as well. When Patrick
Braddock comes to the society to reconnect with his wife Sylvia who drowned in
a tragic accident several months before, Edie finds herself becoming obsessed
with Patrick and Sylvia and the more she learns about them the more immersed
she becomes in their lives---and Sylvia’s death. Edie begins to see cracks in the Braddock’s
marriage and she becomes more invested with Sylvia and she begins to wonder
about her death, but the more time she spends with them, the more she wants
Patrick; uncertain whether Patrick is interested in Edie as Edie or as Sylvia,
she begins to rearrange her life so she can continue channeling Sylvia and be
with Patrick, all the while the circumstances of Sylvia’s death niggling in the
background. The further into the
Braddock’s lives she delves, the more at risk Edie becomes of losing herself
forever, which is sometimes a very appealing thought to the young woman who
harbors her own secrets and sadness. There
are so many facets to this unique novel that it is hard to know where to look
next.
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