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Dissolution

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A woman dives into her husband's memories to uncover a decades-old feud threatening reality itself in this staggering technothriller from the bestselling author of Ascension.

Maggie Webb has lived the last decade caring for elderly husband, Stanley, as memory loss gradually erases all the beautiful moments they created together. It's the loneliest she's ever felt in her life.

When a mysterious stranger named Hassan appears at her door, he reveals a shocking truth: Stanley isn't losing his memories. Someone is actively removing them to hide a long-buried secret from coming to light. If Maggie does what she's told, she can reverse it. She can get her husband back.

Led by Hassan and his technological marvels, Maggie breaks into her husband's mind, probing the depths of his past in an effort to save him. The deeper she dives, the more she unravels a mystery spanning continents and centuries, each layer more complex than the last.

But Hassan cannot be trusted. Not just memories are disappearing, but pieces of reality itself. If Maggie cannot find out what Stanley did all those years ago, and what Hassan is after now, she risks far more than her husband's life. The very course of human history hangs in the balance.

384 pages, Hardcover

First published March 25, 2025

213 people are currently reading
20.3k people want to read

About the author

Nicholas Binge

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Nicholas Binge is a bestselling author of speculative thrillers, literary science-fiction, and horror. His work has been featured in The New York Times, The Sunday Times, The Wall Street Journal, The FT, Entertainment Weekly, The Washington Post, and more.

His first novel, Professor Everywhere, was selected as a prize-winner by The Proverse Prize for Literature in Hong Kong. His most recent novel, Ascension, a New York Times Editor’s Choice Pick, was named a best book of 2023 by Vulture, ŷ, The LA Times, and The Sunday Times, as well as being a finalist for the 2023 ŷ� Choice Awards and the 2024 Ignotus Award for Best Novel. It has since been critically praised across almost every major media outlet, as well as being translated into nine languages and being optioned for film.

His next novel, Dissolution, will be out internationally in March 2025. It is also being adapted into a major motion picture by Sony Pictures and Temple Hill Entertainment, with the script penned by Oscar-nominated Eric Heisserer (Arrival, Birdbox, Shadow & Bone).

Binge has lived in Singapore, Switzerland, and Hong Kong, and is currently based in Edinburgh, UK. Outside of fiction, he has written for The Guardian, Literary Hub, and CrimeReads, amongst others. When he’s not writing himself, he also lectures in creative writing at Edinburgh Napier University. He is an active member of ESFF (Edinburgh Science-Fiction & Fantasy) and can often be found at book festivals and events around Scotland and the rest of the UK.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 174 reviews
Profile Image for Linzie (suspenseisthrillingme).
651 reviews566 followers
April 17, 2025
WHOA! There simply aren’t enough words to describe the awesomeness within the pages of Dissolution. From the thought-provoking themes to the realistic arch-villain, this speculative sci-fi thriller was an out-and-out winner. After all, the near-future setting brought to life topics from today’s world that should crystallize both fear and foreboding for each and every reader. Through ideas such as humanity, power, and love, this claustrophobic novel made me fall for Stan and Maggie head over heels. I mean, who could resist a love story for the ages as told over multiple timelines by these distinct dual POVs?

As I’ve already hinted, the characters were simply sublime. Nicely accenting a storyline full of cat-and-mouse antics, complex plot lines, and one almighty gasp-inducing twist, their authenticity absolutely flowed from the pages. Even better, however, was the poignancy that seemed to ooze from each scene. Not only did I root for both of them in turn, but their foil was a character I loved to hate down to my core. Altogether, they gave what was a sometimes hardcore sci-fi story a level of tenderness that I’ve rarely seen. Perfect for fans of Blake Crouch and Michael Crichton, it was darn close to perfection.

The only teeny, tiny fly in the ointment was how deep the theorizing became at times. While I eventually understood, it took some doing for me to parse out the words. Diving deeply into literature and science, while it didn’t get into the nitty gritty of the topic at hand, it still required some heavy thinking in order to truly comprehend Stan’s ideas. Nevertheless, I loved every moment even if I had to slow down my speed reading to follow along.

All said and done, I was duly impressed by this immersive masterclass of unbridled suspense. From the literary fiction feel to the action-packed climax, only the utterly perfect conclusion could outdo the rest of the novel. After all, it had me both smiling with glee as well as laughing out loud. Combined with a message that had me thinking long and hard, I knew when I flipped the last page that I had found something special. Now I can’t wait to go back and read Binge’s first novel, Ascension. If this one was anything to go by, I’ve got quite the thrilling, “Binge�-able rollercoaster ride waiting in the wings. Rating of 4.5 stars (upgraded).

SYNOPSIS:

Maggie Webb has lived the last decade caring for elderly husband, Stanley, as memory loss gradually erases all the beautiful moments they created together. It's the loneliest she's ever felt in her life.

When a mysterious stranger named Hassan appears at her door, he reveals a shocking truth: Stanley isn't losing his memories. Someone is actively removing them to hide a long-buried secret from coming to light. If Maggie does what she's told, she can reverse it. She can get her husband back.

Led by Hassan and his technological marvels, Maggie breaks into her husband's mind, probing the depths of his memories in an effort to save him. The deeper she dives, the more she unravels a mystery spanning continents and centuries, each layer more complex than the last. But Hassan cannot be trusted. Not just memories are disappearing, but pieces of reality itself. If Maggie cannot find out what Stanley did all those years ago, and what Hassan is after, she risks far more than her husband's life. The very course of human history hangs in the balance.

Thank you to Nicholas Binge and Riverhead Books for my complimentary copy. All opinions are my own.

PUB DATE: March 25, 2025

Content warning: dementia, violence, suicide, gun and knife violence, mention of: parent-child estrangement, bullying, child abuse
Profile Image for Holly  B (slower pace!).
923 reviews2,657 followers
April 8, 2025

Enjoyed the first 30%

A great premise, but the execution failed me. The story became too monotonous, too detailed with the science (complex), the chess playing and the overall explaining of the procedures and process. Perhaps I needed to focus more and a kindle copy would have worked better! Not at all sure!

Anyway, this was a struggle to finish, but wanted to make sure I didn't miss a fantastic turnaround. I did not!

Audio was 14 hrs/ 9 min





Profile Image for Gareth Is Haunted.
394 reviews88 followers
March 26, 2025
An amazing Science Fiction story.
'Deep time humbles the human moment. What do the tens of thousands of years care for your plans?'

When I was sent a copy of Dissolution to read and review, it brightened a bit of a tough day and as it happened, it did the same for the next six days of reading.

As with his previous book Ascension, this is a speculative sci-fi thriller and it happens to tick all the boxes for me. It has a deepness that many books from the genre tend to lack. I guess you could say that it's a love story buried within a sci-fi framework, which manages to pull me deeper and deeper into the story. It's also nice that the story doesn't get lost behind all of the science involved within this novel. It's extremely accessible for science lovers or those who have no interest in science at all.
As for the storytelling, it's exemplary. You'll be thinking you've sussed things out and then, bam! The story twists and turns, feeding you little hints here and there, pulling you along with it.

'But real loneliness is repetition: doing the same routines day in and day out with nothing new to reflect on or look forwards to.'

I've purposely not revealed any of the themes within due to not wanting to spoil this for anyone, but if you love a good thriller or science fiction novel then I'd suggest giving this a go.
Exemplary work from Nicholas Binge, yet again.

I received an advanced copy for free and I'm leaving this unbiased review voluntarily.
Profile Image for Dutchie.
318 reviews44 followers
March 24, 2025
Fabulous!!! I loved just about every minute of this novel. This novel was one that I took my time with. While I wanted to continue reading to know what happened., I wanted to also digest and appreciate the novel itself.

As a quick synopsis, Maggie is tasked with digging deep into her Alzheimer ridden husbands mind in order to find a solution that could possibly save humanity.

While the main concept is geared more towards science fiction, this novel goes way beyond that. As for the science fiction aspect of this, it does not go too deep into the inner workings of it. Which for this reader was perfect. I tend to glaze over when things get super technical. There were a few moments while reading that I went OH! As everything clicked into place. The characters were developed in such a way that you couldn’t help but become engrossed in each of their minds.

I cannot recommend this book enough. It certainly is going to be my one of my favorites this year. I will be checking out more from this author for sure.

Thanks to NetGalley and the publisher, for my advanced copy in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for JaymeO.
551 reviews580 followers
April 3, 2025
“It hungers.�

Dissolution can best be described as The Matrix meets Inception. It is the second sci fi thriller I have read in the past month that delivers a compelling plot dealing with time travel through memories. While you will have to wait until May 20th to read The Memory Collectors, I highly recommend picking up Nicholas Binge’s Dissolution. Specifically, the fantastic audiobook read by a full cast!

Maggie Webb admits her 83 year-old husband Stanley to a care home after dementia has taken the last ten years of his life. When a man named Hassan shows up at her door claiming that the Sunrise Care Home is responsible for deleting her husbands’s memories in order to prevent a long buried secret from coming out, Maggie can’t believe it! He says that it’s essential that she break him out of the care home as soon as possible in order to preserve the memories he has left. They need to hurry! If she helps get him out, she will be able to get his memories back. Compelled to reconnect with the old Stanley, Maggie follows Hassan’s instructions. But Hassan has his own secret agenda. Can he really be trusted?

Dare I say that I enjoyed a love story? Told in multiple time lines through different points of view, this character driven novel will keep you guessing and furiously flipping the pages. I could easily see this book being made into a major motion picture! While I didn’t completely grasp all of the complex scientific concepts, it didn’t affect my reading experience. Light sci-fi readers will definitely be thrilled by this clever plot!

Highly recommend!

4.5/5 stars rounded down
Profile Image for Blair.
1,969 reviews5,671 followers
March 27, 2025
(3.5) An elderly woman, Margaret, wakes up in a bizarre situation. She’s in an abandoned swimming pool, getting interrogated by a menacing yet oddly charismatic guy, Hassan, who’s desperate for her to recount the events of the last few days in perfect detail. Why? Because her husband, Stanley, apparently discovered something that could change the course of human history. And since Stanley now has Alzheimer’s, Hassan needs Margaret to literally enter his memories and retrieve whatever it was. Quickly, too � powerful people are willing to kill for this secret (they might even have engineered Stanley’s memory loss in the first place). If this all sounds overly convoluted on paper, Binge makes it pleasingly easy to fall into.

The best parts, by far, are the chapters that explore Stanley’s perspective � his miserable childhood, his strained friendships, his introduction to the theory and science of memory via an eccentric mentor. Margaret’s sections, though? Trickier. The whole thing is framed as a transcript of everything she tells Hassan, and it takes intense suspension of disbelief to buy into that. There are some MacGuffins to explain Margaret’s improbably perfect and novelistic recall: Hassan gives her a memory-enhancing drug that supposedly ‘encourages verbalisation of your inner monologue�. But, needless to say, one’s inner monologue doesn’t generally involve describing dialogue the same way it’s written in a book.

I kept bouncing between ‘this is way too polished� and ‘ooh, that was actually a really good twist�. Dissolution is one of the most obvious examples I’ve read recently of something that feels like it’s written with the express aim of being adapted into a film or TV series. Whether or not that’s an issue is a matter of taste. I think it’s fair to say that although I enjoyed the book � because it’s slick and compelling and all those things you’d expect from a story like this � I wished the style had been pared back a bit. I wanted more ambiguity, more restraint, something with a little less of a relentless drive towards the next big action sequence.

This is Binge’s third novel; I’ve read them all, liking each a little less than its predecessor. I think this is because his writing is moving in a more commercial direction, which, fair enough, good for him, that’s its own kind of skill; it’s just not for me. Dissolution might appeal to those who have enjoyed books by the likes of Blake Crouch, Claire North and Stuart Turton. Personally, this action-packed, kinetic style just doesn’t represent what I want to get out of, or find most rewarding about, speculative fiction in general. Nevertheless, it’s undeniably gripping and fun � and look, if that big-budget adaptation does happen, I’ll definitely be watching.

I received an advance review copy of Dissolution from the publisher through .
Profile Image for Booksblabbering || Cait❣️.
1,585 reviews492 followers
February 28, 2025
Dark Matter meets Vitra Nostra.
This was mind-bending and I would recommend going in blind knowing this is about memory and the power of the mind.

2021 - Maggie is 83 years old and is told her husband doesn’t have dementia but a corporation is removing them to hide a long-buried secret from his past. If Maggie does what she's told, she can reverse it.
1950 - We are also treated to her husband’s life through flashbacks and we follow a young Stanley as a student (major dark academia vibes), to experimenting and discovering something crazy, and meeting young Maggie.

It is weird to say that a slow-moving story can be tense and heart-pounding, but that’s what this manages to be.

When people depict loneliness, they tend to show the isolation, the claustrophobia of it—someone curled up in a dark room, stuck in bed, unable to move. But real loneliness is repetition: doing the same routines day in and day out with nothing new to reflect on or look forwards to.

At the heart of this is relationships we make between people and what we are willing to do to keep them.

It is extremely accessible - there are no hard-to-grasp or understand concepts. Rather, a stretching of our current understanding that uses a speculative lens to make it sci fi.

One final note - this is told through transcripts from Maggie and uses the second person which created an eerie tension and unique narrative.

Don’t go in expecting a fast paced thriller - this is a deep character study with intimate moments, emotional highs and lows, and secrets hidden from everyone.

Arc gifted by Harper Voyager.

Profile Image for Ian Payton.
135 reviews29 followers
February 11, 2025
This is an imaginative technical thriller that is bound together by love and loss, with an old school ‘bad quy� in the mix. It should have been great.
"When a mysterious stranger named Hassan appears at her door, he reveals a shocking truth: Stanley isn’t losing his memories. Someone is actively removing them to hide a long-buried secret from coming to light. If Maggie does what she’s told, she can reverse it. She can get her husband back.

Led by Hassan and his technological marvels, Maggie breaks into her husband’s mind, probing the depths of his memories in an effort to save him."
This story has a intriguing premise, and I always enjoy plots that play with time and memory, so this should have been perfect for me. There is technology that allows other people’s memories to be explored, and there are implications for the fabric of reality itself, and there is a ‘bad guy� and a malevolent force that need to be dealt with - this is exciting stuff! The plot is well paced, and the author does a great job of guiding us skillfully through multiple timelines, often intertwined.

But while the plot was intricate and engaging, I think I was hoping for something more profound. The bad guy is an archetypal old school villain - if he had a moustache, he would have twirled it menacingly. The malevolent force is, well� just malevolent:
“I do not know what its purpose is. Maybe it has no purpose. Maybe it’s just a force of nature. It is, perhaps, beyond our comprehension.�
And the mechanism by which memories of others can be explored is similarly well explained:
“We would run out of time before you even began to understand the science of it�
Well, that’s all very convenient. But not very satisfying.

There is a lovely relationship between the two main characters, Maggie and Stanley, and this does form a solid foundation. But the plot has difficulty providing substance to the jeopardy that they’re in, given the two-dimensional villain and the unknowable malevolent force. So, while I did care what ultimately happened to Maggie and Stanley, I found it somewhat of a trudge to work my way through the muddy shallows of their struggle - and I found myself not always wanting to pick up the book and carry on.

Thank you #NetGalley and HarperCollins UK for the free review copy of Dissolution in exchange for an honest review. All opinions are my own.
Profile Image for Lorelei.
334 reviews37 followers
March 17, 2025
Dissolution is one of those books that I finished, closed the book, and just stared into space for several minutes. This book was FANTASTIC.

High concept scifi doesn’t always hit right for me. Binge’s previous book, Ascension, was like that. It’s an objectively good book, I can see why people loved it, but I’m just not the right audience. Dissolution though? This was absolutely the book for me.

Our protaganist is Maggie, an elderly woman visited one day by a stranger named Hassan. He tells her that her husband, currently in a care facility, isn’t actually suffering from Alzheimers or dementia. Someone is actually removing his memories, and with Hassan‘s help, she can stop it and bring him back. Maggie can tell that he’s not giving her the full story, but who wouldn’t take the chance to get back the love of their life?

You hop about in time, both in Maggie’s POV and her husband, Stanley, as you begin to gradually uncover the edges of this mystery and what it all means.

I don’t want to spoil anything, so that’s all I’ll say about the plot, but the ending? Holy hell. Chef’s kiss. Perfect. Sticking the landing on a story like this is so hard, and it’s what convinced me this is a 5 star book.

Love it. Seriously thinking about buying the beautiful Broken Binding edition, it’s so pretty and the book is so good.

Thank you Netgalley and Riverhead Books for the opportunity to read this ARC! All opinions are, as always, my own.
Profile Image for Miguel Azevedo.
215 reviews8 followers
December 8, 2024
Starting with full disclosure, I am both a neuroscientist and highly appreciative of Nicholas' writing. I don't think you need to be either, though, to appreciate the exploration of the ethical and identity implications of memory and neuronal "manipulation", as a study of the human condition, that Nicholas presents with Dissolution. In fact, I do believe he did an extraordinary job at keeping the science both accessible and presented with sufficient nuance not to establish a weak foundation. Dissolution is a book about the human condition, not the science behind the technology it invokes, and as such delivers in spades on questioning the elements of humanity.

In fact, the novel’s strength lies in its balance of intellectual inquiry and emotional resonance. Its depiction of experimental neuroscience reflects contemporary ethical debates (which do occupy our professional minds frequently) while engaging in a fluid narrative and superb character development.

Nicholas Binge's growth as a storyteller is undeniable. His mastery of scene-setting, impeccable pacing, and ability to forge deep emotional connections between readers and characters are nothing short of exceptional. With Margaret, I felt deeply entwined—sharing her fears, her astonishment, her uncertainty. I didn’t just follow her journey; I felt a partner in it, questioning and feeling alongside her every step of the way.

Dissolution is an exceptional novel from every perspective and stands poised to be a leading contender for the Science Fiction novel of 2025.
Profile Image for Cindy Burnett (Thoughts from a Page).
652 reviews1,073 followers
November 8, 2024
4.5 stars. This is a fabulous book with a unique premise; I thoroughly enjoyed it. It could have been edited down a bit at times (it dragged in places with no real reason that it needed to) so I am giving it 4.5 stars instead of 5, but it's well worth the read. I loved the ending so much. I will be thinking about this one for a long while.
Profile Image for Justine.
1,341 reviews358 followers
April 8, 2025
4.5 stars

Ah, so good! I loved Binge’s surreal and chilling book , but Dissolution takes the prize for me.

Part scientific thriller, part time travelling chase, part love story for the ages, this book has a little bit of everything and ends up producing something larger than the sum of parts. It’s a story best entered into cold and enjoyed for the ride that it is. If you enjoyed the feeling you got when you read , Dissolution delivers a bit of that.

"It occurs to me that at some point, you pick up your child for the very last time. And you don't know. At the time, you don't know that it's the last time you'll ever do it." He was right, of course: Endings don't announce themselves. They sneak around you; they shuffle their way past unnoticed until, on some cloudy day, you look out on an empty street and realize everything ended some time ago.
Profile Image for Leanne ☾.
840 reviews68 followers
February 21, 2025
This book didn’t just grip me—it tore through me. From the first page, I was hooked, unraveling a story as intricate and fragile as memory itself. This isn’t just sci-fi � it’s a psychological labyrinth, a haunting exploration of identity, love, and the terrifying consequences of losing what makes us us.

“Because our identities are defined by our experiences, and our experiences are just a collection of our memories. In that sense, our memories—both conscious and subconscious—are what make us human. Without memory, we would be blank slates. We would be empty.�

That’s the terrifying heart of Dissolution. What happens when those memories—our very sense of self—are no longer ours?

The atmosphere? Absolutely electric. There’s this constant tension—a creeping, skin-prickling unease that builds with every page. Like Ascension, Binge masterfully blends cosmic horror with something deeply human, making every revelation feel like a punch to the gut. The pacing is relentless, twisting and turning in ways I never saw coming.

And Maggie. She’s unlike any protagonist I’ve read before—an octogenarian fighting for her husband, for his (and their) past, for the truth buried deep in his (and hers) fragmented memories. Her strength, her love, her sheer determination wrecked me. She’s the kind of character who lingers, whose pain feels real, whose story matters. Watching her piece together the impossible was exhilarating and heartbreaking all at once.

But what truly broke me was Stanley and Maggie’s relationship. Their love—the kind that endures beyond time, beyond memory—felt like the beating heart of this book. It was almost a love letter to love itself. I couldn’t stop thinking about it, even when I wasn’t reading. It’s rare to find a book that makes your mind reel while also making your heart ache, but Dissolution did both. It brought tears to my eyes and left me feeling utterly hollowed out in the best way.

“Stanley stared at her—this crazy, wonderful, fantastic woman—and could think of only one more question to ask. ‘Is it worth it?�
‘Oh, Stan, there’s never been anything more worth it in the entire world.’� 😭

I’ve always been obsessed with time travel stories, and while this isn’t traditional time travel, it plays with time in ways that felt just as exhilarating. The way memory fractures and shifts, the nonlinear unraveling of truth—it gave me that same thrill I love in time-bending narratives. The past isn’t just something remembered here; it’s something fought for, manipulated, and slipping through grasping fingers. And at the heart of it all, there’s love—enduring, aching, refusing to be erased.

Binge’s writing is razor-sharp, immersive, and deeply unsettling. He doesn’t just craft a story—he burrows into your mind, forcing you to question everything. About memory. About truth. About the terrifying fragility of our own existence.

Dissolution isn’t just a book you read—it’s a book that reads you. Brutal, breathtaking, romantic, and utterly unforgettable.
Profile Image for CadmanReads.
336 reviews19 followers
March 2, 2025
Thanks to HarperCollins UK and Netgalley for the ARC.

After absolutely loving Ascension, I was stoked to receive an ARC of Dissolution through NetGalley. Nicholas Binge has a way of crafting thought-provoking, mind-bending sci-fi that lingers long after the final page, and I was eager to see where he would take things next.

The plotline of Dissolution completely hooked me. It’s the kind of high-concept sci-fi that explores profound philosophical ideas while keeping the tension and intrigue alive. Binge excels at weaving complex narratives with emotional depth, and this book is no exception. The questions it raises about humanity, technology, and the nature of existence are precisely the themes I love in sci-fi.

However, the method of storytelling didn’t entirely work for me. While I appreciated what Binge was trying to do, the execution occasionally pulled me out of the story rather than immersing me in it. That being said, I still found it fascinating, and his ability to create compelling, cerebral sci-fi remains impressive.

One of the standout aspects of the book for me was the relationship between Stanley and Maggie. Their dynamic added an emotional core to the story that balanced out the more cerebral elements. Their connection felt authentic, filled with love, regret, and the weight of past choices. It was one of those relationships that felt raw and real, and I found myself deeply invested in how their story unfolded.

Interestingly, in the same month, I also read Make It Stick, which delves into memory and learning theory—two themes that Dissolution explores uniquely. The overlap between the two books made for an even more intriguing reading experience, as both examine how we retain and process knowledge, though from very different angles.

This book is perfect for fans of Dark Matter by Blake Crouch, with its fast-paced thrills and mind-bending scientific concepts. It also has strong similarities with another of my favorite books (and its movie adaptation), but saying the title would be a massive spoiler, so I’ll leave that for readers to discover for themselves.

Even though Dissolution didn’t quite hit the same highs as Ascension for me, it’s still a book I’d recommend to fans of thought-provoking sci-fi. Nicholas Binge continues to be an author whose work I eagerly anticipate.
Profile Image for Angie Miale.
714 reviews52 followers
March 24, 2025
I can't imagine a scarier scenario than deep diving and getting lost inside your partner's memories of 80 years of life. Dissolution is a love story deeply embedded within a mystery within a speculative fiction/sci fi novel. Maggie's husband Stanley is in assisted living, in the memory care unit. A stranger appears into her life and tells Maggie that Stanley does not have dementia, but his memories are being stolen. She has renewed hope that he can regain his short and long term memory and become "her Stanley" again.

Hassan gives Maggie the chance to go back into Stanley's memories- to places and time they shared together in 50 years of marriage and with their daughter, Leah. The chapters alternate between Stanley's past- back to 1955 before he met Maggie. It becomes clear earlier on in the book that Hassan is not all he seems.

This is a fascinating premise that unfolds over time, layers upon layers are revealed... and I missed some. I did have to keep flipping back to understand where I was in the narrative, and to differentiate the true from the false. Although I liked Maggie and believed her love- and Stanley being a true romantic, the characters themselves fell a little flat for me, protagonist and antagonists being tragically exaggerated. I liked this book a lot, but I am not sure I completely understood it. It was exciting and very dark/gruesome in parts.

Memories as time travel is something intriguing to me, and this was certainly a fresh way of thinking about it.

Thank you to Netgalley and Penguin/ Riverhead books for the ARC. Book to be published March 25, 2025.

200 Book ReviewsCamp NetGalley 202480%Professional Reader
Profile Image for Isabelle.
Author1 book62 followers
January 20, 2025
This book was a total cover grab based on the U.K. cover. I loved it at first sight and despite not wanting to judge a book by its cover, I happily accepted a review copy from the author. Little did I know how much I would love this book.

When I first started Dissolution, I was a little skeptical though. I found the narrative setup a little lacking and forced. Thankfully the story that was told through that POV and the second narrator, which showed us scenes from the past, kept me very interested. I also found the thought process of the first narrator very compelling. I enjoyed her little detours, rants, and memories that weren’t always exactly what she was supposed to be talking about. It made her feel so real to me.

There were some other small details throughout that I found a little questionable, but—just like the narrative setup I originally disliked—these all converged in a really satisfying ending. It felt like every detail (those I loved and those I didn’t) had a specific purpose that slowly led us to the conclusion. I fully expected to be reading multiple books at the same time as this one (ADHD brain!), but this one crept its way into daily thoughts even when I wasn’t reading and I just could not start another one. It hooked me so thoroughly with its consistent build-up and I reached the finale breathless for the conclusion. It took right until the very last couple of pages to completely resolve. I was really worried that it wouldn’t feel as satisfying as the climb to get there, but it did not disappoint! What a clever and fitting ending!

When I read the description of the book, I did worry it might get a little dark for me. Despite my exploration of horror this year, I still approach each thriller and horror book with caution. That wasn’t necessary with this one though. I never really got that worried while reading the book itself. Rather, what unsettled me instead snuck up on me really slowly, which were the implications of the book. It started quite innocently with its second POV. I don’t usually like most coming-of-age stories, but this one managed to stay interesting to me the whole time with its carefully chosen scenes and its swift timeline. While I don’t usually like that kind of rush through someone’s story either, here the scenes always felt important and emotionally impactful. At times, it was quite heart-breaking. At the same time it was compelling and addictive. I couldn’t look away, even when it started to feel like tragedy was approaching. It was satisfying to guess some of the reveals but also be surprised by others.

I sometimes got lost in my own thoughts about the tech that was discovered and used in the book. That’s what my worried brain got quite stuck on at times. If that technology really was part of our world, that would be terrifying. It was incredibly interesting though to follow the story woven around memories and how they could be used. I’m not sure why I thought I could read a book about memory though and not have my feelings hurt. Hehehe.

I’ve already got Ascension on my kindle now and am eager for the next book by Nicholas Binge as well. This one obviously worked really well for me so I’m eager to try more.

Profile Image for Panda .
681 reviews27 followers
April 19, 2025
Audiobook (14 hours) narrated by Charlotte Strevens, David Thorpe, and Joe Eyre.
Publisher: Books on Tape

The narration is very good.
All of the narrators have voiced hundreds of books, with David Thorpe holding several awards for his narration skills.
The audio is flawless.

Two time travel books in a row! I had totally missed that this novel was also based on time travel when I started. Funnily enough, the time travel was kind of similar to the novel that I just finished, . Nicholas Binge has a much more character forward based approach and was able to put in a fantastically eerie antagonist, who really drew me in.

I especially enjoyed the use of the narrators to really enforce and bring out the emotional depths of the characters. While single narrators can and do do exceptional voice work, in this case using three narrators with distinct voices seems like an intentional choice to elevate the work done by the author, and it was the right one to make. I'm not sure which narrator out of the two men voiced the antagonist, however whenever he entered the room the air chilled to a sharp edge.

This is one of those books that I would love to see on the big screen. So much good.
Profile Image for T.R. Napper.
Author35 books209 followers
September 15, 2024
A taut techno-thriller written with compassion and intelligence. This is an intricately plotted and - from a craft perspective - a technically difficult novel to write. And yet, Binge creates a compelling narrative that takes the reader on a page-turning journey through both time and memory.
Profile Image for Susy.
1,158 reviews158 followers
April 6, 2025
5 stars
Very engaging sci-fi thriller with vast and compelling themes, great characters and twists and turns, pulling me deeper and deeper into the story. I just couldn't put it down.

Characters 10
Atmosphere 10
Writing Style 10
Premise 10
Execution/Plot 10
Execution/Pace 10
Execution/Setup 10
Enjoyment/Engrossment 10
Narration 10
Profile Image for Mark.
318 reviews31 followers
December 31, 2024
There are a lot of sci-fi books out there with cool ideas but poor writing or one-dimensional characters.

Happily, Dissolution backs up its cool ideas with a very readable story and strong characters.

This is my second Nicholas Binge book, after Ascension, and he's 2 for 2 now for me. This one improves on Ascension by virtue of the main characters, an octogenarian couple whose life together is tenderly drawn. I won't give away any plot points but there's lots of fun sci-fi concepts, set alongside the more mundane settings of old folks homes and after-school clubs for Maths nerds at Uni.

The ending didn't pan out exactly as I might have liked, but such is life!

Highly recommended. I'll look out some other Binge books this coming year.

Thanks to NetGalley, the publisher and author for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Shannon  Miz.
1,416 reviews1,081 followers
April 10, 2025
4.5*

First, can I just say that Iloved that the protagonist is an elderly lady? Like how often does that happen? And she isawesome. Loved her desperately.More of that, please and thank you! I also really enjoyed that we got to see the history of how Maggie and Stanley reached this point, and there are a lot of great twists and turns that led us there. I will say, my one minor gripe was that some of the scenes from Stanley's boarding school days got a little long, and maybe a wee bit boring. But! This is not most of the book, just a minor thing.

It takes a lot of turns I didn't expect, and had my jaw on the floor in places. It was also incredibly heartfelt and emotional, which I don't think I expected with all the thrilling sci-fi bits, but tucked into all of it was some really great commentary on life. It made my heart both sad and happy, in the best of ways.

Bottom Line: This was more than just an exciting sci-fi book (though it was that, too!)- it was an earnest look into love and life, too.

Profile Image for Ranjini Shankar.
1,435 reviews82 followers
April 22, 2025
3.5 rounding up. This is an interesting time travel love story but it got bogged down with jargon and the time jumps made me feel like I didn’t actually know any of the characters. However, the concept was intriguing and I loved how it was narrated through transcripts

Maggie is introduced to a mysterious man who claims her husband’s memory loss isn’t actually due to Alzheimer’s but due to someone stealing his memories. He swears that if she breaks him out of his care home he can help restore those memories and there’s nothing Maggie wants more. However, she’s worried this man may not be telling her everything and that her husband might be hiding more in his mind than she expected

The last page bumped this up by an easy half star. It was so poignant and beautiful and felt like the right way to end this. I wish the villain and the ambiguous memory eating creature (?) had better motive or at least more definition. I hate seeing great stories with weak villains but the moments of connection between Maggie and Stanley were beautiful and really brought the story together
Profile Image for Keri Smith.
170 reviews
April 18, 2025
A favorite read of the year! Did you like the movie Inception? And did you also enjoy the movie About Time? Then Dissolution is right up your alley!

This is a fast paced science fiction novel with an engaging, high stakes mystery plot. It has fantastic writing that is easy to follow but doesn’t sacrifice substance. It’s the perfect blend of suspenseful and heartfelt, mind bending and gut wrenching.

You know when a book starts out well and you optimistically think to yourself, “Oh! Maybe this one will be a 5 star book!� And then you get further, and your star rating gradually starts to deteriorate, until you reach the end and think to yourself, “Wow. What a disappointing ending.�

That won’t happen to you if you read Dissolution. The ending is PERFECT. It’s one of the best endings I’ve ever personally come across in a book. It’s what truly made this a 5 star read for me!

Dissolution is wonderful in book form, but it would make an incredible movie, too (and it looks like it’s being turned into a film). I can’t wait to read more from this author!
136 reviews
March 30, 2025
Dissolution is the kind of book that you finish and immediately want to turn back to Page 1 and start all over again.
Profile Image for Helen French.
499 reviews21 followers
March 20, 2025
Dissolution is a mind-bending science fiction thriller, largely told through interviews and flashback, that's ultimately about love and memory.

It begins with Maggie Webb, an elderly woman whose ailing husband Stanley is struggling with memory loss. She's trapped in a room with a man called Hassan, who gives her a drug to remember specific moments of her own life - and then her husband's memory's too.

Because it turns out that Stanley isn't suffering from Alzheimer's - but rather, someone has been removing his memories on purpose. We dive into flashbacks from the past, unveiling Stanley's youth, the friends he made, the experiments they started...

This is a fun, twisty SF thriller that I think Blake Crouch fans would enjoy. The flashbacks of Stanley's school days vs Maggie being forced to cooperate with Hassan are doled out in a way that keep you rapidly turning the pages to find out more. It's a complex plot, with lots of different threads to keep in mind at once, but that's half the fun of it. And there's a lovely romance that emerges as the story unfolds.

If I could wish for any changes, I struggled a bit with hearing about Stanley's super complex early life, then trying to understand he must've had quite a calm couple of decades - or did he? Maybe I need to reread!

Would certainly read this author again.
Profile Image for C.J. Dotson.
Author11 books112 followers
October 20, 2024
Dissolution by Nicholas Binge is a decades-spanning memory thriller with killer vibes that occasionally made me think of the video game Control (which if you know me at all, you know is high praise). This book has twists and turns that hit just right, at just the right times. The pacing and tension and intrigue and speculative elements are spot-on. This book would already absolutely shine, but two things make it brilliant. The first is how the plot is so tightly-woven; not one word feels misplaced, nothing is left hanging or unresolved, and this is all the more impressive for the plot's intricacy. The second is the characters, who are well-written and compelling and create an at times achingly tender heart for the thrilling story surrounding them. I highly recommend this book.
Profile Image for Tabatha (tab.talks.books).
362 reviews
April 18, 2025
* 3⭐️ 0🌶�
* Maggie wakes up in a capsule surrounded by water and realizes something strange had happened.
* Dual time lines go from present and past going back to the 1950s with dial POV. Very dark matter vibes with that type of thinking. Patel universes, mind hacking.
* Maggie’s husband has Alzheimer’s and is in a memory care unit in sunshine. A strange man comes to her house and starts questioning if she brought him there and goes into detail about how he thinks that Stanley doesn’t have Alzheimer’s but that sunshine is stealing his memories for some kind of crazy experimental trial.
* Mix of transcripts and Stanley’s POV throughout the years starting as a teen in boarding school in the 1950s with his friends raph and Jacques and the blind mad professor waldman
* There’s just a lot of jerking around. It kinda seems like the story is just repeating itself over in over in different ways. For a good reason
* People change their identity with time. You slowly start to piece together what’s happening. There’s a lot for gore in it than I was thinking.
* The ending was bittersweet.
Profile Image for Martin Maenza.
917 reviews20 followers
January 30, 2025
Riverhead Books, a division of Penguin Group, provided an early galley for review.

Like the last book I read, this one too has a split narrative (one part in present day, one part in the past). This one really works for me in that it is a clear back and forth between the two, with each feeding into the engaging mystery of the narrative. Binge creates a cloud of confusion that is not off-putting for the reader. There are the mysteries of what is happening with Stanely and why Hassan needs Maggie to revisit his memories of the past. The narrative technique serves the story well.

It is hard to say much more without spoiling the story. Suffice to say, Binge pulls it off extremely well. That moment when the reader realizes how all the pieces are aligning is just wonderful. If you're looking for a thrilling sci-fi tale with some great human touches, this is a book I will strongly recommend.
Profile Image for Elena.
28 reviews
April 14, 2025
I loved this book so much I want to SHOUT IT FROM THE ROOF TOP!!! I’m not typically a sci fi gal but came across this book on Aardvark and decide to switch things up for myself and give it a go.

I could not put this down! It was so entertaining from start to finish, so much going on, so well written!!! Sometimes I’m not sure what I’d rate a book until I finish it, but this one was 5 ⭐️ from the very first page, all the way through!

At one point I was nervous that the ending would be bad and would ruin the book for me. But the ending was more perfect than I could’ve even imagined. Would recommend to everyone I know!!!
Profile Image for Sarah Harney.
193 reviews30 followers
February 3, 2025
Thank you to NetGalley and Penguin Group Riverhead for an ARC of Dissolution.

WOW, this book was such a wild, mind-bending ride! Think Inception meets Dark Matter meets Good Will Hunting. This is a must read for Sci-Fi fans and I think it would make an absolutely amazing movie! I'll be turning this story over in my mind for a long time.

4.5 stars!
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