Petrik's Reviews > Recursion
Recursion
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Recursion has become the first sci-fi standalone to be included in my favorite shelves.
As many readers probably did, my first experience with reading Crouch’s work was for Dark Matter. I was super impressed by it and after hearing that the author has a new sci-fi thriller that’s highly recommended for readers who loved Dark Matter gave me so much joy; it would be insane for me to not take a look at Recursion. Do note that taking a look at Crouch’s novel can be surmised as reading the novel non-stop until completion. This book was undoubtedly exceptional; it was so good that it made Dark Matter—which I loved and rated 4.5/5 stars—felt like a practice novel so that Crouch has the skill to unleash the full capacity of his brain towards the creation of this cleverly crafted insanity.
Two central characters drive the plot. The first main character is Barry Sutton, a cop that’s investigating the mysterious phenomenon dubbed as False Memory Syndrome (FMS)—a phenomenon that drives its victims insane with false memories of a life they never lived. The other main character, Helena Smith, is a neuroscientist that understands the importance of memory; she decides to dedicate her life to create a technology that could preserve any moment of the recipient’s memories. This is pretty much all I can say regarding the general premise. Reviewing Crouch’s book is not an easy task; there’s a huge limitation on how much of the plot I can talk about unless I risk spoiling something and I don’t want that. To avoid spoilers, I will say this: Recursion is a sci-fi thriller about memories and how precious they are in defining humanity and their sense of identity. Imbued inside this resonating theme was an addictive story about love, loss, ambition, redemption, and life.
When I started this book, I knew I would be thoroughly engaged by it and Crouch exceeded my high expectations brilliantly. Crouch outstandingly proved that he’s super capable of writing a fast-paced story that doesn’t neglect crucial characterizations. Dark Matter was thought-provoking and this book held similar philosophical discussions about life and choices but honestly speaking, Recursion resonated more with me because I believe that Crouch has improved as an author; his prose was extremely well-polished and the characters were more fleshed out. I truly didn’t expect this novel to be this evocative and large-scale. There were moments where I felt genuinely sad, terrified, and heart-warmed by what the characters went through. The poignant thought-provoking passages made me reflect on life; the gradual increase in stakes and scope that eventually became more destructive and global as the story progressed fully stole my attention cover to cover. I’ve been having difficulties in my life, it’s almost as if this book appeared at the right timing to brighten my mood by teaching me how to think better moving forward; I’m truly grateful for it.
Recursion was relentlessly thrilling, unpredictable, and mind-blowing. Crouch’s narrative was utterly unputdownable, the harrowing events displayed were enormously impactful, and I absolutely loved every moment of reading this vivid magnificence. I can vouch with certainty that Recursion broke a new milestone for me by becoming the first sci-fi standalone to be included in my ‘favorites� shelves with a full 5/5 stars rating. Read this breathtaking novel as soon as you can. Trust me, you won’t regret it.
Sidenote:
I heard Recursion is currently being planned for TV series adaptation by Netflix and I'm so excited for it!
You can order the book from:
You can find and the rest of my reviews at
As many readers probably did, my first experience with reading Crouch’s work was for Dark Matter. I was super impressed by it and after hearing that the author has a new sci-fi thriller that’s highly recommended for readers who loved Dark Matter gave me so much joy; it would be insane for me to not take a look at Recursion. Do note that taking a look at Crouch’s novel can be surmised as reading the novel non-stop until completion. This book was undoubtedly exceptional; it was so good that it made Dark Matter—which I loved and rated 4.5/5 stars—felt like a practice novel so that Crouch has the skill to unleash the full capacity of his brain towards the creation of this cleverly crafted insanity.
Two central characters drive the plot. The first main character is Barry Sutton, a cop that’s investigating the mysterious phenomenon dubbed as False Memory Syndrome (FMS)—a phenomenon that drives its victims insane with false memories of a life they never lived. The other main character, Helena Smith, is a neuroscientist that understands the importance of memory; she decides to dedicate her life to create a technology that could preserve any moment of the recipient’s memories. This is pretty much all I can say regarding the general premise. Reviewing Crouch’s book is not an easy task; there’s a huge limitation on how much of the plot I can talk about unless I risk spoiling something and I don’t want that. To avoid spoilers, I will say this: Recursion is a sci-fi thriller about memories and how precious they are in defining humanity and their sense of identity. Imbued inside this resonating theme was an addictive story about love, loss, ambition, redemption, and life.
“Life is nothing how he expected it would be when he was young and living under the delusion that things could be controlled. Nothing can be controlled. Only endured.�
When I started this book, I knew I would be thoroughly engaged by it and Crouch exceeded my high expectations brilliantly. Crouch outstandingly proved that he’s super capable of writing a fast-paced story that doesn’t neglect crucial characterizations. Dark Matter was thought-provoking and this book held similar philosophical discussions about life and choices but honestly speaking, Recursion resonated more with me because I believe that Crouch has improved as an author; his prose was extremely well-polished and the characters were more fleshed out. I truly didn’t expect this novel to be this evocative and large-scale. There were moments where I felt genuinely sad, terrified, and heart-warmed by what the characters went through. The poignant thought-provoking passages made me reflect on life; the gradual increase in stakes and scope that eventually became more destructive and global as the story progressed fully stole my attention cover to cover. I’ve been having difficulties in my life, it’s almost as if this book appeared at the right timing to brighten my mood by teaching me how to think better moving forward; I’m truly grateful for it.
“Life with a cheat code isn’t life. Our existence isn’t something to be engineered or optimized for the avoidance of pain. That’s what it is to be human—the beauty and the pain, each meaningless without the other.�
Recursion was relentlessly thrilling, unpredictable, and mind-blowing. Crouch’s narrative was utterly unputdownable, the harrowing events displayed were enormously impactful, and I absolutely loved every moment of reading this vivid magnificence. I can vouch with certainty that Recursion broke a new milestone for me by becoming the first sci-fi standalone to be included in my ‘favorites� shelves with a full 5/5 stars rating. Read this breathtaking novel as soon as you can. Trust me, you won’t regret it.
Sidenote:
I heard Recursion is currently being planned for TV series adaptation by Netflix and I'm so excited for it!
You can order the book from:
You can find and the rest of my reviews at
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Quotes Petrik Liked

“He thinks how it will be winter soon, and then another year gone by and another one on the chopping block, time flowing faster and faster. Life is nothing how he expected it would be when he was young and living under the delusion that things could be controlled. Nothing can be controlled. Only endured.”
― Recursion
― Recursion

“There are so few things in our existence we can count on to give us the sense of permanence, of the ground beneath our feet. People fail us. Our bodies fail us. We fail ourselves. He's experienced all of that. But what do you cling to, moment to moment, if memories can simply change. What, then, is real? And if the answer is nothing, where does that leave us?”
― Recursion
― Recursion

“Life with a cheat code isn't life. Our existence isn't something to be engineered or optimized for the avoidance of pain. That's what it is to be human - the beauty and the pain, each meaningless without the other.”
― Recursion
― Recursion
Reading Progress
June 15, 2019
– Shelved
June 16, 2019
–
Started Reading
June 17, 2019
–
Finished Reading
Comments Showing 1-38 of 38 (38 new)
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Jun 18, 2019 04:05AM
I still haven't read any of his books, but now I'm interested! Great review as always. :)
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Thank you, Olga! This one was fantastic. Dark Matter and this is a must read imo! :)


You're welcome, David! I think this book will be a right fit for you, it's a fast read too; or feels like it. Give it a go! :)

Thank you, bro! Ohh, I'm looking forward to your thoughts on that duology! I've heard good things about it! :)

Thanks, Chris! Ahh unfortunately, I don't have many sci-fi books on my favorites shelf. Right now there's only Recursion, Dark Age by Cixin Liu, and Red Rising Saga by Pierce Brown. There are other hybrid SFF books like Robert Jackson Bennett's books, The Poison Song by Jen Williams, and The Stone Sky by N.K. Jemisin, but other than that... nothing else.
I enjoyed plenty of sci-fi books though, I just have to broaden my reading of the genre because the quantity of my fantasy reads overwhelm my sci-fi reads by far! xD

Thanks, Roxane! Happy reading and I hope you'll enjoy it as much as I did! :)


I've had the first book since Christmas. Was just waiting on the release of book 2 to get started. I have heard good things about it as well. I am really looking forward to this one. If I could just read a little faster. Lol! :)

Thank you, Hannah! Aaaa I can't wait to hear what you think about it. It was super good! :D

I've had the first book since Christmas. Was just waiting on the release of book 2 to get started. I have heard ..."
Hahaha niceee! Might as well wait when there's only one more book left for series's completion, I do that sometimes too! :p
Enjoy, bro!

Thank you, Ginger! It was so amazing, I didn't expect it to be this good! :O

I felt the same. I didn’t think this could be as good as Dark Matter. I was so wrong!

I felt the same. I didn’t think this could be as good as Dark Matter. I was so wrong!"
I know right!? This was even better than Dark Matter imo! :D



Yeah... it was ridiculously difficult to stop reading, especially when you're about halfway through! I hope you'll find this book to be even better than Dark Matter! :D

Thank you, Sara! I actually haven't read his Wayward Pines series. I might have to make time for it while I wait for whatever he writes next! :)

I hope you'll get to it soon, Alexis. It was awesome! :)

Thank you, Piya! I loved Dark Matter too, but this was even better imo! I hope you'll think the same about it! :)

I will! Thank you for letting me know about it! :)

Thank you, Nafeeza! Yeah, I've finished this a few days ago and it's still on my mind too! :)


Thanks, Wick! Too bad this one didn't work for you but we can't all love the same book! Hope your next read is better! :D

Glad you loved it, too! :D



It was super bonkers. I have to read more of his books tbh! :D

Thank you for the recommendations, AJ. I've read only Dark Matter and Recursion, and I loved them both! :)

I can totally understand that. Dark Matter seemed like a preparation to write Recursion now! :)