Review: InSomnus by Molly Fennig

Review: InSomnus by Molly Fennig

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Description (from Amazon.com)

The Red Queen meets science fiction in this “action-packed” novel packed with “wit” and “unexpected twists”.

Bryony “Bryn” Winters can harm people by dreaming. With no control over whom she hurts, a condition called Somnus, Bryn can’t even be sure she won’t kill her own family. Protecting them means running away and trusting a mysterious company that possesses as much authority as amorality. And when Bryn meets Cedar Blackthorne, a Somnus with captivating eyes, she can feel he’s hiding something. So why can’t Bryn help trusting him? And what if she’s making a deadly mistake?


3.5 Stars

My Thoughts

When I read anything with speculative fiction elements, I am constantly reminded that I need to suspend disbelief in order to move the story along. The best novels so entrap me in their world that this suspension is automatic. Then there are those novels where I struggle at times to suspend my disbelief, mostly because I cannot put myself in the protagonist’s shoes as much as I like.

InSomnus by Molly Fennig is a Young Adult science fiction novel that sort of fits in both categories. I found quickly that InSomnus was published when Fennig was just 17, which does explain the tone and the very clear presence of adolescent angst. Bryn Winters is a teen with a very serious problem: she suffers from a condition called Somnus which allows her to harm people while dreaming. This is a novel concept and one that is explained a little. Personally, I would have liked a little more explanation.

Fearing for the lives of those she loves, Bryn seeks to find answers. To do so means leaving her family to attend a convention which aims to bring together others of her kind. Those with Somnus are not limited to harming others. Some can change their appearance while others can influence a person’s decisions. One of the people Bryn meets along the way is a teen named Cedar, and from that meeting comes a mild romance which has its ups and downs (and ups again) throughout the novel.

InSomnus was slow to start, and while the inciting incident was clear, the rising action dragged on a bit at first. I was anxious to get to the convention, but I do understand and appreciate the need to show rather than tell Bryn’s love for her family and the angst she suffers making her decisions. While the first act could be tightened, once the novel moved into the second act, it never really let up. The action was quick, sometimes confusing, but definitely moved the story along to its (rather predictable) conclusion.

I refer back to the point I made in the second paragraph: Fennig was only 17 when InSomnus was published. Count me impressed. The writing can be poetic and a little wordy at times, but it is still good. There are some cringe-worthy elements that I would have rather done without, but overall the novel was an entertaining read. I fully expect her second novel, Starvation, to be much stronger and after that…more good things.

(A note: the rating here is 3.5 stars out of 5, but I round up when posting reviews on Amazon, Goodreads and elsewhere.)

Available at Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01K57CTKQ/


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