THE SUN CASTS NO SHADOW

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Wellington Thorneycroft makes his money from stealing, mostly pickpocketing. Many others survive in the enigmatic City by becoming Factory workers. But Thorneycroft is a loner who frequently partakes of alcohol and Ambrosia (a variety of psychoactive pills). One day, he’s taken aback by a strange woman he encounters whose voice he hears in his head: “We’ll escape together.” His friend Dempsey suggests the woman is a nymph called Lilith, one of the compassionate beings whose apparent expulsion from the City coincided with the construction of the Wall. When Felix, the thuggish individual who runs the City, later offers Thorneycroft a job, Lilith’s voice tells him to take it. The gig is nothing new to Thorneycroft, since it involves burglary, until Lilith directs him to a blueprint. He has to hide it from Felix, who quickly discovers he’s stashing it. The blueprint may hold the key to escaping outside the Wall, as scaling it is evidently impossible. With help from Lilith, Thorneycroft undertakes the perilous task of infiltrating the Factory, where the City’s exit ostensibly resides. Richardson coats his short, engaging novel in a gleefully dense atmosphere. Thorneycroft, for example, is periodically in a hazy state, either Ambrosia-induced or involving dreams that sometimes seem more real than not. Likewise, the bleak story is deliberately vague, including the mysterious past event known as the Transformation and Lilith’s evasive responses to Thorneycroft’s questions. But the author gives the City a strong pulse, particularly in the vivid descriptions of its relentless heat: “The room had no windows or air conditioning or even a fan. The air was heavy and hellishly hot, so hot it burned my throat to breathe it.” The indelible ending, despite the resolution, is open to interpretation.



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THE SUN CASTS NO SHADOW THE SUN CASTS NO SHADOW Reviewed by CTS Store on May 31, 2020 Rating: 5

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