Friday Face Off : “You can’t choose between life and death when we’re dealing with what is in between.”
19 July 2019
Filed under Book Reviews
Tags: Books by Proxy, Friday Face off, The Gone World, Tom Sweterlitsch, White Noise

Here we are again with the Friday Face Off meme created by Books by Proxy . This is a great opportunity to feature some of your favourite book covers. The rules are fairly simple each week, following a predetermined theme (list below) choose a book, compare a couple of the different covers available for that particular book and choose your favourite. Future week’s themes are liste d below – the list has been updated to help out those of you who like to plan ahead – if you have a cover in mind that you’re really wanting to share then feel free to leave a comment about a future suggested theme. I’ve also listed events that take place during the year, that I’m aware of, so you can link up your covers – if you’re aware of any events that you think I should include then give me a shout. This week’s theme:
“You can’t choose between life and death when we’re dealing with what is in between.” – A cover that is grainy or looks like ‘white noise’
I quite enjoyed this week’s theme – probably because it wasn’t quite as tough as I’d imagined. I was thinking a ghost style story would have worked well for this or maybe something sci-fi – or a horror book like the Ring? I’ve gone for The Gone World by Tom Sweterlitsch – it was actually the book I had in mind in particular for this theme but I didn’t know if there’d be any variety in covers so I was quite happily surprised to find 8 or 9 choices. Here they are:
The first cover was the one I read and the cover that gave me the idea for ‘white noise’. I find myself drawn to the two covers below which really couldn’t be further apart in terms of design:
Difficult to choose between these but I quite like the solitary figure walking away:

Like last week I’ve added a Mr Linky here so that you can leave a link if you wish or please leave me a link in the comments so we can all visit and check out each others covers. Thanks
I’ve updated the list and included themes through to the end of 2019 – I’ve also included events that I’m aware of so that you can perhaps link your themes up where possible (if you know of an event you’d like to share that let me know in the comments). I also have a list prepared for 2020 and so will set up a separate page soon for forthcoming themes. As always, if you wish to submit an idea then leave me a comment.
Next week – A cover that is Upside Down
Future themes: (if you’re struggling with any of these themes then use a ‘freebie’ or one of your favourite covers)
2019
26th July – “Ludo ….. down” – A cover that is Upside Down
2nd August – “There are children here somewhere. I can smell them.” A cover featuring children
9th August – “I’m disinclined to acquiesce to your request.” – A cover featuring Pirates
16th August – “The haft of the arrow had been feathered with one of the eagles own plumes” – a cover featuring feathers
23rd August – A cover that is a movie tie in
30th August – “I wandered lonely as a cloud” – a cover that is predominantly yellow
6th September “Warm September brings the fruit” – a cover that is seasonal for Autumn/Fall
13th September – Friday the 13th – unlucky for some! A cover with ‘curse’ in the title
20th September – “Your hair is winter fire,January embers.” – A cover featuring hair
27th September – Freebie
4th October – “Feed me Seymour” – A cover that is 60s horror
11th October – ““And, though there should be a world of difference between the smile of a man and the bared fangs of a wolf, with Joss Merlyn they were one and the same.” – a cover featuring an Inn
18th October – “It’s your favorite scary movie, remember? He had on the white mask, he stalked the babysitters.” – A cover featuring a scream
25th October – for Halloween – pick any scary cover you like
(I’m hoping that November will once again bring to us SciFiMonth – Twitter @SciFiMonth)
1st November – A cover that is predominantly grey
8th November – “big badda boom” – a cover that features an explosion
15th November – “No thinking thing should be another thing’s property, to be turned on and off when it is convenient.” – a cover featuring a robot
22nd November – A cover that is Futuristic
29th November – “When a day that you happen to know is Wednesday starts off by sounding like Sunday, there is something seriously wrong somewhere.” – a cover that is 60s sci fi
6th December – Now is the winter of our discontent, Made glorious summer by this sun of York” – a cover that puts you in mind of winter
13th December – A cover that features a temple/or religious icon
20th December – Longest Night – a dark and foreboding cover
27th December – the festive season – a cover that is glittery or sparkling
(2020 – January is Vintage SciFi month so I’ll be including possible themes to take that on board.
The Gone World by Tom Sweterlitsch
Hailed as Inception meets True Detective Tom Sweterlitsch’s Gone World is a dark and fairly brutal thriller with a modern day setting where sci fi has made the impossible possible.
This is a clever read indeed and one that definitely needs clear focus and attention in order to stay on top of the many plot twists. To be honest, I’m not entirely sure that I understood all of the elements at play here and yet in spite of that I found this a completely compelling read. For me, I’d say this has a feel of Interstellar in terms of the mind bending elements, Twelve Monkeys in terms of the bleak kind of atmosphere and even a bit of Event Horizon although I only use those comparisons very loosely and to try to give you an idea of the feel of the book. I feel like this is a book that I could read at least a couple more times and still continue to find new elements.
Imagine a future where time travel is possible and is used sometimes to help solve the unsolvable. Using space travel and navigating deep time this is a world where such a thing has become possible. Of course this ability is kept top secret and falls within the powers of a covert division known as the Naval Criminal Investigative Service (NCIS). Using the current year as a base operatives can move forward into time. Of course, this is only one possible future, as soon as the operative returns the information they return with could change the direction of that ‘possible future’ and it would simply blink out of existence. At the same time the NCIS have become aware of a cataclysmic event that could end the world. Known as the Terminus the only thing the NCIS are absolutely clear on is that the date at which this event takes place seems to be jumping ever closer and they’re desperate to uncover the nature of the threat in order to try and prevent it.
In terms of the plot. As the story begins a family has been brutally murdered. The father, believed to be a Navy SEAL, and his daughter are missing. The NCIS are called in to assist and the detective, Shannon Moss, soon uncovers that the missing SEAL was in fact an astronaut on board a spaceship believed to be lost in deep time. Of course she isn’t at liberty to share this information with law enforcement officers, but, desperate to try and locate the missing daughter before it’s too late Shannon takes the decision to travel into the future to see if any clues can help with the search.
Shannon is the main character and she’s a wonderfully strong lead. She cares about people, she’s tough and persistent. Basically the life she’s chosen here isn’t easy and it certainly isn’t for everyone. Her forays into the future means she has no real possibility of putting down roots or having a family in her current existence. It all sounds a bit complex but it isn’t really. Basically, Shannon’s current time line is 1997 (I think), if she travels forward to 2040, for example, the travel alone will take months, she then may spend months in that possible future trying to uncover evidence and develop possible leads. When she returns to her current lifeline of 1997 although everyone back in that time will be exactly as she left them she will have aged. It’s a fascinating idea and one that means in her current timeline Shannon is actually nearly the same age as her own mother. Of course, as soon as she travels forward there’s always the possibility that something could happen to her and she might never return. To everyone in her current timeline she would simply have disappeared. Anyway, I digress. Put bluntly, Shannon is an excellent protagonist to follow. She is of course surrounded by many interesting characters but it’s difficult to talk about them too much as they may behave differently depending on the possible future that we see them in. Layers, twists, world within worlds and conundrums. On top of this there are echoes – which, frankly, I’m not even going in to because there are far better minds than mine out there that can probably explain them better and this review feels like it’s becoming far too convoluted as it is.
Basically, to cut to the chase. I found this intriguing and compelling. It’s a really clever read and even though I might not have completely grasped everything I’m still thinking about it even now and having little light bulb moments (which make me want to pick up the book again). This to me is a winning element to any book – the ability to make you keep returning to think about things and mull them over. I might come up with something that I think is a glitch but when I reason it out I realise that it isn’t – although it usually then sets me off thinking about something else, and so on, etc, etc.
In terms of criticisms. The ending felt a little rushed. That could just be me rushing to conclude things though and it’s difficult to put my finger on but there was just something about it that felt too abrupt. I can’t say it changed the way I felt about the book though.
Of course the paradox of time travel isn’t for everyone and I can understand why but for me this book really won me over. It’s raw and edgy, the murder investigation is deftly combined with the futuristic elements of the story and the main protagonist brings a certain something to the read that makes it more palatable. She’s just so very human, she gets into hideous situations and by the end of the book I felt exhausted on her behalf. A round of applause for the author for managing to keep all these threads from becoming a tangled mess.
I received a copy, through Edleweiss, courtesy of the publisher, for which my thanks. The above is my own opinion.




