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Bats of the Republic: An Illuminated Novel (2015, Doubleday) 4 stars

Fun but confusing

4 stars

I really enjoyed reading Bats of the Republic, but it's a very disorienting book. The story is told entirely through in-world documents, which is important to remember as two of those document sets are narrative fiction in the world and only one of them is open about it. The story hinges around a vault of documents and copies in a post-apocalyptic future, and Zeke Thomas's hunt for a letter which illegally was never copied for a government record, and is interspersed with letters written by Zeke's ancestor Zadock on his journey to deliver that same letter. The past and future very nearly mirror each other the entire time, such as with Zadock's horse Raison D'etre which runs away and abandons him in the wilderness, and Zeke's friend Raisin Dextra who wants to run away from their city with Zeke. The future tracks Zadock through his letters, and the past tracks …