Frisson: the word used to describe the moment the hair on the back of
your neck stands up when you are struck by a climax of beauty in art.
Intentional Dissonance is a book purely profound in every
way that with every page inflicts its own frisson. Not only does the post-apocalypse
piece of art make you consider the power of words, from frisson to saudade, but
also makes you consider your life as a whole. With a profoundly empty world,
where bottled emotions are taken like drugs and antique shops hold the ruins of
the statue of liberty, the story follows Jon as he tries to survive in the
microcosm of a world that has barely survived.
‘You have read this all before and you will read it again’
reads The End which opens the book, starting the loop of central character Jon’s
life. The story then tumbles from first person into third, due to Jon’s
preference to refer to himself in the third person, he explains to us, and then
begins to explain what happens when he ‘falls’.
The world in which Jon has lived in for the past ten years
has not treated him kindly, leaving him addicted to a drug called sadness despite
it being illegal, as the government instead taints the water supply with the
opposite, happiness, in order for every member of society to be forcefully induced
with it. But through the story, Jon is left to save or destroy what little of
the free world is left as it is besieged by its own governors.
However, the storyline is not what makes Intentional
Dissonance special. While reading it you must pay attention to details as the
novel explores the very concept of human emotion and survival. It can be a
difficult read, at times confusing, and without paying utmost attention it can
simply be accused of being, in extreme cases, unenjoyable. However, if you
particularly enjoy the poetics of words and what it is to be human, and are
willing to face what could even be called a literary challenge, then this book could
be excellent for you.
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