The Delusions by Jenni Fagan review – an afterlife of queues and bureaucracy
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<p>A witty metaphysical satire about what happens when the processes that help souls pass on begin to fail</p><p>Jenni Fagan’s satirical fifth novel, The Delusions, opens with an epigraph from the Kurt Vonnegut-inspired science fiction curiosity Venus on the Half-Shell by Philip José Farmer. “The universe is a big place, perhaps the biggest.” The afterthought leaks back into the original statement, underpinning and undermining everything.</p><p>Infinity and
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<p>A witty metaphysical satire about what happens when the processes that help souls pass on begin to fail</p><p>Jenni Fagan’s satirical fifth novel, The Delusions, opens with an epigraph from the Kurt Vonnegut-inspired science fiction curiosity Venus on the Half-Shell by Philip José Farmer. “The universe is a big place, perhaps the biggest.” The afterthought leaks back into the original statement, underpinning and undermining everything.</p><p>Infinity and
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