The Things We Learn When We’re Dead is about how small decisions can have profound and unintended consequences, but how we can sometimes get a second chance.
On the way home from a dinner party, Lorna Love steps into the path of an oncoming car. When she wakes up she is in what appears to be a hospital – but a hospital in which her nurse looks like a young Sean Connery, she is served wine for supper, and everyone avoids her questions.
It soon transpires that she is in Heaven, or on HVN, because HVN is a lost, dysfunctional spaceship, and God the aging hippy captain. She seems to be there by accident… or does God have a higher purpose after all?
Despite that, The Things We Learn When We’re Dead is neither sci-fi nor fantasy. It is a book about memory and how, if we could remember things slightly differently, would we also be changed?
In HVN, Lorna can at first remember nothing. But as her memories return – some good, some bad – she realises that she has decisions to make and that, maybe, she can find a way back home.
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Lorna Love has died and gone to heaven… or rather HVN, a spaceship infested with hamsters (do not feed them, ever) among the stars. The Things We Learn When We’re Dead is a unique and refreshing fast-paced, character-driven book that is about life, memory, and perception.
This is mostly a book about Lorna’s life; HVN and the cast of characters she meets on that spaceship are secondary to the story. The Things We Learn When We’re Dead is a fast-paced, character-driven novel. The story is told by an omniscient narrator in two perspectives:
‘The present,’ referring to the dead Lorna in heaven storyline
‘Flashbacks’ (or memories) of Lorna’s life and loved ones
The narrator alternates between these two perspectives often and the flashbacks are presented in a non-linear fashion and the perspectives switched without warning. At times I did struggle to follow the timeline as I generally prefer linear storytelling. While the jumps in time were always separated by asterisks, there isn’t an indication of what time period (or if it is a memory at all). This was only a minor annoyance, though, because Laidlaw masterfully manages to have distinct voices depending on the time period — memories from Lorna’s childhood are told in a way that reads from that perspective, whereas the writing structure and language choices when she is older is different. The overall voice is consistent, but this nuanced way of noting the shift in time-frame was elegant and the way I was able to easily orient myself once I got acquainted with the writing style.
“Many are taken, few are chosen.”
After Lorna dies she wakes up to find herself in heaven… or rather, HVN — an alien spaceship that has been essentially stranded near Earth for centuries after experiencing technical difficulties. Lorna finds out that she was regenerated on HVN after death and her memories were uploaded to the new body, only she doesn’t remember much… yet.
“She’d been told that she was a temporal anomaly: dead in one place, alive in another. But Lorna didn’t feel dead. She didn’t feel devastated by her death, because she could no longer believe she had died. Equally, she didn’t feel elated by continued life either. It was as if she had become two people, with different consciousnesses in different places; the real and nonsensical place in which she existed couldn’t be death…”
The character development for Lorna’s family and friends is done slowly through the non-sequential flashbacks as she regains her memory. Every single character felt real, they were relatable and multi-faceted. I cared for every single one of them.
“In Lorna’s experience, her mother’s barbecue sausages never turned brown, the way she sometimes saw on films or in adverts. One minute they were raw, the next cremated. There was no halfway stage at which burger or sausage could safely be eaten. They always came with a layer of charcoal.”
We also learn a lot about Lorna through her regaining her memory… her moral code, her defensiveness at being thought stupid, wanting to appear knowledgeable and assured. Her idealism and wanting to make the world a better place. These traits reveal themselves as the layers of the onion of her personality are peeled back and I can relate to her so much. Lorna is a character that I believed her choices and actions — as a matter of fact, I can say that about all of the characters; none were one dimensional.
I do wish that it had been clearer that the flashbacks were part of the overall HVN narrative; I think I realized that maybe what was intended around 130 or so pages in but it wasn’t confirmed until page 196.
Photo credit: Reader Voracious Blog (2013)
While a lot of care is spent describing HVN and its inhabitants in the ‘present’, I did find the ‘worldbuilding’ during the flashbacks for Scotland a bit lacking. Edinburgh is a stunning city and there are such vast architectural differences between the Royal Mile area overlooking the castle and New Town; it is a shame that it wasn’t expanded on a bit but that may just be my bias because I spent 4 weeks in Edinburgh during the summer of 2013. Page 205 mentions The Last Drop Pub, located in the Grassmarket, and I legit started laughing because I ate there a few times during my stay. As the book mentions, it is a historic pub where people used to be brought for their last drop of alcohol prior to their last drop (execution by hanging). Here’s a photo of the pub because why not.
When I read a book I am usually afflicted with Synopsis Amnesia: I don’t remember what the back cover said and I can truly read the book unspoiled. Sure, I read the synopses when I first decide to haul/TBR a book… it is just that for the most part by the time I pick it up I don’t remember the details and prefer it that way. About midway through the book, for no logical explanation, I began trying to piece everything together based on the synopsis. Playing detective, searching for clues. And I think that may have been a bit to my detriment as it pulled me out of the fast-paced, interesting and engaging narrative.
I highly recommend this book. It isn’t science fiction, not really. It is a compelling and well-written story about life, memory, and perception. The ending is open for interpretation, and I have my own theories but mum’s the word as this blog is spoiler-free! Also if anyone figures out more about the hamsters please let me know.
Many thanks to Charlie Laidlaw for sending me a free copy of his book in exchange for my honest review.
Ah, I definitely was expecting 5his to be more science fiction. But I am still completely sold on it. I love this concept. Also, I tend to forget the synopsis as well when I enter stories! I thought I was the only one and blamed my lack of short term memory at time haha 😉 Wonderful review.
Yea I was expecting more sci-fi but I was not at all disappointed by what I received!!! And I am so glad I am not the only person that tends to forget the synopsis… and this is an instance where not forgetting made me a bit antsy and pulled me out of the story. Thanks as always for the love!
I got this book on my list and you just made me intrigued!
I only spent 3 days in Edinburgh and it was cold and miserable, but would want to visit again. I’m curious if i’ll recognize any place!
I cannot wait to see what you think of it once you read it, Norrie!
You probably will! Just mentioning New Town or Castle Rock brought the imagery and memories to me. It was a fun, added bonus! you definitely should go back, it is lovely when not cold and rainy. When I was there it was a freaking heat wave and it didn’t rain for like 3-4 weeks and it was incredibly hot (so hot that there weren’t midges in the highlands!). I hope you get a happy medium if you go back weather-wise. 🙂
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Ah, I definitely was expecting 5his to be more science fiction. But I am still completely sold on it. I love this concept. Also, I tend to forget the synopsis as well when I enter stories! I thought I was the only one and blamed my lack of short term memory at time haha 😉 Wonderful review.
Yea I was expecting more sci-fi but I was not at all disappointed by what I received!!! And I am so glad I am not the only person that tends to forget the synopsis… and this is an instance where not forgetting made me a bit antsy and pulled me out of the story. Thanks as always for the love!
💕 I kind of enjoy forgetting the synopsis. It is like going in blind, which can be fun!
Yea I definitely prefer it myself, hehe!
I got this book on my list and you just made me intrigued!
I only spent 3 days in Edinburgh and it was cold and miserable, but would want to visit again. I’m curious if i’ll recognize any place!
I cannot wait to see what you think of it once you read it, Norrie!
You probably will! Just mentioning New Town or Castle Rock brought the imagery and memories to me. It was a fun, added bonus! you definitely should go back, it is lovely when not cold and rainy. When I was there it was a freaking heat wave and it didn’t rain for like 3-4 weeks and it was incredibly hot (so hot that there weren’t midges in the highlands!). I hope you get a happy medium if you go back weather-wise. 🙂
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