
Area X The Southern Reach Trilogy: Annihilation; Authority; Acceptance
Reviews

Intriguing and unsettling but ultimately undercooked. None of the novels that make up this trilogy would stand on its own—I’m surprised they were published separately to begin with—so you need to read all three, yet the story still feels somewhat incomplete.

Written in the aftermath of Deepwater Horizon catastrophic oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, this trilogy imagines a world where the inverse had happened: this time it was the nature that spilled out, and the humans, — much like those dying seagulls, covered in tar, unable to move, struggling to breathe, — are washed ashore, incapable of comprehending neither the cause, nor the reason behind their terrible fates, awaiting death, or something far worse — a transformation.

Extremely enjoyable series. I don’t really read horror much, but this was done really well and the premise just got me hooked. I had seen the Annihilation movie and was glad the book was such a different experience that makes use of the format immensely. It’s thought provoking, only sometimes “freaky”, and unlike anything I’ve read before. There’s a bunch of advantages to reading the three books in this format but I feel like it mostly actually hampers the reading experience that things are staggered directly and you don’t have to wait at all because books 2 and especially 3 retread group you’ve just read, which just makes it feel bloated. Otherwise I like the formatting a lot, actually. It’s a bit wider than most books and the person who did the layout did a great job. Most paragraphs don’t even carry on to the next spread. The artwork is cool and the spacing between books and chapters are cool. Glad I nabbed it, as I hadn’t read any of them previously.

The biologist character made me feel “seen” in a profound way, an experience that inspired me to get mental help! Its probably my hands down favorite book of all time. The other two are great as well.

I'm going to change my review. As I read it again I can't believe the flawlessness of the prose. The beauty and depth. Structure and horror like none other. Absolutely incredible. And the biologist is totally autistic.













