Official Review: 'Aeon' by Peter Donovan
- d0dridge
- Posts: 63
- Joined: 16 Mar 2013, 11:19
- Currently Reading: Ethics on the Ark
- Bookshelf Size: 7
- Reviewer Page: onlinebookclub.org/reviews/by-d0dridge.html
- Latest Review: "Aeon" by Peter Donovan
Official Review: 'Aeon' by Peter Donovan

Share This Review
The consequences of this shift in time are that Mac and everyone on board Mac’s yacht, Aeon, have to repeat the same year over again. This causes many problems in itself and is the focal point for a large part of the novel.
I really did enjoy reading Aeon and it was a very refreshing, original and refined take on time travel and the consequences. The novel focuses on a few main characters with brief interjections from some interesting ones. The plot and the way it develops is gripping and the few moments in the book when I started to get slightly concerned about the direction it was taking amounted to nothing as it took off again. Aeon is full of matter of fact twists and on occasions heart clenching moments. On reflection I am surprised at the amount of empathy I had for characters who did not feature prominently in the novel. The intensity and tension build up really subtly in the novel and it ends up being very gripping but not in an immediately obvious sense. I really like some of the deadpan humourous language used in the novel, a small example being; “He also desperately needed to empty the stinking rubbish bins in the kitchen. The main bin now had a colony of smaller satellite bins set around it and a pile of cardboard takeaway containers.
I think Aeon is an accessible novel and would appeal to many readers of different genres of fiction. There were points in the book where the science of time travel featured prominently but at the same time these were written by Donovan in quite an accessible way to the reader and I don’t think they would be an issue for many readers.
I downloaded the book initially for my laptop as a PDF with full intentions of transferring it to my kindle to read. I have never successfully really managed to properly engage with a book read on my laptop until this one. The book is futuristic but in subtle ways. In one instance the author refers to current pioneering technologies in a historic sense without going into too much detail.
A negative side to the book which I feel I must mention is the layout. It may be simply because I read the novel as a PDF file on my laptop, but there never seemed to be a really clear distinction between scenes. On a couple of occasions I was unsure whether I was meant to feel disorientated or the narrative had suddenly shifted. Again, it may have simply been because of the format I was reading the book in, but it was annoying to begin with.
I rate this book 4 out of 4 stars. I would certainly recommend this book as I found it very entertaining and thought provoking. It has certainly inspired me to read more of Peter Donovan’s novels and I hope anyone who reads it enjoys it as much as I did.
***
Buy "Aeon" on Amazon
Buy "Aeon" on Barnes and Noble