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Elysium by Jennifer Marie Brissett
Elysium by Jennifer Marie Brissett













Elysium by Jennifer Marie Brissett

Now she is the author of ELYSIUM (Aqueduct Press) which won the Philip K. Brissett deftly handles the challenge of a multitude of characters all being the same people in a multitude of places that are the same place, while exploring complicated questions about identity. Review: Elysium by Jennifer Marie Brissett BreeReadsBooks 1.63K subscribers Subscribe 11 Share Save 205 views 7 years ago Oh, man, what a trip. Jennifer Marie Brissett once owned an indie bookstore in Brooklyn. This work impressed enough readers that it was nominated for the Philip K. Brissett’s punch of a debut is bewildering at first, but never so confusing as to frustrate the reader, and repeating elements and symbols help tie everything together-not neatly, for so much of the world is broken, but enough. December 2014s Elysium, Or, the World After is Jennifer Marie Brissetts debut novel. Gradually the protagonist comes to understand what’s happening and step into the role of savior for the mysterious Elysium. As the fragments of story grow larger and more complex, Adrianne/Adrian continues changing, but Earth remains the same dark place, haunted by an event that alters or kills most of the population. But sooner or later, Antoine/Antoinette is always lost.

Elysium by Jennifer Marie Brissett Elysium by Jennifer Marie Brissett

The one love in her/his life is Antoine/Antoinette, who appears in a variety of roles such as lover, sibling, and friend. Adrianne/Adrian moves back and forth through recent time, switching sexes and situations-always with the same people, albeit in different roles-with each life interrupted and restarted by a mysterious computer code that he/she is occasionally vaguely aware of.















Elysium by Jennifer Marie Brissett