This was great fun to read, and dealt with some really interesting subjects. I got slightly side tracked trying to make sense of the time travel (like, is it consistent). To be honest - it is a really unique take on the paradox problem. It did a great job of hinting at a wider fuller world around the story too. I found the ending a bit "neat" given the whole book had been around the complexities of real life.
It was good enough, but not one I would recommend. The books backdrop - a changing Iran - provided an interesting setting for the book. The two lead characters had lots of depth, and there were a couple of unexpectedly emotional bits that felt very real. Ironically, it was the technology - normally the most interesting aspect of Egan's books - that was lacking. The premise was "side loading" a specific humans behaviour into a template of a human brain. It was interesting to see this intermediate technology explored (i.e. on the way to, but not yet at, uploading human consciousness into a computer - a frequent occurrence in Egan's books). However, the story wanders around before simply stopping without really saying very much about it.
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