Doppelgängers, corporate intrigue, heartbreak, betrayal, and the harsh permanence of the border: Sublimation is a debut for fans of Severance that asks what you'd sacrifice for a different life.
'Do you think it’s emotionally equivalent to murder?' So begins Sublimation, the remarkable debut novel by Isabel J. Kim ... Kim performs this high-wire act with preternatural storytelling skill ... The lush intricacy of this imagined world is not matched by Kim’s everyman characters ... Even so, Sublimation finds resonance in the poignant differences between its Korean and American instances.
A tantalizing novel about immigration, desire, regret, and our struggle to know ourselves ... Kim’s ability to track her world building into ancient times and modern politics, the emotional rawness of the characters and their many-faceted flaws and choices, and Soyoung/Rose’s quest to untangle herself from herself, all make for deeply compelling sf.
Has a fascinating premise but a frustrating execution and dispiriting conclusion ... It is, rather daringly, written in the second person. Reading it, you sometimes wish it weren’t ... Sublimation is among the most-anticipated speculative fiction novels of the year, due to Kim’s success in writing short fiction. The book has its touching moments, and Kim is a talented writer, but a disquieting cynicism underpins it ... Kim’s narration exposes modern anxieties—how we are obsessed with how other people perceive us and our own satisfaction. This fictional world, despite its entirely different way of creating new people, looks almost exactly like ours.