Review by Kirkus Book Review
After Cain is infected with the Nightmare Virus, he only has 22 days to find a cure and save humanity. Cain wanted to build dream worlds as a professional Draftsman, but then the Nightmare Virus arrived. It traps sleeping people in the nightmarish state Cain's older brother, Nole, called the Tunnel, adding one hour of sleep per day until, after 22 Sleeps, you never wake up. When Cain is infected after Nole's death, he fights his way through the Tunnel by sheer force of will and finds Tenebra, a dreamscape reminiscent of ancient Rome that's inhabited by other infected people. Cain makes a bargain with young Emperor Luc--save Luc's infected father (who's in a Life Support Pod that needs charging in the Real World), access the cure that's locked in his mind, and get an exorbitantly expensive LifeSuPod of his own. While Cain is asleep, he must earn his Tenebran citizenship by surviving the Arena and dangerous Spores who enter and exit the Nightmare at will. When he's awake, he faces the apocalypse. If he dies in one world, he also dies in the other. While this genre-bending work features an interesting premise, it's slow to start, the worldbuilding is muddled, and the ending may not satisfy readers who are unfamiliar with Christianity. The author's approach to dealing with mental health and emotional struggles is confusing, potentially communicating blame for sufferers. Most characters read white. May satisfy Christian fans of dystopian science fiction. (Christian science fiction. 13-18) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.