When Cara travels to a world where her doppelgänger has recently died, she starts to discover hidden secrets about her employer that put her life in jeopardy. This makes Cara, our main character, valuable to the Eldridge Institute, because she is dead in almost all of the worlds where humans can travel. The catch is, you can only travel between worlds (other universes) if the version of you in the other world is dead. And if you’re a person who is likely to die. The Space Between Worlds takes place on a futuristic, dystopian Earth where multiversal travel is possible if you work for the Eldridge Institute. (If anyone reading this hasn’t seen Everything Everywhere All At Once, you need to see it ASAP.) I feel like I’ve consumed a lot of multiverse-themed fiction in the past few months and I am here for it. This book was one of my book club’s choices this year, although I had already purchased it while it was on sale from the Kindle store, so I was excited when the club chose it as one of our monthly reads.
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