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Alone with you in the Ether by Olivie Blake – Blog Tour Book Review

About the Book
From the instant #1 Sunday Times bestselling author of The Atlas Six comes a story about the nature of love, what it means to be unwell, and how to face the fractures of yourself and still love as if you’re not broken. A must for fans of Sally Rooney and Gabrielle Zevin.
Chicago, sometime. Two people meet in the armoury of the Art Institute by chance. Prior to their encounter, he is a doctoral student who manages his destructive thoughts with compulsive calculations about time travel; she is a bipolar counterfeit artist undergoing court-ordered psychotherapy. After their meeting, those things do not change.
Everything else, however, is slightly different.
Both obsessive, eccentric personalities, Aldo Damiani and Charlotte Regan struggle to be without each other from the moment they meet. The truth – that he is a clinically depressed, anti-social theoretician and she is a manipulative liar with a history of self-sabotage – means the deeper they fall in love, the more troubling their reliance on each other becomes.
About the Author
Olivie Blake, the pseudonym of Alexene Farol Follmoitj, is a lover and writer of stories. She has penned several indie SFF projects, including the webtoon Clara and the Devil with illustrator Little Chmura and the BookTok viral Atlas series. As Alexene, she has written the young adult rom-com My Mechanical Romance. She lives in Los Angeles with her husband, new baby and rescue pit bull. Find her at olivieblake.com.
What I Thought
Olivie Blake knows how to write complex and flawed characters and this book focuses in the main on our two protagonists, Regan and Aldo, and she does an excellent job of embedding us inside their heads. Not always the most fun places to be.
I wonder if that may be why the POV is more omniscient. For me it put distance between us and them, almost like we were gods on Mount Olympus watching the mortals below. However, maybe being purely in their heads would have been too much. In fact the earlier sections include random character narrators – this gives an interesting ‘relationship in the eyes of observers’ vibe.
There is a recurring motif of bees and hexagons and the book is consequently presented in six parts (with an additional hypothesis). I have to admit to finding the earlier three parts easier to read. I think the will they won’t they part of their relationship was the most engaging to me. In part four, although I assumed we were still talking about Aldo and Regan, they didn’t get named for much of it – increasing the distance for the reader especially because of how part three ended and the feeling of missing out on part of the journey. It also focused on sex – a lot.
In the latter parts the focus on Regan’s mental health becomes more intense and there is an author note about this in the acknowledgments which I do think it’s important to read (about medication use). I think the mania that the character is feeling is perhaps reflected in the choppy tangental way the story is told.
I’d wondered if there was going to be more on the time travel aspect so maybe a slight sci-fi or magical realism element, but, like Aldo’s calculations, that stays firmly in the theoretical. I really enjoyed all of the mathematical discussions and their early conversations was so true to how neurodivergent people braindump to connect. I loved it. Regan’s relationship with art is complex and how that developed alongside her relationship with Aldo did demonstrate how at times we do need others to see the potential in us. He was her muse if you like, unlocking what he already knew to be true.
This book is complex for me to review because I think it does what it sets out to really well – exploring how two people that society would consider broken connect. It’s complexity is in how healthy or unhealthy that relationship is – and the fact that both are true is truer to life than we usually see in fiction.
I do think it would make a marvellously romantically complex film in the vein of Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind or Silver Linings Playbook and so if you are in the mood for either of those in book form I’d definitely pick this up. It’s much quieter and less plot heavy than The Atlas books though so do be prepared for a change of pace.
The writing is exquisite and there are some wonderfully described phrases and moments. I would say that to me the book reads more on the literary end.
Thanks to Black Crow PR and the publisher for the gifted copy for the purposes of an honest review. Do check out the rest of the tour to see what everyone else thought too.

The Atlas Paradox by Olivie Blake – Blog Tour Book Review and #ShowUsYourShelves
The second book in the dark academia Atlas trilogy is out now. Check out my review of book one – The Atlas Six – and do share your Dark Academia shelves with us online using #ShowUsYourShelves. Here’s mine.

About the Book

Six magicians were offered the opportunity of a lifetime. Five are now members of the Society. And two paths lie before them.
In this thrilling next instalment, the secret society of Alexandrians is unmasked. Its newest recruits realise the institute is capable of raw, world-changing power. It’s also headed by a man with plans to change life as we know it – and these are already under way. But the cost of the knowledge is as high as the price of power, and each initiate must choose what faction to follow. Yet as events gather momentum and dangers multiply, which of their alliances will hold? Can friendships hold true and are enemies quite what they seem?
About the Author
Olivie Blake, the pseudonym of Alexene Farol Follmoitj, is a lover and writer of stories. She has penned several indie SFF projects, including the webtoon Clara and the Devil with illustrator Little Chmura and the BookTok viral Atlas series. As Alexene, she has written the young adult rom-com My Mechanical Romance. She lives in Los Angeles with her husband, new baby and rescue pit bull. Find her at olivieblake.com.

What I Thought
One of the taglines for The Atlas Six was – Six are chosen only five will walk away. The blurb for the Atlas Paradox reminds us that only five are now members of the Alexandrian Society. I am going to try and keep this review spoiler free for both books so I’m not going to name who made it, or perhaps more vitally who didn’t and why.
One of the things I will say is that one of my favourite side characters from book one gets a more starring role in this one which was a very pleasant surprise. Although I’d have been happy with more POV chapters from them please.
One of the good things about the first book was that immediately we got a sense of how the Society fits within the wider magical world and how the two interact and this of course continues in this book.
The academic discussions continue and build up a picture of possibility that I’m hoping will come to fruition in the final book. In book one the topics taught very much lent into the plot but I do think we get a bit more future set up information here.
The relationships between the characters continue to be complex and this is very much an adult book in tone and nuance. I also continue to enjoy the lighter moments of humour amongst all the planing and plotting.
It’s interesting to see how – as the characters develop their magic – they generally develop. The saying that power corrupts absolutely is definitely on display here with all characters walking that fine morality line – which way will they turn and what will that mean for the rest of humanity? If you don’t like your characters messy and flawed then this may not be the book for you.
I found it highly readable because of the characters although it does touch on complex themes and discussions which sometimes take a slower read through to grasp – especially wherever time is concerned.
The Atlas trilogy is very much a social commentary on how power and knowledge is used and propagated wrapped up in a fantastical world.
We now also have a title for book 3 – The Atlas Complex. I will definitely be picking it up to see how this all turns out. Check out the rest of the blog tour to see what everyone else thought about The Atlas Paradox. Thanks to U.K. Tor/Panmacmillan and Black Crow PR for the gifted copy for the purposes of an honest review.

The Atlas Six by Olivie Blake – Blog Tour Book Review


About the Book
Secrets. Betrayal. Seduction.
Welcome to the Alexandrian Society.
When the world’s best magicians are offered an extraordinary opportunity, saying yes is easy. Each could join the secretive Alexandrian Society, whose custodians guard lost knowledge from ancient civilizations.
Their members enjoy a lifetime of power and prestige. Yet each decade, only six practitioners are invited – to fill five places.
Contenders Libby Rhodes and Nico de Varona are inseparable enemies, cosmologists who can control matter with their minds. Parisa Kamali is a telepath, who sees the mind’s deepest secrets. Reina Mori is a naturalist who can perceive and understand the flow of life itself. And Callum Nova is an empath, who can manipulate the desires of others. Finally there’s Tristan Caine, whose powers mystify even himself.
Following recruitment by the mysterious Atlas Blakely, they travel to the Society’s London headquarters. Here, each must study and innovate within esoteric subject areas. And if they can prove themselves, over the course of a year, they’ll survive. Most of them.

About the Author
Olivie Blake, is a lover and writer of stories, and is the pen name of Alexene Farol Follmuth. Many of her stories involve the fantastic, the paranormal, or the supernatural, but not always. More often, her works revolve around the collective experience, what it means to be human (or not), and the endlessly interesting complexities of life and love.
Alexene tripped and fell into writing after abandoning her long-premeditated track for Optimum Life Achievement while attending law school, and now focuses primarily on the craft and occasional headache of creating fiction.
What I Thought
This book appears to be very much a marmite book but that’s often the case with books that have been hyped and when people go in with pre-conceptions about what it should be like.
I try and go into everything I read with an open mind and all I really knew about this one was that it was Dark Academia, which having loved Nevernight and A Deadly Education, I knew I was here for.
First up, it’s important to know that this is a multipoint of view book. All of the characters are so intriguing that I think it is necessary to get into each of their minds to unpick what is going on but I know that not everyone is a fan of switching heads so often. The cast of characters is diverse so there’s bound to be one who’s sections you want to skip forward to – but don’t.
Second, the book starts a little slowly. This is an adult title, and I’m currently doing a writing course for children and young people where the focus is very much on letting the reader know up front what is going on. Here we get introduced to each character in turn along with the mysterious Atlas but they, like us do not yet appreciate what we are getting in for.

I showed a friend the back of the book and they said the stakes weren’t high enough if five of the six get to walk away, but if you like more than one character the stakes even then are plenty high enough imho.
The magic in this is dynamic, and political and definitely has the potential to be manipulated.
In fact much manipulation and double crossing happens and who doesn’t love that in their fiction?
As you might expect with a story about knowledge it does get cerebral at times (and the tiny font in the ARC didn’t help my Long Covid brain). I love books that challenge me and make me think but the timing has to be right. That’s why I restarted this book a few times because I knew it was a story that would be more demanding for me as a reader, I was definitely intrigued from the first line’s of Libby’s section (just after the prologue). Demanding does not mean unenjoyable it just means be prepared to brain.
To help with some fun to get you in the mood here’s some artwork of our six.

Illustration by @LittleChmura
And a quiz to find out which character you are most like. Supposedly I’m Parisa!


The Atlas Six is out now and the sequel The Atlas Paradox is out in October 2022.
Use the hashtag to follow the blog tour and check out the tour events coming up in April too. Thanks to Jamie and Stephen at Black Crow and the publisher for the gifted ARC. All opinions are mine.






