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reviewed Acceptance by Jeff VanderMeer (Southern Reach, #3)

Jeff VanderMeer: Acceptance (Paperback, 2014, Macmillan) 4 stars

From the publisher---

It is winter in Area X, the mysterious wilderness that has defied …

Review of 'Acceptance' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

This is a Weird, wonderful trilogy. It's disorienting, varied in style, confusing, unsettling, somewhat infuriating... and yet...

This is the last book in the Southern Reach Trilogy, the last chance Mr. Vandermeer has to expound the mysteries of Area X, its origins, its mysteries. So how does he fare? Do we, the readers, get the answers we crave? Or is it a disappointing trip to Purgatory?

Well, Area X is not Purgatory anyway. But neither are the answers easy. Or, rather, accessible. Or meaningful.

Sounds like a harsh criticism, right? What am I trying to pull, giving a book four stars that does not clarify the mysteries? It's some ol' bait and switch!

As I have explained in my "review" of Annihilation (the first book, now at a bookstore near you!) this trilogy is of the Weird genre, specifically partaking of the "cosmic horror", the idea that there are forces beyond our understanding affecting our world without concern for us, the most sapien of the homos!

And there in lies the quandary: the force, even recognized, is beyond our comprehension. If we can fully identify its purposes, why it does what it does, it is much closer to us and less alien...making it a very crummy cosmic horror.

And that is what Acceptance does, it does identify the force (and events) behind the creation of Area X, but not its desires or purpose...because neither it nor the characters can. And it is the dealing with such a force that makes ultimately for intriguing reading, where you can not plan for or strategically combat it. Anything you do find out is ultimately worthless and can not be used to combat whatever is antagonizing you.

So what would you do? What can you do? Can you still function? Would you become a gibbering nutcase? That is what this trilogy deals with... in part... there are certainly other themes, but that would be for a book club to discuss and not for a humble review such as this one.