Mem (Paperback)
June 2018 Indie Next List
“Adding fictional scientific breakthroughs to a glittering era of history is a setup for a great plot, but it takes an artist’s hand to carry it beyond its initial gimmick. Bethany C. Morrow’s examination of memory, desire, and what makes us human flourishes in its alternative historical setting. Her writing is as well-paced as her plot, in which the Mems develop beyond their creator’s intentions and the most evolved of them suffers at our least-evolved hands. Morrow’s novel has a beauty to it that underlines its critical depth and heart-racing conclusion.”
— Hannah Oliver Depp, WORD, Brooklyn, NY
Summer 2019 Reading Group Indie Next List
“Step into this alternate history where technology is created to remove unwanted memories and place them in vessels—that happen to look just like you! These ‘Mems’ are human snapshots, usually limited to existing inside the memory that created them. However, this story follows a Mem that is different. Although she never ages or physically changes, she retains identity, learns, grows, and develops relationships. This leads to the exploration of concepts of life, individuality, freedom, and civil rights. What makes us...us? Why is this memory different, and what did its loss cost the original owner?”
— Megan Irland, The River's End Bookstore, Oswego, NY
Staff Reviews
A remarkable achievement, elegantly and efficiently brought to life. The question is, how much of who and what we are depends on our memories, and to what degree? Bethany Morrow responds by positing the ability to "extract" a memory, manifesting it as a copy of the person, a living embodiment of the memory. Dolores #1, however, is unique---a Mem who becomes fully individualized, in possession of her own life. She becomes celebrated and then endangered because, being a Mem, she remains property, belonging to the woman from whom she was originally extracted. Morrow grapples with the moral, ethical, and legal questions implicit in such a circumstance, and the parallels to chattel bondage, while giving us a portrait of a remarkable character. Highly recommended.
— From Mark