The Sudden Appearance of Hope Audiobook By Claire North cover art

The Sudden Appearance of Hope

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The Sudden Appearance of Hope

By: Claire North
Narrated by: Gillian Burke
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About this listen

The World Fantasy Award-winning thriller about a girl no one can remember, from the acclaimed author of The First Fifteen Lives of Harry August and 84K.

My name is Hope Arden, and you won't know who I am. But we've met before—a thousand times.

It started when I was 16 years old. A father forgetting to drive me to school. A mother setting the table for three, not four. A friend who looks at me and sees a stranger.

No matter what I do, the words I say, the crimes I commit, you will never remember who I am.

That makes my life difficult. It also makes me dangerous.

The Sudden Appearance of Hope is a riveting and heartbreaking exploration of identity and existence, about a forgotten girl whose story will stay with you forever.

©2016 Claire North (P)2016 Hachette Audio
Adventure Fiction Genre Fiction Literary Fiction Psychological Science Fiction Suspense Thriller & Suspense Heartfelt

Critic reviews

"[Narrator] Gillian Burke's performance is unforgettable. It's smooth, polished, and oh so graceful.... Burke's performance is as addictive as the story itself." (AudioFile)

"Beautifully written, with a protagonist who is both tragic and heroic, the novel is remarkably powerful and deeply memorable, the latest in a string of terrific books from this newly emerged star in the genre-blending universe."—Booklist (starred review)

"The experience of sitting with it, sinking into it, aching along with Hope as her loneliness shapes and breaks her, was wonderful, painful and moving."—NPR

What listeners say about The Sudden Appearance of Hope

Highly rated for:

Fascinating Concept Intriguing Storyline Excellent Narration Complex Protagonist Compelling Plot Lovely Voice
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  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
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    2 out of 5 stars

Struggled to get through this

This book lashed in the beginning bit then started to get more interesting. And then lagged, and lagged, and... finally around Ch 70I didn't care about what happened anymore. I raced to the end, and was not rewarded. Better luck next time!

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  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
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    2 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

great story but not my favorite author.

The extemporaneous details get tiresome, boring, and hault what could be a great narrative. Maybe there was something lost between reading a physical book and the audiobook, but much of the time I found myself zoning out or skipping ahead to something interesting and meaningful to the story. The themes on lonliness never seemed to really strike me and the main character was cold and bitter and struggling with lonliness and isolation, but I never seemed to care. was that the point? Maybe I need a book club.....

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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Perfection

A perfect exemplification of the human concept of perfection vs being who you are. Hope is Perfect.

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

Can be a bit slow

4 out of 5 stars for story pacing. 5 out of 5 stars for creativity. I keep expecting Claire North's new books to capture me the way her first Harry August book did. While a new and creative idea is offered here, it was only a good story and not one that I will continue to treasure like the above named book.

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4 people found this helpful

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    5 out of 5 stars
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quie brilliant

i see a mumber of negative reviews. i would disagree quite strongly....this is most excellent.
i say no more

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1 person found this helpful

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    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

Genius, but I feel like I've read it before

I love the author. I devour all the books from her that I read. Love her writing and the way she tells story.
I just feel it follows the same story structure from The First Fifteen Lives of Harry August. It's almost the same journey, the same pitfalls and the same thrills.
I couldn't predict exactly what would happen next, but I could definitely predict what I would feel next every time something was about to happen, as I read so much of her books before.
I still would really recommend the reading.

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    3 out of 5 stars
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    2 out of 5 stars

Disappointing

I was excited to start this book after having just read The First Fifteen Lives Of Harry August. Let me first say, the narrator did a good job ... the reading required many accents and she preformed them well. Sadly, that is where the praise stops. Unfortunately as a whole, I found this book very disappointing. I do understand where the author was going with the plot and the message behind it but I found the repetitive nature of the content and the gratuitous use of the word "F*#k" eye roll worthy. I did manage to struggle through each chapter, in hopes of an ending that would be redeeming in some way ... It was not.

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

A Philosophical Novel Wrapped in a Good Story

Any additional comments?

Hope Arden has inside-out-amnesia. That is, while she can remember the world, the world forgets her. Her photographs remain, and she can leave a trace in documents and on the internet. But, if you have an interaction with her, you’ll forget her and your actions alongside her.

On the one hand, it gives her what one character insistently describes as the ultimate freedom, the endless capacity to reinvent herself. Without a past, without the capacity to leave a mark on the world around her, she can do things the rest of us could never imagine. She is, for instance, a superb thief. She can pick up an item in plain view, duck behind a corner for a few seconds, and walk back again, forgotten and unsuspected. She also proves to be an unparalleled investigator, someone who can interrogate a particular witness, get a piece of the story, and then come back a minute later to start the interrogation again using those new bits to leverage out harder to find ones.

More broadly, though, Hope experiences her condition as a curse. It hurts when her own parents forget her, at first selling her things because they don’t recognize them as hers and later losing all sense that they had a second child. And she has no capacity to fall in love, to form friendships, or to live in community. She is a constant newcomer, someone who, having no past as far as the world is concerned, effectively has no future. She is a perpetual observer rather than someone who is fully alive.

That premise is provocative in its own right, and “Claire North” (apparently it’s a pseudonym) is a gifted enough writer to sense what she has. Claire’s condition becomes a stepping-off point for reflecting on what it means to be human. Who are we if we cannot leave a lasting mark on the world around us? To what degree are we, or should we, be shaped by group and social pressures?

It takes a while for the central conflict to become fully clear – North is very skilled, here and in the even a little better The First Fifteen Lives of Harry August, and she shows her hand slowly – but Hope is both attracted to and horrified by a Scientology-like app call Perfection. The app works by encouraging consumers to make “healthy choices” – like eating well, working out, buying flattering clothes, and being seen with other out-to-be-perfect people – and it rewards its top-tier participants with “programming,” eventually revealed to be surgery that alters their personality.

The result of such engineering is a cadre of bland movie-star types, people whom the world seems to value but who appear to Hope (and to a couple other key characters) as soul-less. They have, in other words, forgotten their true selves in favor of the marketed, packaged identity of corporate America.

And there you have the central conflict of the novel: at one extreme a woman incapable of experiencing community and its pressures and, at the other, a process that amplifies a false sense of community over all other types of identity.

This is, in other words, a philosophical novel disguised as sci-fi/fantasy. Or maybe that’s what sci-fi/fantasy should always aspire to. It’s just rarely this good.

Further complicating the scenario here, Hope is a Black woman of Muslim descent. She is, after Ralph Ellison (who shows us how the Black man is, in some crucial ways, invisible in white America), or Stan Lee and Jack Kirby (who give us the Fantastic Four’s Invisible girl), or even a host of very contemporary political voices who insist that all Muslims are subsumed under the identity of their faith, just the type to be made invisible. As a consequence, North is after something not just philosophical but topical as well.

All those conflicts get subsumed within a story that is still a pretty good story. I’ve said enough already without getting into the other characters who, while not remembering Hope, do come to understand that she exists and develop relationships with her by leaving themselves notes about their interactions. Those characters develop different feelings about the nature of her invisibility and the potential for Perfection to perfect or destroy the world. And they work at cross purposes to safeguard or sabotage the app.

I do think this one could have worked just as well if it were a good shot shorter, but North writes so well that it’s hardly a complaint. I’m happy to be lost in her work and her worlds. She has the capacity, like no one else I can think of at this scale, to change one fundamental premise of human identity and then to measure the implications of that change with unwavering insight. I am very much looking forward to whatever she does next. She writes novels that ought to be written.

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    4 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

Gripping Plot- Fantastic Narration

I read this for book club. It's not something I would have normally picked but I quite enjoyed it. I found myself binging it and finishing a week early somehow. The narration is wonderful and really helps you get lost in the book.

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This is a wonderful, touching story, narrated well

Would you recommend this audiobook to a friend? If so, why?

I have already recommended it to friends, because Claire North writes beautifully and Gillian Burke is the perfect narrator for Hope.

What did you like best about this story?

I enjoyed the central conceit greatly, and the explorations and explanations for Hope's justification of her actions.

Which scene was your favorite?

I quite enjoyed the scene where Hope and Luca speak and argue in the cafe.

Was there a moment in the book that particularly moved you?

Hope's explanations of how she gets through life with her affliction towards the end of the book are thought-provoking and poignant.

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