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Genre: Dystopian Fiction, Political Satire, Thriller
Ratings: ⭐⭐⭐⭐☆ (4.5/5 - for its chilling and insightful premise)
Book Review:
''The Fat Years'' is a brilliant, unsettling, and all-too-plausible dystopian novel set in a near-future Beijing. The central conceit is as ingenious as it is terrifying: an entire month has been erased from official history and public memory, and the populace, basking in newfound prosperity and stability, couldn't care less.
The story follows a small group of friends who notice the gap and embark on a dangerous quest for the truth. What they uncover is a shocking conspiracy that uses enforced collective amnesia as a tool of social control. This novel is a sharp and courageous satire, directly critiquing the Chinese government's historical revisionism and the passive compliance of a society sedated by material comfort.
As noted by critics, the book is ''creepy'' and frightening precisely because it feels so close to reality. It's a bracing, smart, and utterly absorbing read that serves as both a gripping thriller and a profound commentary on power, memory, and the price of stability. A triumph of modern political fiction.