Echohead by T. C. Waas

The first chapter of Echohead had me frozen—not with suspense, but with sheer confusion. It felt like the author was using fifty words when six might have done the trick—but for the life of me, I couldn’t figure out what those six words would have been. It was dense, poetic, and puzzling.

Then I hit Chapter Two. Something shifted. The pieces began to fall into place—slowly, deliberately—and a story started to emerge around Ivy, our main character. I found myself leaning into the rhythm, appreciating the unique prose and the almost meditative pace. This isn’t a sprint—it’s a slow stroll through language and layered meaning.

And then… bam. The middle of the book hit like a brick wall and spun everything in a completely different direction. A full 180. I won’t spoil it for you because, honestly, it’s something best discovered as you read.

If you like your fiction a little challenging, a little mysterious, and a whole lot different, Echohead might be your next read. Just give it time—and trust that the confusion might just be part of the plan.

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Book Summary

Ivy Q. can read your mind—she can live your entire life, in fact. And normally she would add your memories to her stash like any addict stealing a fix. But right now she’s distracted. A little obsessed with someone… Set in Houston, Texas, Echohead is the story of a mind-reader obsessed with a televangelist, and her attempt, against her own better judgement, to uncover the preacher’s innermost secrets. This is a novel about life, music, and belief in the bayou city.

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