The Recordings is a bold endeavor, boasting a complex cast with alternating perspectives and a tough-minded approach to topics like childhood trauma and suicide, all wrapped in a compelling narrative that blends romance, mystery, and even tech thriller—Zona makes clever use of H.D., the digital assistant whose apparent mis-hearing of a drunk command yields a jolting piece of evidence that both upsets and inspires Joseph and leads to unforeseen consequences. That thread opens the novel up to explore rich thematic material, such as questions over who has the right to retell stories of crimes. Zona’s emotive, often shorthanded storytelling brings exciting life to scenes and moments of connection or danger, though it feels most assured in the novel’s first half, before the thriller elements push the characters into an escalating chain of complex scenarios, some that strain credulity or feature over-the-top violence.
The character work and prose are both strong, and Zona is committed to capturing not just suspense but a rich sense of this cast’s lives without slowing down the narrative momentum. Zona brings welcome authenticity and forward-thinking views to his largely LGBTQ+ cast that refreshes, though a few stereotypes-played-as-jokes may divide some readers. A passionate heart drives The Recordings, and readers of thriller fiction powered by convincing, complicated people will find Zona an author to watch.
Takeaway: Twisting, surprising, emotional thriller debut, with touches of tense romance.
Comparable Titles: Christopher Murphy’s The Other Side of the Mirror, Tal Bauer’s The Grave Between Us, Eva Robinson’s Influenced.
Production grades
Cover: A-
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A-
Marketing copy: A-