Elaine Ionello was a climber, a coder, and GW Canyon's most trusted friend. Then a bike courier hit her in a crosswalk, and when she woke up, something had shifted. Her mother noticed. Her neurologist noticed. Tali noticed.
GW did not notice.
Starfish is the novel where the series' central architecture becomes visible-a network of influence operating through neurological conversion technology, and a woman whose traumatic brain injury may be the only thing standing between its expansion and everything the Canyons have built. Elaine is the series' most complex figure: flawed, brilliant, partially reprogrammed, and more heroic for all of it. Her moral compass survives every rewrite. Barely.
Part psychological thriller, part conspiracy novel, and entirely a story about what women know that the men around them don't, Starfish is the series' turning point-where the stakes become clear and the women who carry the actual intelligence of the story step fully into the foreground.
For readers of Tana French's Dublin Murder Squad and Sally Rooney's careful, devastating character work-a series where the women have been paying attention from the beginning.
Book 4 of the GW Canyon Journey series. Stands alone. The series rewards deeply in order.