Premium Content:

Bibliophile: The Erasure Initiative is a thrilling ride

The Erasure Initiative
by Lili Wilkinson
Allen & Unwin

- Advertisement -

Day 1 and Cecily wakes up in a driverless bus. She knows that is her name as she has a nametag, but she doesn’t remember anything else about herself. Out of the window there is ocean to one side and tropical jungle to the other but she doesn’t even remember getting on the bus. When Cecily tries to access her memories, there’s only fog. She knows she can talk and read and what the capital of Bolivia is but she doesn’t know how she knows.

As the tyres continue to rumble on the bitumen, she looks around to find that there are six other people in the bus. There’s a middle-aged woman, an older woman who is sleeping and brown-skinned teenage girl with a shaved head. There’s also a shy Asian teenage boy with glasses, a hot guy with a chiseled jaw and a guy with short red hair and neck tattoos. Everyone is wearing the same t-shirt, but some are red and some are blue.

While trying to work out what is happening, the bus load of strangers are faced with the first in a series of psychological and ethical tests from computer screens on the back of the seats in front of them. “You are in a moving vehicle. Before you the road forks. Ahead, there are five pedestrians. On the side road there is one pedestrian. You can press a button and the bus will turn off onto the side road. The bus will not stop. Do you press the button?”

Each of the passengers must choose an outcome and the questions become more complicated over the next few days. Some information is found about the passengers as they try to piece together their past lives and work out who are the goodies and who are the baddies. There is edge-of-your-seat tension as the choices become ultra-real with the passengers standing on the road for the test … or so it seems.

With wristbands that not only tell the time but heat up if a participant tries to escape or refuses to cooperate, everyone is trapped and given only basic food and water. It is a mega-thrilling ride and not everyone will survive the experiment to find out if when episodic memory is erased, you can you become a different person.

Lezly Herbert


Love OUTinPerth Campaign

Help support the publication of OUTinPerth by contributing to our
GoFundMe campaign.

Latest

Dean Misdale brings ‘Dragged Through The Desert’ to Fringe World

The show promises to bring glitz, glamour, and a whole lot of heart to Fringe World Festival 2026.

Co3 will collaborate with The New Zealand Dance Company to stage ‘Gloria’

Its a rare chance to see an acclaimed work from one of New Zealand's most acclaimed dance talents.

Barry Manilow shares he’s been diagnosed with lung cancer

The musician says the cancer has been detected early and he expects to make a full recovery.

The Year in Review | May 2025

Continuing a journey through the big news stories of 2025, we reach May - the month that had the most posts of the year.

Newsletter

Don't miss

Dean Misdale brings ‘Dragged Through The Desert’ to Fringe World

The show promises to bring glitz, glamour, and a whole lot of heart to Fringe World Festival 2026.

Co3 will collaborate with The New Zealand Dance Company to stage ‘Gloria’

Its a rare chance to see an acclaimed work from one of New Zealand's most acclaimed dance talents.

Barry Manilow shares he’s been diagnosed with lung cancer

The musician says the cancer has been detected early and he expects to make a full recovery.

The Year in Review | May 2025

Continuing a journey through the big news stories of 2025, we reach May - the month that had the most posts of the year.

On This Gay Day | In 2013 the Queen pardoned Alan Turing

Turing is credited with being the father of theoretical computer science and artificial intelligence.

Dean Misdale brings ‘Dragged Through The Desert’ to Fringe World

The show promises to bring glitz, glamour, and a whole lot of heart to Fringe World Festival 2026.

Co3 will collaborate with The New Zealand Dance Company to stage ‘Gloria’

Its a rare chance to see an acclaimed work from one of New Zealand's most acclaimed dance talents.

Barry Manilow shares he’s been diagnosed with lung cancer

The musician says the cancer has been detected early and he expects to make a full recovery.