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{{infoboxinfobox1
|title=The Shifting Pools
|sort=Shifting Pools
|isbn= 978-1785630361
|website= https://www.zoeduncan.co.uk/
|videocover=1785630369|aznuk=1785630369|amazonukaznus=<amazonuk>1785630369</amazonuk>
}}
Perhaps the most overused phrase in fiction publishing is ''life-affirming'', closely followed by ''human condition''. The Shifting Pools takes this to a whole new level. Its blurb boasts that it is ''charged throughout with the beautiful urgency of life'', whatever that means. It isn't. And that's the problem. This isn't a bad book, but it sets itself up to fail. A cardinal rule of writing is ''focus on the small stuff''. If you set out to write a ''life affirming'' novel that answers all the ''big questions'', you'll struggle. And it is this trap that Zoe Duncan falls into. In her quest for profundity she loses her way.