Fourteen years after the monumental publication of the international bestseller The Raw Shark Texts, Maxwell's Demon heralds the triumphant return of Granta Best Young British Novelist Steven Hall.
Thomas Quinn is having a hard time. A failed novelist, he's stuck writing short stories and audio scripts for other people's characters. His wife, Imogen, is working on a remote island halfway around the world, and talking to her over the webcam isn't the same. The bills are piling up, the dirty dishes are stacking in the sink, and the whole world seems to be hurtling towards entropic collapse. Then he gets a voicemail from his father, who has been dead for seven years.
Thomas's relationship with Stanley Quinn--a world-famous writer and erstwhile absent father--was always shaky, not least because Stanley always seemed to prefer his enigmatic assistant and protégé Andrew Black to his own son. Yet after Black published his first book, Cupid's Engine, which went on to sell over a million copies, he disappeared completely. Now strange things are happening to Thomas, and he can't help but wonder if Black is tugging at the seams of his world behind the scenes.
Absurdly brilliant, wildly entertaining, and utterly mind-bending, Maxwell's Demon triumphantly excavates the ways we construct meaning in a world where chaotic collapse looms closer every day.
Show moreFourteen years after the monumental publication of the international bestseller The Raw Shark Texts, Maxwell's Demon heralds the triumphant return of Granta Best Young British Novelist Steven Hall.
Thomas Quinn is having a hard time. A failed novelist, he's stuck writing short stories and audio scripts for other people's characters. His wife, Imogen, is working on a remote island halfway around the world, and talking to her over the webcam isn't the same. The bills are piling up, the dirty dishes are stacking in the sink, and the whole world seems to be hurtling towards entropic collapse. Then he gets a voicemail from his father, who has been dead for seven years.
Thomas's relationship with Stanley Quinn--a world-famous writer and erstwhile absent father--was always shaky, not least because Stanley always seemed to prefer his enigmatic assistant and protégé Andrew Black to his own son. Yet after Black published his first book, Cupid's Engine, which went on to sell over a million copies, he disappeared completely. Now strange things are happening to Thomas, and he can't help but wonder if Black is tugging at the seams of his world behind the scenes.
Absurdly brilliant, wildly entertaining, and utterly mind-bending, Maxwell's Demon triumphantly excavates the ways we construct meaning in a world where chaotic collapse looms closer every day.
Show moreSteven Hall (@stevenhallbooks) is the author of The Raw Shark Texts, which won the Somerset Maugham Award and was shortlisted for the Arthur C. Clarke Award. It was an international bestseller and has been translated into over thirty languages. In 2013, Hall was named as one of Granta's Best of Young British Novelists. Maxwell's Demon is his long-anticipated second novel.
Praise for Maxwell's Demon: Named a Most Anticipated Book by the
Guardian "A wonderfully imaginative, splendidly baroque novel that
is a combination of the baffling, teasing, and tantalizing. Part
fantasy, part mystery, it is altogether delightful and filled with
surprises--in a word, exceptional. No, make that two words; the
second is fantastic. A rare, sui generis treat." --Booklist
(starred review) "[A] phantasmagoric novel with shades of Stephen
King's The Dark Half . . . There's really nothing like this
book--long contemplations of philosophy, personality, religion, and
history are all woven into something of a mystery in which no one
is truly reliable. With influences that recall Fight Club and
Motherless Brooklyn, Hall manages to put a whole world on the page
that shifts and changes as weirdly and wildly as the ones in the
novel's fictional books. The modern novel's version of a Möbius
strip, written with verve and a vast appreciation for the power of
language." --Kirkus Reviews "Ingeniously plotted and compulsively
well-paced, a blend of detective story and science fiction with an
epistemology course thrown in." --Sunday Times "A postmodern
mystery . . . Ingenious fun . . . Showily postmodern, full of odd
typographical elements, altered realities and intertextual jokes .
. . Maxwell's Demon is consistently fun and often impressive."
--Guardian, "Book of the Day" "An entropic and sprawling mystery .
. . Mind-twisting . . . Introspective and philosophical, the novel
explores the dangers that occur when fatalistic urges take over."
--New Statesman "Written in the first person and paced like a
thriller, there's an intimacy and immediacy that quickly grips, and
even the long digressions on theory--a trademark of the form--are
enjoyable to read." --Spectator "It's Raymond Chandler meets Dan
Brown meets Albert Einstein. Meets Christopher Nolan. Meets Jorge
Luis Borges. It's a mind-expanding page-turning adventure-mystery
that crackles with intelligence and intrigue; a book about books
(sort of) that's been beautifully rendered in book form." --Foyles
"A postmodern literary thriller about a difficult second novel . .
. Anyone who has a taste for postmodern hijinks--fans of Thomas
Pynchon or Mark Z. Danielewski's House of Leaves--will be drawn to
the menace and profusion, the game-like brilliance and black
hilarity of Maxwell's Demon." --Australian "A Pynchonesque,
footnote- and theory-heavy mystery novel that's as postmodern as
they come, and--or but, depending on the reader--it's superb . . .
The novel's abiding theme is the joy of reading--always a risky
ground for authors to tread. After all, your own book has to be
completely lovable--which, thankfully, Maxwell's Demon is."
--Telegraph "Moves at an exhilarating lick, as befits its pop
culture propensities, but with highbrow sensibilities, its concerns
including the Kabbalah, whether the world is made of words, the
origins of the alphabet, the mythopoetic nature of the hero's
journey and what angels look like . . . The genius of the book is
that despite it seeming like an elegant orrery, all these wheels
within wheels are a carapace, a psychic armor against a grief (and
it's not the grief you were expecting). Beneath this truly
beautiful astrolabe is a beating human heart." --Scotsman "With
Maxwell's Demon, Steven Hall has created a kaleidoscopic,
disconcerting God game in which reality itself is thrown into deep
shape-shifting shade. In an era of 'alternative truths'--when what
we believe to be authentic is often just another spurious story;
when chaos and order, fiction and entropy are quicksand
underfoot--this novel couldn't be more timely. Like David Mitchell,
Mark Z. Danielewski, and the Christopher Nolan of Inception, Hall
has created his own unique world in which readers take a journey as
mercurial and unexpected as life itself. Maxwell's Demon is a
radiant and unique achievement." --Bradford Morrow, author of The
Forger's Daughter "Labyrinthine, mind-twisting and deliciously
diabolical, yet also unexpectedly warm-hearted. Maxwell's Demon is
fantastic." --Christopher Brookmyre, author of The Last Hack
"Dazzlingly clever, wickedly playful, devastatingly poignant."
--M.R. Carey, author of The Girl with All the Gifts "A cracking
detective story that seems to be investigating its own existence."
--Jeff Noon "Anyone who enjoyed The Raw Shark Texts will be
delighted." --Toby Litt
Praise for The Raw Shark Texts: "In Hall's buoyant fantasy, which
reads as if it were concocted by a team of media-savvy
undergraduates flinging together chunks of Alice in Wonderland and
The Hunting of the Snark, Jaws, The Matrix, Memento, Harry Potter,
Haruki Murakami, Paul Auster, and Stephen King, as well as Carl
Jung, triumphant . . . Rendered with the precise attentiveness to
psychological states of mind worthy of a hyperventilating James
Joyce . . . The Raw Shark Texts is that most good-hearted of dark
fantasies: one in which cranky old cats at sea in tiny dinghies
will make it safely to shore, whatever the fate of their masters."
--Joyce Carol Oates, New York Review of Books "Wonderfully
ambitious, even exuberantly so. At times, it seems as if Hall must
have written it while hopping up and down with excitement, like a
6-year-old recounting his first trip to the circus. Paced like a
thriller, the book thinks like a French theorist and reads like a
deluge. The end result is a fun, quirky, very British love story .
. . Herman Melville meets Michael Crichton, or Thomas Pynchon meets
Douglas Adams. No matter, the book is full of big, wild ideas
brought to gloriously convoluted fruition . . . An engrossing,
delirious and perfectly wacky book." --San Francisco Chronicle
"Jaws by way of Jung." --New York Times Book Review "The star of
Steven Hall's rousingly inventive The Raw Shark Texts is its
villain--always a good sign in a thriller . . . [Hall's] real
achievement is to create a bizarre and sinister world where
language and ideas exist like a stream of nutrients, spawning
predators and parasites . . . It's all a lot of fun, yet there is
also a surprising emotional resonance . . . Best of all, there is
the shark itself, wily and relentless, with its chilling eye and
gaping maw, hungry for memory." --Washington Post "The Raw Shark
Texts is so much more than a clever, playful book, though it is
both those things. Steven Hall has worked hard to build on the work
of his intellectual ancestors . . . Paul Auster, Philip K. Dick,
Haruki Murakami, Steve Erickson, Ursula K. Le Guin--to say nothing
of Beckett and Borges and Kafka . . . His writing, description as
well as dialogue, is sharp and clear, which is extremely important
when you are writing on the edge of the form." --Los Angeles Times
"Hyperactively playful . . . An astute reader will find dozens of
playful allusions in The Raw Shark Texts to the work of Paul Auster
and Haruki Murakami, borrowed textual devices from Jonathan Safran
Foer and Mark Z. Danielewski, intellectual gags based on the work
of Italo Calvino and a giant shark that comes right out of the work
of Peter Benchley." --Newsday "The Raw Shark Texts manages to reach
the loftiest goal of speculative fiction: making its outlandish
situations illuminate real human emotion . . . A metaphysical book
such as this easily could have become dense and inaccessible, but
Hall's unrelenting focus on visual storytelling keeps it lucid . .
. Fully succeeds in exploring the tenuous hold we have on our sense
of self." --USA Today "What is summer without some sharks? The Raw
Shark Texts is an elliptical tale of lost memory and concomitant
mystery . . . Amazingly complex, The Raw Shark Texts is part Mary
Shelley, part Sigmund Freud, part thriller, part Hegelian dialectic
and totally engaging." --Baltimore Sun "The Raw Shark Texts is the
latest in unforgettable fiction . . . Sanderson's cat-and-mouse
search for the shark unveils a hidden world--solid, real, and
vividly imagined by Hall . . . Hall pulls it all off with such élan
and good humor (and the most charmingly irreverent disregard for
coherent plotting since the early work of Jonathan Lethem) that
ultimately you're charmed to have climbed into his conceptual shark
cage." --Playboy (3 stars) "It's rare to finish a book and
know--know beyond s shadow of a doubt--that you'll think about that
one for a while . . . Steven Hall is the author of 2007 . . . The
Raw Shark Texts is the most original and fascinating, if
bewildering, book you are likely to read this year." --Tampa
Tribune "Imagine Jaws as a literary mash-up eating its way through
the contemporary information explosion. Now, imagine this creature
has developed a taste for you and only you. Hall pushes the
boundaries of fiction and design in this unique first novel."
--Seattle Post-Intelligencer "Told with poetic accuracy . . . This
book is going to be a huge success; the movie is already optioned
and the computer game can't be far behind. Wait for these versions,
however, and you deprive yourself of its sheer verbal pleasure . .
. Hall . . . write[s] so vividly that you can imagine ideas
themselves coming alive . . . Finishing the story makes you wonder
if the whole thing, the book and your reading of it, was a dream
(and fiercely hoping it wasn't)." --Minneapolis Star Tribune "The
Raw Shark Texts is a compelling, thought-provoking, page-turning
read. Like Stephen King and other writers who detour through the
supernatural, Mr. Hall spins a pliant, devilishly tactile prose
style." --Dallas Morning News
"If your local bookstore has a Hip-Lit section, Steven Hall's first
novel is top-shelf . . . Place it among Hip-Lit favorites by David
Mitchell and Haruki Murakami . . . A fluid, fast-paced thriller . .
. The narrative is brisk, with rough edges that have the action
passages erupting in sweat and strained muscles. 'Raw' in the book
means different species of texts that give the story its sense of
immediacy." --Oregonian "His work is wild, his work is wicked, and
his work is unlike any other work you have ever read . . . Dubbed
slipstream by the pulp literati, Hall's oeuvre encompasses all the
sci-fi, fantasy, horror, mystery, and realism that the tag
suggests, and then twists the lot of 'em into a whole new further .
. . There really are no precedents for what Hall has pulled off . .
. Hall catches where catch too often can't, and in the doing he's
digging a deep that's as blue as it is menacing." --Miami Sun Post
"If Paul Auster and Haruki Murakami collaborated on Moby-Dick
crossed with The Wizard of Oz, they might produce something like
Hall's deliriously ambitious debut . . . Riveting . . . A narrative
feat of hallucinatory imagination." --Kirkus Reviews (starred
review) "What can you say about a first novel that's been sold to
32 countries, was pushed by authors as diverse as Mark Z.
Danielewski and Chuck Palahniuk, and received front-page coverage
in the New York Times business section? Hall is such a hit that the
publisher won't even reveal what he's up to next." --Library
Journal "A psychological thriller with shades of Memento and The
Matrix and the fiction of Mark Danielewski; page-turning, playful
and chilling by turns." --Guardian "The book justifies the hype . .
. An innovative, postmodern, metafictional novel . . . The most
original reading experience of the year . . . A literary novel
that's more out there than most science fiction . . . Genuinely
isn't like anything you have ever read before, and could be as big
an inspiration to the next generation of writers as Auster and
Murakami have been to Hall." --Independent "An avant-garde thriller
in which these devil-fish of the unconscious somehow escape the
symbolic realm, or rather, we join them on their side of the border
. . . The Raw Shark Texts unfolds not in sleek cyberspace, but
inside the post-Freudian human self, with its layers, its pungent
humours, its debris left over from construction, and its monsters
of the deep . . . Jaws meets Alice in Wonderland." --Times Literary
Supplement
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