Shortlisted for the 2017 Hugo Award for Best SF Novel.
The year is 2454.
Humanity has engineered a hard-won golden age, forged in the aftermath of a bitter conflict that wiped both religion and nation state from the planet. Now seven factions or 'hives' co-govern the world, their rule fuelled by benign censorship, oracular statistical analytics and technological abundance. But this is a fragile Utopia - and someone is intent on pushing it to breaking point.
Convicted for his crimes, celebrated for his talents, Mycroft Canner is the indentured instrument - and confidant - of some of the world's most powerful figures. When he is asked to investigate a bizarre theft, he finds himself on the trail of a conspiracy that could shatter the tranquil world order the Hives have maintained for three centuries.
But Mycroft has his own secrets. He is concealing a much greater threat to the seven Hives, a wild card no degree of statistical analysis could have prophesised. This threat takes the unlikely form of a thirteen-year-old called Bridger. For how will a world that has banished God deal with a child who can perform miracles?
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
ISBN: 9781786699503
Number of pages: 576
Dimensions: 198 x 129 mm
More intricate, more plausible, more significant than any debut I can recall - Cory Doctorow
The kind of science fiction that makes me excited all over again about what science fiction can do - Jo Walton
Thought-provoking, disturbing, occasionally perverted, and always entertaining. Worldbuilding at its richest - Kirkus Reviews
Incredibly ambitious and groundbreaking... Palmer writes gloriously lush prose stuffed with asides, allusions and nods to the reader' - Guardian
Admirable in its scope and attention to detail... A book thats quirky and makes you think' - Concatenation
A powerful, beautifully written novel... It is a mystery, historic document, social commentary and futuristic science fiction all combined to make an excellent novel' - Concatenation
At first I thought I was just too tired to understand and appreciate this book but after trying again with a clearer head, I'm clearly just too stupid. I personally prefer to chill with a book, especially in the... More
Frankly a work of genius.
A word of warning though.
You might need to be an expert in the history of philosophy, political theory and 18th century French literature to get the full benefit.
It is also very funny...
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