The literary debut of 2008 - part adventure, part comic opera, part geek nirvana
Nick Harkaway is the author of The Gone-Away World and Angelmaker, and of an even better and more exciting novel whose name will probably end up being Tigerman, or possibly Man, Island, Boy. Contrary to what you may have heard, the title really is the hard part. When he's not writing, he spends his time being the husband of a brilliant lawyer and the dad of two small children who are secretly bent on world domination. He likes Italian red wine and lives in a bit of London where the taxis still have a horse at the pointy end.
Its scope and ambition are extraordinary, its execution is often
breathtaking, and its style is by turns hilarious, outrageous,
devastating, hip and profound ... Hugely entertaining
*Independent on Sunday*
Breathtakingly ambitious ... A bubbling cosmic stew of a book,
written with such exuberant imagination that you are left
breathless by its sheer ingenuity
*Observer*
[A] post-apocalyptic triumph ... Immensely rewarding ... Genuinely
terrifying
*The Times*
A stunning debut
*Scotland on Sunday*
Exuberant...Wildly inventive
*The Times*
There are delightful moments aplenty ... Any author who has come up
with the beautifully silly plan of melding a kung-fu epic with an
Iraq-war satire and a Mad Max adventure has to be worth keeping an
eye on
*Guardian*
A debut novel of the kind that comes along only once every couple
of years, overflowing with imagination yet powered by the kind of
cleverly twisting plot that marks him out as a master storyteller
... A quirkily original writer
*The Scotsman*
Has the pace and action of an episode of 24 ... The agility of the
narrative is one of the great strengths of this book ... Harkaway
is robustly confident ... Particularly effective are his
Matrix-like fight scenes, brought to life in meticulous yet flowing
prose
*The Times*
A stunning debut ... By turns thrilling, silly, gripping, crazy,
daring and outrageous. I loved every minute ... The Gone-Away World
is brakes-off fiction
*Scotland on Sunday*
I loved it...exuberant, mind-bending science-fiction/fantasy
adventure about truckers, weapons that wreck the very fabric of
existence, foul-mouthed drill instructors, ninjas and stuff like
that. But by golly it's well written, funny and enjoyable
*Daily Mail*
Its scope and ambition are extraordinary, its execution is often
breathtaking, and its style is by turns hilarious, outrageous,
devastating, hip and profound ... Hugely entertaining * Independent
on Sunday *
Breathtakingly ambitious ... A bubbling cosmic stew of a book,
written with such exuberant imagination that you are left
breathless by its sheer ingenuity * Observer *
[A] post-apocalyptic triumph ... Immensely rewarding ... Genuinely
terrifying * The Times *
A stunning debut * Scotland on Sunday *
Exuberant...Wildly inventive -- Michael Gove * The Times *
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