David Guy Compton is a speculative fiction writer. His
1970 novel, The Steel Crocodile, was nominated for the Nebula
Award, and in 1980 Bertrand Tavernier adapted The Continuous
Katherine Mortenhoe for the screen under the title Death Watch.
Compton lives in Maine.
Jeff VanderMeer is the author of the Southern Reach trilogy
(Annihilation, Authority, and Acceptance) and, most
recently, of the novel Borne, which was shortlisted for the
Arthur C. Clarke award. His nonfiction has appeared in many
publications, including The New York Times, The Guardian,
and the Los Angeles Times. He lives in Tallahassee, Florida,
with his wife, the editor Ann VanderMeer.
“Like his peers Philip K. Dick, Bernard Wolfe, and J.G. Ballard,
D.G. Compton had a special capacity for sensing the encroachment of
what has in fact become our present life. And, as with those
writers at their best—and The Continuous Katherine Mortenhoe is
Compton at his best —he found a way to embody his apprehensions
with a sympathy and fascination and horror that puts the reader
inside the skin of his characters, and inside the skin of the
world.” —Jonathan Lethem
“Considering Katherine Mortenhoe was originally published
in 1974, the book is eerily relevant in a world where we’ve
surrendered so much of our personal information to tech giants like
Facebook and Google. It also reads like something written today,
which is impressive for something written yesterday about
tomorrow.”–Kevin Nguyen, GQ
“Authenticity has always been a tricky concept, but in the era of
social media, it’s downright weird. All the more striking, then,
that one of the most cogent and damning critiques of its
internet-age performance should be found in a novel published in
1974.” —Anna E. Clark, Los Angeles Review of Books
“For a novel focusing on death (and how we examine it), this is a
deeply unsentimental look at life, which makes the emotional sting
that its ending contains that much more powerful.” —Tobias Carroll,
Tor.com
“An eerie, prophetic vision of a not-too-distant future.”—Pasquale
Iannone, Sight and Sound
“Compton has been one of Britain’s most original and consistent
novelists since the late Sixties, but he has never received the
attention he deserves...Compton’s prose is fine-tuned, his human
insights sharp, and his narrative pace filled with the weird
synchronicities and dissonances of how violent things usually
happen.”—Scott Bradfield, The Independent
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