AGUARDIANBOOK OF THE YEAR
'Gnomonis an extraordinary novel, and one I cant stop thinking about some weeks after I read it. It is deeply troubling, magnificently strange, and an exhilarating read.' Emily St. John Mandel, author ofStation Eleven
The best thing hes ever written It is an astonishing piece of construction, complex and witty It is a magnificent achievement Hes never written a bad book, but this is the one thatll see him mentioned in the same breath as William Gibson and David Mitchell This book seriously just destroyed me with joy. Warren Ellis Nick Harkaway: bonkers, brilliant and hilarious Effervescent, clever and entirely fantastic.Sunday Times [Harkaway] is the missing, but somehow logical, link between David Mitchell and Terry Pratchett.Independent
Near-future Britain is not just a nation under surveillance but one built on it: a radical experiment in personal transparency and ambient direct democracy. Every action is seen, every word is recorded.
Diana Hunter is a refusenik, a has-been cult novelist who lives in a house with its own Faraday cage: no electronic signals can enter or leave. She runs a lending library and conducts business by barter. She is off the grid in a society where the grid is everything. Denounced, arrested and interrogated by a machine that reads your life history from your brain, she dies in custody.
Mielikki Neith is the investigator charged with discovering how this tragedy occurred. Neith is Hunters opposite. She is a woman in her prime, a stalwart advocate of the System. It is the most democratic of governments, and Neith will protect it with her life.
When Neith opens the record of the interrogation, she finds not Hunters mind but four others, none of which can possibly be there: the banker Constantine Kyriakos, pursued by a ghostly shark that eats corporations; the alchemist Athenais Karthagonensis, jilted lover of St Augustine of Hippo and mother to his dead son, kidnapped and required to perform a miracle; Berihun Bekele, artist and grandfather, who must escape an arson fire by walking through walls if only he can remember how; and Gnomon, a sociopathic human intelligence from a distant future, falling backwards in time to conduct four assassinations.
Aided or perhaps opposed by the pale and paradoxical Regno Lönnrot, Neith must work her way through the puzzles of her case and find the meaning of these impossible lives. Hunter has left her a message, but is it one she should heed, or a lie to lead her into catastrophe? And as the stories combine and the secrets and encryptions of Gnomon are revealed, the question becomes the most fundamental of all: who will live, and who will die?
Nick Harkaway was born in Cornwall in 1972. Author of the novelsThe Gone-Away World,AngelmakerandTigerman, he lives in London with his wife and two children.