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MAXWELL'S DEMON by Steven Hall

MAXWELL'S DEMON

by Steven Hall

Pub Date: April 6th, 2021
ISBN: 978-0-8021-4920-6
Publisher: Grove

The son of a world-famous writer plays a literary cat-and-mouse game with his late father’s enigmatic protégé.

Fourteen years ago, Hall unleashed an original and inventive debut, The Raw Shark Texts (2007). With this follow-up, he delivers an equally phantasmagoric novel with shades of Stephen King’s The Dark Half. This confessional is narrated by Thomas Quinn, an unsuccessful writer whose wife, Imogen, is off on some kind of live-streamed Big Brother–type experiment. This leaves Thomas time to drink whiskey and contemplate the legacy of his late father, Stanley Quinn, a famous novelist and lousy dad. Even worse than his father, Thomas has been living under the long shadow of Andrew Black, once Stanley's assistant and for all intents and purposes his favored “son." Black is famous for Cupid’s Engine, a bestselling magnum opus about a fedora-wearing private eye, while Thomas’ sole novel, The Qwerty Machine Gun, was a dismal failure. The relationship changes when Thomas receives an envelope from the reclusive Black: Along with a photograph of a black sphere, there's a note saying, "Thomas, What do you think this is?" Hall delights in playing with typography, and early on he starts dropping in passages shaped like leaves as well as a seven-page illustration of the physics theorem that lends the novel its title. 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.