Amnesia
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- $13.99
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- $13.99
Publisher Description
From the two-time Booker Prize winner: a masterful, exceedingly timely new novel--at once dark, suspenseful and seriously funny--that takes us on a journey to the place where the cyber underworld of radicals and hackers collides with international power politics.
When an internet virus throws open the gates at thousands of American prisons, the hacker turns out to be an unlikely young Australian woman. Has she declared cyber war on the United States or was her "Angel Worm" intended only to free the victims of Australia's immigration policies? Is she innocent? Can she be saved? The answers are up to journalist Felix Moore, a.k.a. Felix Moore-or-less-correct. His career is tanking when he gets this chance to write a biography that will vindicate the young woman. Funding is to be provided by an old friend--an outrageous millionaire property developer--and further impetus by an old flame: the young woman's actress mother whom Felix worshipped when they were at university together. And it will be our great good fortune to see the world through Felix's comic, cowardly, angry, yet fundamentally humane eyes as he attempts to save the young woman--and redeem himself in the bargain.
APPLE BOOKS REVIEW
Amnesia is a great return to form for the two-time winner of the Man Booker Prize. A sullen young Australian woman—the daughter of a famous actress—is accused of an act of cyberterrorism against the United States. After hitting rock bottom, a disgraced and disheveled journalist who’s declared war on Australia’s political and media behemoth is commissioned to write her biography. Peter Carey’s inventive storyline lets him tackle timely issues, unleash his fiery humor, and mold nuanced, entertaining characters that immediately grab your attention.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
From two-time Booker winner Carey comes this complex new novel, focusing on the author's native Australia, but exploring themes of journalistic freedom and Internet ethics. At the center of the book is the young Australian Gabrielle Baillieux, who releases a virus called the Angel Worm in the computer system that controls the Australian prison system, releasing thousands of prisoners throughout Australia and, inadvertently, in the U.S. The move could be construed as an act of terrorism, a bold stroke in the fight for human rights, or just a geeky plan gone awry. Journalist Felix Moore is hired to write Gabrielle's story sympathetically, to avoid her extradition. In the process, he spends time with her mother, the actress Celine Baillieux, whom he had previously known in college. Looking back through the two women's lives, Felix also explores Australia's history since WWII, confusing himself but also educating readers about the Land Down Under. Throughout the book, Carey's cartwheeling prose and dazzling intellect can be challenging to keep up with, but the book is worth the effort.