Quotients
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- 9,49 €
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- 9,49 €
Descripción editorial
Two people search for connection in a world of fractured identities and aliases, global finance, big data, intelligence bureaucracies, algorithmic logic, and terror.
Jeremy Jordan and Alexandra Chen hope to make a quiet home together but struggle to find a space safe from their personal secrets. For Jeremy, this means leaving behind his former life as an intelligence operative during The Troubles in Northern Ireland. For Alexandra, a high-powered job in image management for whole countries cannot prepare her for her missing brother’s sudden reappearance.
In a culture of limitless surveillance, Jeremy and Alexandra will go to great lengths to protect what is closest to them. Spanning decades and continents, their saga brings them into contact with a down-and-out online journalist, shadowy security professionals, and jockeying technology experts, each of whom has a different understanding of whether information really protects us, and how we might build a world worth trusting in our paranoid age.
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O'Neill's esoteric follow-up to The Hopeful centers on the deceit-filled relationship between Alexandra Chen, an American woman, and Jeremy Jordan, an Englishman, who meet and begin dating in London in May 2005. Alex works in international public relations ("She had practiced how to sell a country on her selling their country"), while Jeremy, a hedge fund analyst, tries to keep his past as a British intelligence officer stationed in Belfast during the Troubles a secret from Alex. Alex has troubles of her own her brother, Shel, ran away at 13, and she's been looking for him ever since. After Alex accepts an advertising job in New York City that December, Jeremy follows her and they get married. O'Neill's narrative is tinged with commentary on the rise of digital and social media, which drives a wedge between screen-obsessed Alex and analog Jeremy. Then, in 2008, a journalist friend of Alex's does his own digging on Shel and raises alarms from Jeremy's old intelligence contacts after the story unearths NSA secrets. As the details of the couple's pasts come to light, their marriage is put in jeopardy. O'Neill's oblique, sometimes opaque prose wears on the reader, though it also offers flashes of insight on the characters' frequent incomprehension of one another. This would-be techno thriller takes on a bit too much.