Glow
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- £2.99
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- £2.99
Publisher Description
'ADDICTIVELY GOOD' The Times
'Over-whelming' Independent
'Supercharged' Evening Standard
'Deliciously, startlingly, exuberantly fresh' Guardian
With GLOW, Ned Beauman has reinvented the international conspiracy thriller for a new generation.
A hostage exchange outside a police station in Pakistan.
A botched defection in an airport hotel in New Jersey.
A test of loyalty at an abandoned resort in the Burmese jungle.
A boy and a girl locking eyes at a rave in a South London laundrette . . .
For the first time, Britain's most exciting young novelist turns his attention to the present day, as a conspiracy with global repercussions converges on one small flat above a dentist's office in Camberwell.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
This droll, clever, and intelligent novel has an undercurrent of thriller, but it's a young man's thriller or, more accurately, a slacker's thriller. The setting is 2010 London amid a milieu of underemployed 20-somethings in search of love, raves, and drugs, most notably the "glow" of the title, a new, Ecstasy-like designer drug with an epic reputation. Protagonist Raf's primary occupation seems to be walking the dog who guards the transmitter of a pirate radio station. He's also dealing with a "non-24-hour sleep/wake syndrome" he has an abnormal circadian rhythm that requires a strict, complicated sleep regimen ("It's like his brain is wearing a novelty watch"). At a rave, he first hears of "glow" and meets the beautiful Cherish. Raf is odd, but the events happening around him are odder still, including the abduction of his friend Theo by a couple of guys driving "a grimy white builder's van." The quest for glow, and the story behind the white van, paces the novel, which grows into a complex (but vague) conspiracy story, with lengthy (but interesting) digressions into the backstories of people like Cherish. Beauman writes like a dream (bicycle couriers have a "famished muscularity"), but his plotting is nothing more than a framework supporting a glimpse into a dystopian slacker universe, as well as the neurochemistry of mind-altering substances and the global drug trade.