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Lambda: A Sunday Times Book of the Year
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A SUNDAY TIMES BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR
In a disturbingly familiar parallel world, a small population of tiny, semi-aquatic humans known as lambdas has quietly lived in the capital for decades. When a school bombing is claimed by an unknown faction of their community, everything changes.
Meet Cara Gray, anarchist-turned-surveillance officer, who is trialling an application that will render her life as a novel.
Experience a world of government agents made of slime mould protein, dubious quantum computers, and sentient toothbrushes.
- Print length352 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherEuropa Editions
- Publication date3 Mar. 2022
- Dimensions13.49 x 1.85 x 21.01 cm
- ISBN-101787703193
- ISBN-13978-1787703193
From the Publisher
Product description
Review
"Literary SF at its best."
― The Guardian“An accomplished, thought-provoking novel that is also darkly humorous.” ― The Sunday Times
“A neat idea… a scathing critique of the attitude towards migrants in Brexit Britain.”
― The Financial Times"Ever wish George Saunders tried his hand at crime fiction? Try David Musgrave’s imaginative debut novel, Lambda." ― Wired - A Summer 2022 Best Read
"Ceaselessly inventive yet grounded in a world we recognise - an eloquent, insightful and funny demonstration the future is now. And always will be."
― Richard Beard (The Day That Went Missing)“A science fiction novel not quite like any other I’ve read."
― Ananyo Bhattacharya (The Man from the Future)“Part cyber-thriller, part sci-fi parable, part glorious social satire.”
― Tim Baker (Fever City)“Absolutely brilliant. It's like William Gibson and JG Ballard made a baby - a weird semi-aquatic baby. A one-off, properly uncategorizable." ― Darragh McManus (Shiver the Whole Night Through)
“Lambda harks back to the utopian preoccupations of early pioneers of the genre like Orwell or Zamiatin, leavening its tale with wry humour and quiet social commentary and satire that scores and hits the target with systematic ferocity… Most definitely a novel of ideas, where the plot insidiously burrows into the reader’s mind to unsettling effect. A fascinating curiosity and well worth the detour.”
― Maxim Jakubowski, CrimeTime"Rife with suspense, intrigue and menace, the story is an allegory for current events that parallels books like Orwell’s 1984 and Animal Farm." ― Reading the West
“Musgrave uses his tale to provide some affecting commentary on current political, emotional and health crises, as well as the future of technology.” ― Buzz Magazine
Review
“Part cyber-thriller, part sci-fi parable, part glorious social satire.” –Tim Baker, author of Fever City
About the Author
David Musgrave was born in North East England and now lives in London. He has exhibited widely as a visual artist, and his work is held in many collections worldwide.
Product details
- Publisher : Europa Editions
- Publication date : 3 Mar. 2022
- Language : English
- Print length : 352 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1787703193
- ISBN-13 : 978-1787703193
- Item weight : 340 g
- Dimensions : 13.49 x 1.85 x 21.01 cm
- Best Sellers Rank: 1,006,612 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- 5,419 in Dystopian
- 5,955 in Post-Apocalyptic
- 8,301 in Science Fiction Adventure (Books)
- Customer reviews:
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Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings, help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyses reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonTop reviews from the United Kingdom
- 5 out of 5 stars
Literary science fiction at its best
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 29 March 2022An unsettling and absorbing book. Lambda's dark plot is leavened with dry wit and more than a few belly laughs. A meditation on how we treat the lowliest in society, be they vulnerable aquatic humans or lab-grown killers.
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An inconclusive but fascinating peek into an alternative present
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 18 January 2024Oh, I enjoyed this very much—an inconclusive but fascinating peek into an alternative present where lambdas, a subspecies of human adapted for life in the oceans, begin to make landfall on the English and Icelandic coasts, with little memory of their journey or life cycle apart from a vague notion of a common set of progenitors known as the Four Fertile Pairs. There’s a terrorist incident, and a police investigation, and increasing racist attacks on lambdas, but none of those are the point of the book. LAMBDA is more of a window on this world, not a plot-driven commentary on it (though the choices Musgrave makes about narrative voice and structure constitute commentary, in a way). I generally struggle with lack of resolution at the end of a book, but here that felt exactly right, and actually provided more closure than I had expected. I must say, though, I’m not going to be an early adopter if sentient household objects become a thing. It pays to be polite to ChatGPT, but if the future is a toothbrush that your boyfriend can hack to clandestinely monitor your hormone levels in the hopes of manipulating your fertility, count me out. (Not a spoiler—nothing comes of it except a low-key but entirely deserved breakup!) More specfic like this, please.
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Aimless
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 19 August 2022Maybe I'm just not bright enough for this type of work, but it just went nowhere. The story threads were interesting enough to keep me going, then it just ends.
IA real let down after a promising start. Definitely not for me.
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Just awful
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 12 May 2022The description sounded great, always up for a weird sci-fi novel. After the first chapter I just thought it was written as a robot speaking, then the same style continues and I makes it unreadable. I struggled through thinking it might change but it doesn’t, the story just fumbles along with it’s annoying trend of writing the measurements and scores of everything. I rarely give anything a 1 star review, however I haven’t read anything this bad in a long time, just avoid its awful.
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Absolutely brilliant and incredibly innovative
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 20 March 2022Musgrave manages to use innovative narrative techniques without any trace of pretension or pomposity and the storyline had me constantly engaged. A must read in contemporary fiction!
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Drivel
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 2 January 2023I have no idea what this book was supposed to be about. There seemed to be about 4 threads, none of which were meaningfully connected with each other. None of them seem to lead anywhere, and then the book just stopped. Like a previous reviewer said, maybe I'm too dim to get it. Avoid.
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A hidden gem
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 26 May 2022This is probably going to be fully appreciated in the decades to come - this book is very ambitious in style and concept, and quite hard to define in today's commercial (and meaningless) jargon. A gem and it's not for everyone. I am not giving 5 stars only because a bit more simplicity and readability wouldn't hurt and would probably make Musgrave's writing approachable for a wider audience, and wouldn't compromise its originality. Overall a great read.
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Top reviews from other countries
Izitru4 out of 5 starsCouldn't put it down
Reviewed in the United States on 4 August 2022To me, this book offers a "Brave New World/1984 narrative that Is just as terrifying, ironic and prescient as those two books ever were in their time. In Lambda, Musgrave has created a fictional world that is beautiful at exposing the humanity in non-human things. Can't wait to see what the author comes up with next!
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Lee E Wittham2 out of 5 starsThe toothbrush is the most interesting character
Reviewed in the United States on 24 January 2024Title.
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