§Metro Best New Books to Read in Spring Pick
Glossary Magazine Highly Anticipated Fiction Pick
Selected for The Times Best Science Fiction of 2021
'Achingly believable, unsensational, and chilling' The Times
'Chilling, cryptic-apocalyptic, and highly thought-provoking' Andrew Hunter Murray, Sunday Times Best-selling author of The Last Day
'Highly readable and hugely important - an apocalyptic road trip into our near future informed and shaped by the most pressing issues of our present' Owen Sheers, author of Resistance
A road trip beneath clear blue skies and a blazing sun: a reclusive artist is forced to abandon his home and follow two young sisters across a post-pandemic Europe in search of a safe place. Is this the end of the world?
Meanwhile two computer scientists have been educating their baby in a remote location. Their baby is called Talos, and he is an advanced AI program. Every week they feed him data, starting from the beginning of written history, era by era, and ask him to predict what will happen next to the human race. At the same time they're involved in an increasingly fraught philosophical debate about why human life is sacred and why the purpose for which he was built - to predict threats to human life to help us avoid them - is a worthwhile and ethical pursuit.
These two strands come together in a way that is always suspenseful, surprising and intellectually provocative: this is an extraordinarily prescient and vital work of fiction - an apocalyptic road novel to frighten and thrill.
Glossary Magazine Highly Anticipated Fiction Pick
Selected for The Times Best Science Fiction of 2021
'Achingly believable, unsensational, and chilling' The Times
'Chilling, cryptic-apocalyptic, and highly thought-provoking' Andrew Hunter Murray, Sunday Times Best-selling author of The Last Day
'Highly readable and hugely important - an apocalyptic road trip into our near future informed and shaped by the most pressing issues of our present' Owen Sheers, author of Resistance
A road trip beneath clear blue skies and a blazing sun: a reclusive artist is forced to abandon his home and follow two young sisters across a post-pandemic Europe in search of a safe place. Is this the end of the world?
Meanwhile two computer scientists have been educating their baby in a remote location. Their baby is called Talos, and he is an advanced AI program. Every week they feed him data, starting from the beginning of written history, era by era, and ask him to predict what will happen next to the human race. At the same time they're involved in an increasingly fraught philosophical debate about why human life is sacred and why the purpose for which he was built - to predict threats to human life to help us avoid them - is a worthwhile and ethical pursuit.
These two strands come together in a way that is always suspenseful, surprising and intellectually provocative: this is an extraordinarily prescient and vital work of fiction - an apocalyptic road novel to frighten and thrill.
Under the Blue is a novel with a terrible beauty. Oana Aristide gives us so much to think about: environmental destruction, the melting of the polar ice, eco-terrorism, but all within a heart-stopping story of three survivors travelling through Europe alone. I couldn't look away Claire Fuller, author Bitter Orange