The Coincidence Engine
A hurricane sweeps off the Gulf of Mexico and in, the back-country of Alabama, assembles a passenger jet out of old bean-cans and junkyard waste. An eccentric mathematician - last heard of investigating the physics of free will and ranting about the devil - vanishes in the French Pyrenees. And...
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A hurricane sweeps off the Gulf of Mexico and in, the back-country of Alabama, assembles a passenger jet out of old bean-cans and junkyard waste. An eccentric mathematician - last heard of investigating the physics of free will and ranting about the devil - vanishes in the French Pyrenees. And the thuggish operatives of a multinational arms conglomerate are closing in on Alex Smart - a harmless Cambridge postgraduate who has set off with hope in his heart and a ring in his pocket to ask his American girlfriend to marry him. At the Directorate of the Extremely Improbable - an organisation so secret that many of its operatives aren't 100 per cent sure it exists - Red Queen takes an interest. What ensues is a chaotic chase across an imaginary America, haunted by madness, murder, mistaken identity, and a very large number of unhealthy but delicious snacks. The Coincidence Engine exists. And it has started to work. "The Coincidence Engine" is consistently engaging - one of the most enjoyable, entertaining debut novels you'll come across for ages.
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Format: paperback
ISBN:
9781408802342 (1408802341)
Publish date: April 1st 2011
Publisher: Bloomsbury
Pages no: 271
Edition language: English
I wanted to get to the end of this book. Then, at the end, I realised that the point of the book is that it doesn't have an end. It embodies the sense of the MWI theory, even though many reviewers say it doesn't. It reminds of the time Heisenberg was pulled over by the Highway Patrol in Malibu...
Some really cool ideas, but meh...For a start, there is no Douglas Adams connection here, apart from the presence of a coincidence engine that somewhat resembles the infinite improbability drive. Oh yeah, and the author is British. Once people start making comparisons like that, you might expect hum...
3.5Reminded me of a cross between Neil Gaiman and Douglas Adams, only with less of Adams' humour and Gaiman's wit and skill with words. However it was very entertaining, and I would happily read again to make sense of a few things I missed.