The Zero
The Zero is a groundbreaking novel, a darkly comic snapshot of our times that is already being compared to the works of Franz Kafka and Joseph Heller.From its opening pages—when hero cop Brian Remy wakes up to find he's shot himself in the head—novelist Jess Walter takes us on a harrowing tour of...
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The Zero is a groundbreaking novel, a darkly comic snapshot of our times that is already being compared to the works of Franz Kafka and Joseph Heller.From its opening pages—when hero cop Brian Remy wakes up to find he's shot himself in the head—novelist Jess Walter takes us on a harrowing tour of a city and a country shuddering through the aftershocks of a devastating terrorist attack. As the smoke slowly clears, Remy finds that his memory is skipping, lurching between moments of lucidity and days when he doesn't seem to be living his own life at all. The landscape around him is at once fractured and oddly familiar: a world dominated by a Machiavellian mayor known as "The Boss," and peopled by gawking celebrities, anguished policemen peddling First Responder cereal, and pink real estate divas hyping the spoils of tragedy. Remy himself has a new girlfriend he doesn't know, a son who pretends he's dead, and an unsettling new job chasing a trail of paper scraps for a shadowy intelligence agency known as the Department of Documentation. Whether that trail will lead Remy to an elusive terror cell—or send him circling back to himself—is only one of the questions posed by this provocative yet deeply human novel.From a novelist of astounding talent, The Zero is an extraordinary story of how our trials become our transgressions, of how we forgive ourselves and whether or not we should.
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Format: paperback
ISBN:
9780061189432 (006118943X)
Publish date: August 7th 2007
Publisher: Harper Perennial
Pages no: 368
Edition language: English
Category:
Adventure,
Novels,
Literary Fiction,
Mystery,
War,
Politics,
Contemporary,
Thriller,
Action,
Suspense,
Terrorism
Memento meets the post 9/11 novel in a very very good way.
I'm going to try not to give anything away -- this book is probably best read if you only know that it's about 9/11 and it's a satire. THE ZERO is fascinating and frustrating, but ultimately satisfying. The conceit, wherein the protagonist Brian Remy suffers from "these gaps [of time]," requires a b...