Acerca del libro
The Mothman Institute’s mission is to protect endangered moths, but its experts are becoming bystanders, sidelined by the Institute’s ‘Players’, and their pursuit of corporate self-perpetuation. A senior Player, Caius, recruited Cuffe to create the rhetoric to underpin this new corporate vision. Cuffe, contemptuously confident, is disturbed by the oddnesses of the Institute – the punitive process with its absent defendant, the quarterly Hunt, the disregarded but omnipotent Registry. Then the Institute gets the shocking news that a breeding pair of a rare moth, thought to be extinct, has been discovered in a country in the middle of a military coup. The Institute in turn is riven by competing ambitions: the Mothmen trying to save the moths, the Players trying to save the goose that lays the golden eggs. Meanwhile, no-one – not even Caius – has been paying enough attention to what is happening in the basement…
Under the influence of Beckett, O’Brien and Kafka, Hollowmen deploys disjunctive temporalities, narrative shifts, and intertextual polyphony to create an irreal depiction of a psychotic corporation and the aftermath of a seismic shift from the margins towards the centre.
Características y detalles
- Categoría principal: Ficción
- Categorías adicionales Ciencia ficción y fantasía
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Características: 13×20 cm
N.º de páginas: 360 -
ISBN
- Tapa blanda: 9781739603700
- Fecha de publicación: abr. 01, 2023
- Idioma English
- Palabras clave Irreal Fiction, Speculative Fiction, Slipstream
Acerca del creador
SUSAN MAXWELL is an independent author and scholar who has had short stories and poetry published and commissioned in magazines and anthologies. In 2014 Little Island Books published the novel 'Good Red Herring'. Maxwell independently published further novels suitable for younger readers, set in the same fictional 'Hibernia Altera' universe; she also writes slipstream works aimed at an adult rather than a universal readership. Apart from writing fiction, Maxwell has served on juries for the British Fantasy Awards; has a PhD in Archival Science and writes on archives and fiction; and reviews regularly for 'Inis', the magazine of Children’s Books Ireland. Literary influences come mostly from speculative and modernist fiction, particularly Flann O'Brien, Calvino, Beckett, and Woolf. When not writing, or painting, or being an archivist, the author can be found in the vegetable patch, listening to music, reading books, watching old detective series, or catching up on sleep.