Gods Without Men

Gods Without Men

by HariKunzru (Author)

Synopsis

It's 2008. The California desert. A four-year-old autistic boy, Raj Matharu, disappears in the wilderness, plunging his wealthy New York parents into the surreal public hell of a media witch-hunt. But the desert is inexplicable and miraculous, and the Matharus' fate is bound up with that of others: a debauched British rock star, on the run from a failed relationship and the sordid excesses of his life; a former member of an extraterrestrial-worshipping cult, now middle-aged but still haunted by transcendent callings; and, a teenage Iraqi refugee, who befriends a young black Marine while playing the role of 'Iraqi villager' in a military simulation exercise. Their lives converge in an odd, remote town, near a rock formation called The Pinnacles - and among the tangled echoes and stories of all those who have travelled before them through this brutally powerful landscape. A branching and multilayered novel by one of our most acclaimed writers, and a compulsively readable journey into the twists and turns of a handful of human lives, "Gods Without Men" is a heartfelt exploration of our search for pattern and meaning in a random and chaotic universe.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 400
Publisher: Hamish Hamilton
Published: 04 Aug 2011

ISBN 10: 024114311X
ISBN 13: 9780241143117

Media Reviews
A beautifully written echo chamber of a novel -- David Mitchell
Kunzru's engagingly wired prose and agile plotting sweep all before them * New Yorker *
One of the most talented writers of his generation * Image *
Kunzru's prose sashays across the page with all the fluid flamboyance of a dance * The Times *
Pitch-perfect masterwork * Publishers Weekly *
Kunzru just gets better and better. This fourth novel is an astonishing tour de force * Kirkus *
The literary skills of Hari Kunzru are evident throughout this complex and disturbing novel . . . beautifully constructed sentences . . . A briliant crossover literary feat -- Annie Proulx * Financial Times *
A funny, beautifully observed novel that raises big questions about how far events and people, past and present, are connected. But for all the big ideas, it is also surprisingly moving * Psychologies Magazine *
With each novel, Hari Kunzru is proving himself a subtler and more ingenious writer . . . his most ambitious work yet * Scotland on Sunday *
Dizzying scope . . . It is a testament to Kunzru's ability as a writer that Gods Without Men presents so many characters sketched so vividly * New Statesman *
A fine writer with an enviably fertile imagination * Telegraph *
Refreshingly uncompromising -- Fatema Ahmed * Prospect *
Author Bio
Hari Kunzru is the author of the novels The Impressionist, Transmission and My Revolutions, and the story collection Noise. He lives in New York.