Spook Country
โ Scribed by William Gibson
- Publisher
- G.P. Putnam's Sons
- Year
- 2007
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 199 KB
- Category
- Fiction
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
EDITORIAL REVIEW:
Tito is in his early twenties. Born in Cuba, he speaks fluent Russian, lives in one room in a NoLita warehouse, and does delicate jobs involving information transfer.
Hollis Henry is an investigative journalist, on assignment from a magazine called Node. Node doesn't exist yet, which is fine; she's used to that. But it seems to be actively blocking the kind of buzz that magazines normally cultivate before they start up. Really actively blocking it. It's odd, even a little scary, if Hollis lets herself think about it much. Which she doesn't; she can't afford to.
Milgrim is a junkie. A high-end junkie, hooked on prescription antianxiety drugs. Milgrim figures he wouldn't survive twenty-four hours if Brown, the mystery man who saved him from a misunderstanding with his dealer, ever stopped supplying those little bubble packs. What exactly Brown is up to Milgrim can't say, but it seems to be military in nature. At least, Milgrim's very nuanced Russian would seem to be a big part of it, as would breaking into locked rooms.
Bobby Chombo is a "producer," and an enigma. In his day job, Bobby is a troubleshooter for manufacturers of military navigation equipment. He refuses to sleep in the same place twice. He meets no one. Hollis Henry has been told to find him.
*Pattern Recognition* was a bestseller on every list of every major newspaper in the country, reaching #4 on the *New York Times* list. It was also a *BookSense* top ten pick, a *WordStock* bestseller, a best book of the year for *Publishers Weekly*, the *Los Angeles Times*, *Newsday*, and the *Economist*, and a *Washington Post* "rave."
*Spook Country* is the perfect follow-up to *Pattern Recognition*, which was called by *The Washington Post* (among many glowing reviews), "One of the first authentic and vital novels of the twenty-first century."
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
EDITORIAL REVIEW: Tito is in his early twenties. Born in Cuba, he speaks fluent Russian, lives in one room in a NoLita warehouse, and does delicate jobs involving information transfer. Hollis Henry is an investigative journalist, on assignment from a magazine called Node. Node doesn't exi
Spook Country - a gripping spy thriller by William Gibson, bestselling author of Neuromancer 'Among our most fascinating novelists ... unmissable' Daily Telegraph What happens when old spies come out to play one last game? In New York a young Cuban called Tito is passing iPods to a mysterious old ma
EDITORIAL REVIEW: Tito is in his early twenties. Born in Cuba, he speaks fluent Russian, lives in one room in a NoLita warehouse, and does delicate jobs involving information transfer. Hollis Henry is an investigative journalist, on assignment from a magazine called Node. Node doesn't exi