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Beautiful Shining People by Michael Grothaus #Review #Giveaway
The first of the Orenda Blog tours in March is a piece of speculative literary fiction. Details on how to win a print copy are found at the foot of this post. Beautiful Shining People by Michael Grothaus has been getting huge praise.
‘A fascinating exploration of what it means to be human in a world
where everything can be faked, and an alarming projection into a
not-too-distant and all-too-plausible future … wonderful, insightful and
thoughtful’ James Oswald
‘Totally
engrossing from the start – the story, characters and settings will
linger in your imagination long after you're finished … truly wonderful’
Jonathan Whitelaw
‘Exquisite
world-building, this book had me invested from the very first page.
Vivid plot and irresistible characters and a real tug at the soul …
you'll drown in it’ Lisa Bradley
This world is anything but ordinary, and it’s about to change forever…
It’s our world, but decades into the future…
An
ordinary world, where cars drive themselves, drones glide across the
sky, and robots work in burger shops. There are two superpowers and a
digital Cold War, but all conflicts are safely oceans away. People get
up, work, and have dinner. Everything is as it should be…
Except
for seventeen-year-old John, a tech prodigy from a damaged family, who
hides a deeply personal secret. But everything starts to change for him
when he enters a tiny café on a cold Tokyo night. A café run by a
disgraced sumo wrestler, where a peculiar dog with a spherical head
lives, alongside its owner, enigmatic waitress Neotnia…
But
Neotnia hides a secret of her own – a secret that will turn John’s
unhappy life upside down. A secret that will take them from the neon
streets of Tokyo to Hiroshima’s tragic past to the snowy mountains of
Nagano.
A secret that reveals that this world is anything ordinary – and it’s about to change forever…
My Thoughts
This piece of speculative fiction imagines a world in the recent future which looks similar to current times, until you look closer and notice some telling differences. The society which John finds himself in seems quite a lonely place. He may be a genius when it comes to coding but he struggles with relating to people and is very much on the periphery. Through his growing friendship with Neotnia, he glimpses acceptance but there is always a niggling doubt that something is not quite right.
It becomes clear that there have been some huge conflicts in the world and that caring for others is not thought of as the normal reaction of the young. Life in Japan seems centred on the individual. As the story develops, you can see some big themes being explored. The novel takes you right into the question of what it is to exist and what makes us human. Is selflessness possible in this modern age ? Is the destruction of countries inevitable? Will self interest prove to be dominant? With some unusual characters and the creation of a futuristic world which is recognisable, the author has created a thought provoking study in human relationships.
In short: appearances can be deceptive.
About the Author
Michael Grothaus is a novelist, journalist and author of non-fiction. His writing has appeared in Fast Company, VICE, Guardian, Litro Magazine, Irish Times, Screen, Quartz and others. His debut novel, Epiphany Jones, a story about sex trafficking among the Hollywood elite, was longlisted for the CWA John Creasey (New Blood) Dagger and named one of the 25 ‘Most Irresistible Hollywood Novels’ by Entertainment Weekly. His first non-fiction book, Trust No One: Inside the World of Deepfakes was published by Hodder & Stoughton in 2021. The book examines the human impact that artificially generated video will have on individuals and society in the years to come. Michael is American...
You can follow Michael here: Twitter | Website
Book link: Amazon UK
Than ks to Michael Gothaus Karen Sullivan and Anne Cater of Orenda Books for a copy of the book and a place on the tour.
Check out the rest of the tour!
Giveaway (UK only)
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Thanks for the blog tour support x
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