Beth lives alone on a desolate housing estate near the sea. She came here to rebuild her life following her husbandβs return from the war. His memories haunted him but a machine promised salvation. It could record memories, preserving a life that existed before the nightmares.
Now the machines are gone. The government declared them too controversial, the side-effects too harmful. But within Bethβs flat is an ever-whirring black box. She knows that memories can be put back, that she can rebuild her husband piece by piece.
A Frankenstein tale for the 21st century, The Machine is a story of the indelibility of memory, the human cost of science and the horrors of love.
Reviews
βThe Machine is the work of a young writer with a preternaturally powerful and distinctive voiceβ The Guardian
βPhenomenal β¦ simply unmissableβ Tor.com
βExtraordinaryβ Dazed & Confused
βReminiscent of Ian McEwan at his most macabreβ
Will Wiles, author of Care of Wooden Floors
‘Terrifying and moving’ Sam Byers, author of Idiopathy
βPart Twilight Zone, part Iain Banksβ Nikesh Shukla, author of Coconut Unlimited