Recursion : a novel / Blake Crouch.
Publication details: London : Macmillan, an imprint of Pan Macmillan, 2019.Description: 329 pages ; 24 cmISBN:- 9781509866663 (paperback)
- New York (State) -- New York
- Police -- Fiction
- Neurosciences -- Fiction
- Suicide
- Police
- Neurosciences
- Memory
- Epidemics
- Neuroscientists -- Fiction
- Police -- New York (State) -- New York -- Fiction
- Memory -- Fiction
- Epidemics -- Fiction
- Suicide -- Fiction
- New York (N.Y.) -- Fiction
- New York (State) -- New York
- 813.6 23
- PS3603.R68 R43 2019
Item type | Home library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item reserves | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book | Melbourne Athenaeum Library | Fiction - Crime | CRO | Available | 070189 |
"You remember it all. But these memories belong to someone else..."--Cover.
First published in the US 2019 by Crown, an imprint of The Crown Publishing Group, a division of Penguin Random House, New York.
"My son has been erased." Those are the last words the woman tells Barry Sutton, before she leaps from the Manhattan rooftop. Deeply unnerved, Barry begins to investigate her death, only to learn that this wasn't an isolated case. All across the country, people are waking up to lives different than the ones they fell asleep to. Are they suffering from False Memory Syndrome, a mysterious, new disease that afflicts people with vivid memories of a life they never lived? Or is something far more sinister behind the fracturing of reality all around him? Miles away, neuroscientist Helena Smith is developing a technology that allows us to preserve our most intense memories, and relive them. If she succeeds, anyone will be able to re-experience a first kiss, the birth of a child, the final moment with a dying parent. Barry's search for the truth leads him on an impossible, astonishing journey, as he discovers that Helena's work has yielded a terrifying gift - the ability not just to preserve memories, but to remake them... at the risk of destroying what it means to be human.