Synopses & Reviews
Proclaimed "a gifted storyteller" by The New Yorker and "a huge literary talent" by Kazuo Ishiguro, Alex Garland, the internationally bestselling author of The Beach, The Tesseract, and writer of the critically acclaimed film 28 Days Later, returns with yet another gripping page-turner that blurs the edges of reality and probes the boundaries of consciousness. A man is attacked on the Underground and awakens to find himself in a hospital, apparently having emerged from a coma. Or has he? Garland's brilliant tale is illustrated with forty haunting woodblock print illustrations by his father, Nicholas Garland, a well-known political cartoonist for the Daily Telegraph (UK) and noted artist.
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"Much like a dream itself: a novel that eludes definition, makes little sense, and is quickly erased from memory." Kirkus Reviews
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"Alex Garland is a natural born storyteller." Washington Post
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"Alex Garland...has a clear, engaging storytelling style and a vivid imagination." The New York Times Book Review
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"Thanks to Garland's lucid prose, the book is perfectly readable, but it is ultimately static and unsatisfying as a story and disappointingly slight as a metaphysical meditation." Michiko Katutani, The New York Times
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"[A] brief but unputdownable summer read....[A] dark and sometimes terrifying story that derives its somber beauty from the directness and precision of Garland's writing." Scott Lamb, Salon.com
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"[The Coma] is a novel of ideas, focused, emotionally chaste, and produced for the most part in a tone spare to the point of anality. This leads to a curious effect, a terse simplicity rather frightening in the world of padded-up books, which makes the reader want to look away, as if from some public action too transparent, too human. Wait a minute, you want to say: narrative is usually more dissembled than this; and at its best such simplicity suggests a direction all narrative might explore. At its worst, we get the sense that Garland has not only worked himself into a box, but he wants the reader in there with him." M. John Harrison, The Times Literary Supplement (read the entire Times Literary Supplement review)
Synopsis
After being attacked on the Underground, Carl awakens from a coma to a life that seems strange and unfamiliar. He arrives at his friends' house without knowing how he got there. Nor do they. He seems to be having an affair with his secretary which is exciting, but unlikely. Further unsettled by leaps in logic and time, Carl wonders if he's actually reacting to the outside world, or if he's terribly mistaken. So begins a psychological adventure that stretches the boundaries of conciousness.
About the Author
Alex Garland was born in London, England, in 1970, where he still lives, to a highly respected family. His father, Nicholas Garland, is a well-known political cartoonist and artist, his mother is a prominent psychotherapist, and his grandfather was a Nobel-prize winning biologist. In 1987 he went to India on a six week trip to Kashmir and Ladahk. After leaving school, he spent six months in Southeast Asia, and he has returned every year since, most frequently to the Philippines.
In 1992, Garland received a B.A. in History of Art at Manchester University in England. He occasionally works as an illustrator and freelance journalist. He started writing fiction not out of compulsion, but as an anxious response to the careers that his friends were carving out for themselves.
Garland is the author of the bestselling generational classic The Beach, winner of the Betty Trask Award, and of The Tesseract, a national bestseller and New York Times Notable Book. He also wrote the original screenplay of the recent critically acclaimed film 28 Days Later, directed by Danny Boyle.