Gods without men

383 pages

English language

Published July 15, 2011 by Hamish Hamilton.

ISBN:
978-0-241-14311-7
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OCLC Number:
752050828

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4 stars (7 reviews)

"2008. The California desert. A four-year-old austistic boy, Raj Matharu, disappears in the winderness plunging his wealthy New York parents in to the surreal public hell of a media witch-hunt. But the desert is inexplicable and miraculous, and the Matharus' fate is bound up with that of others: a debauched British rock star, on the run from a failed relationship and the sordid excesses of his life; a former member of an extraterrestrial-worshipping cult, now middle-aged but still haunted by transcendent callings; and a teenage Iraqi refugee, who befriends a young black Marine while playing the role of 'Iraqi villager' in a military simulation exercise. Their lives converge in an odd, remote town, near a rock formation called the Pinnacles -- and among the tanged echoes and stories of all those who have travelled before them through this brutally powerful landscape."--Back cover.

2 editions

Review of 'Gods without men' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

3 1/2 stars.

A kind of perplexing story that leaves you scratching your head. Many trails to follow, some in straight lines diminishing in the distance, some looping and connecting back to others. It's easy to become lost in the desert even if you think you are still on the trail. Everything looks the same, distances are unreliable. The mind wanders. Is this about time travel? Alien abduction? Indian folklore? Insanity? You tell me.

Review of 'Gods without men' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Engrossing novel, probably really 5 stars but I will have to think about it. The book is written across time with different characters (reminiscent of David Mitchell's Cloud Atlas and others, I think there is a name for this kind of fiction, but I can't think of it) all of whom have in common a single location in the desert (hence the book title, a fragment from Balzac's quote "In the desert, you see, there is everything and nothing....It is God without men.") The characters are all looking for something, the mystery of the world, something bigger than our lives, etc. The combination of the book being written as parts of a puzzle, when the characters are trying to assemble a puzzle, the characters being a large variety of searchers or pilgrims including several damaged war veterans, the use of American Indian mythology, and the maintenance of a persistent system …

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Subjects

  • Missing children
  • Fiction