Nils Müller liest reviewed Maxwell's Demon by Steven Hall
Podcast-Rezension
5 stars
Ausführliche Rezension bei Weltenflüstern: weltenfluestern.de/63
Steven Hall: Maxwell's Demon (2020, Canongate Books)
304 pages
English language
Published Dec. 19, 2020 by Canongate Books.
Ausführliche Rezension bei Weltenflüstern: weltenfluestern.de/63
Review copy provided by publisher On the outside, Maxwell’s Demon sounds like a straightforward mystery, but those who read The Raw Shark Texts will know it’s anything but. The title is a clue; Maxwell’s demon is a thought experiment on how entropy (in regards to thermal dynamics) might be violated. The novel returns again and again to the theme of entropy, both the physics definition and that of disorder.
I liked how entropy is introduced in the idea of a messy kitchen. The kitchen wants to be messy, the odds of it being tidy are miniscule, only one thing needs to be out of order for it to be messy. And the rules of entropy means it will only get messier unless something intervenes.
Quinn refers to a novel as a closed system, one where entropy does not exist. The story does not decay, it can be read over and …
Review copy provided by publisher On the outside, Maxwell’s Demon sounds like a straightforward mystery, but those who read The Raw Shark Texts will know it’s anything but. The title is a clue; Maxwell’s demon is a thought experiment on how entropy (in regards to thermal dynamics) might be violated. The novel returns again and again to the theme of entropy, both the physics definition and that of disorder.
I liked how entropy is introduced in the idea of a messy kitchen. The kitchen wants to be messy, the odds of it being tidy are miniscule, only one thing needs to be out of order for it to be messy. And the rules of entropy means it will only get messier unless something intervenes.
Quinn refers to a novel as a closed system, one where entropy does not exist. The story does not decay, it can be read over and over and will remain the same. Andrew Black fell out with his publisher over the subject of ebooks. He feared that ebooks would cause the unravelling of reality. His fears over ebooks echo those who objected to Gutenberg’s printing press…and I think Gutenberg’s Bible must have been an inspiration for this book.
It does go on a Biblical tangent but I wouldn’t worry if you’re not religious, just bear in mind that Gutenberg Bible. When they feared the press would change history, there were already different versions of the “Word of God”, and something in Maxwell’s Demon hinges on that. The stories we know today as canon weren’t always canon.
Maybe Andrew Black had reason to fear the digitised word, in this world of fake news, clickbait and bots we now live in. Reality has just about managed to survive 2020.
There is a lot about being a writer in this book too. Quinn published one original novel before going on to take jobs writing for licensed franchises, something he is not snobbish about. Maybe Quinn is slightly autobiographical (at least until now). Quinn’s father was a successful writer, and Andrew Black was a genius who his father treated like another son. He can’t live up to that, and the world is desperately waiting for another novel from Black.
This book is both a mystery story and an exploration of words, stories and reality. As with The Raw Shark Texts some text is formatted in shapes, leaves that fall from Quinn’s world into the book. They serve as footnotes, perhaps clues as to what’s going on. I found it took quite a lot of concentration to read in the earlier chapters but soon I was gripped, I needed to know if reality was indeed falling apart.