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Zero K : A Novel

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    ¡°Mr. DeLillo¡¯s haunting new novel, Zero K - his most persuasive since his astonishing 1997 masterpiece, Underworld - is a kind of bookend to White Noise: somber and coolly futuristic, where that earlier book was satirical and darkly comic. . . . . All the themes that have animated Mr. DeLillo¡¯s novels over the years are threaded through Zero K - from the seduction of technology and mass media to the power of money and the fear of chaos. . . . like a chamber music piece. . . . reminds us of his almost Day-Glo powers as a writer and his understanding of the strange, contorted shapes that eternal human concerns (with mortality and time) can take in the new millennium.¡± (Michiko Kakutani, New York Times)

    "One of the most mysterious, emotionally moving and formally rewarding books of DeLillo's long carer... Unexpectedly touching... [DeLillo offers] consolation simply by enacting so well the mystery and awe of the real world... I finished it stunned and grateful." (Joshua Ferris, The New York Times Book Review)

    ¡°Brilliant and astonishing¡¦ a masterpiece¡¦ full of DeLillo's amazing inimitable scalpel perceptions, fluent in the ideas we'll be talking about 20 years from now¡¦ ZERO K somehow manages to renew DeLillo's longstanding obsessions while also striking deeply and swiftly at the reader's emotions¡¦.The effect is transcendent.¡± (Charles Finch, Chicago Tribune)

    ¡°Daring... provocative... exquisite... captures the swelling fears of our age.¡± (Ron Charles, Washington Post)

    ¡°Among many delights, Don DeLillo¡¯s extraordinary new novel offers a bracing revision of our certitude about death and taxes. . . . DeLillo has created a mysterious, funny, and profound book out of a cultural gag usually reliant on metal cylinders and dry ice. . . . ZERO K deserves to win old and new readers alike. It¡¯s a marvelous blend of DeLillo¡¯s enormous gifts. His bleak humor and edged insight, the alertness and vitality of his prose, the vast, poetic extrapolations are all evident. So is the visceral quickness and wit in the sentences. . . . This is one of the constant pleasures of a DeLillo novel, the talk, the shop talk, the comic talk, the cosmic talk, the way the characters feel language, its sonics, the moral and emotional pressures.¡± (Sam Lipsyte, BookForum)

    ¡°In this intriguing novel, Don DeLillo trains his intense and singular vision on a future where people with the imagination and resources to achieve it may succeed in rewriting [the necessity of death].¡± (Shelf Awareness)

    "Among DeLillo's finest work... DeLillo sneaks a heartbreaking story of a son attempting to reconnect with his father into his thought-provoking novel." (Publishers Weekly, starred review)

    "Lush in thought and feeling... Intently observant and obsessively concerned with language and meaning, Jeffery is a mesmerizing and disquieting narrator as he describes the ¡°eerie and disembodying¡± ambiance of the Convergence and its ritualized, morally murky amalgam of mysticism and science, from the ¡°post-mortem d?cor,¡± punctuated by unnerving sculptures and violent cinematic montages, to the sarcophagus-pods containing naked, cryopreserved voyagers to the unknown... DeLillo infuses the drama with metaphysical riddles: What of ourselves can actually be preserved? What will resurrection pilgrims experience in their cold limbo? With immortality reserved for the elite, what will become of the rest of humanity on our pillaged, bloodied, extinction-plagued planet? In this magnificently edgy and profoundly inquisitive tale, DeLillo reflects on what we remember and forget, what we treasure and destroy, and what we fail to do for each other and for life itself... DeLillo reaffirms his standing as one of the world¡¯s most significant writers." (Booklist, starred review)

    ¡°DeLillo homes in on what may be the ultimate-and deceptively simple-lesson of his novel, which is that in the end, the questions we ask about where death takes us are the same ones we ask about where life takes us.¡± (The Atlantic)

    ¡°Reveals itself as perhaps the author¡¯s most fully animated exploration of human feeling.¡± (Andrew Martin, Vice)

    Ã¥¼Ò°³

    A New York Times Notable Book

    A New York Times bestseller, ¡°DeLillo¡¯s haunting new novel, Zero K-his most persuasive since his astonishing 1997 masterpiece, Underworld¡± (The New York Times), is a meditation on death and an embrace of life.

    Jeffrey Lockhart¡¯s father, Ross, is a billionaire in his sixties, with a younger wife, Artis Martineau, whose health is failing. Ross is the primary investor in a remote and secret compound where death is exquisitely controlled and bodies are preserved until a future time when biomedical advances and new technologies can return them to a life of transcendent promise. Jeff joins Ross and Artis at the compound to say ¡°an uncertain farewell¡± to her as she surrenders her body.

    ¡°We are born without choosing to be. Should we have to die in the same manner? Isn¡¯t it a human glory to refuse to accept a certain fate?¡± These are the questions that haunt the novel and its memorable characters, and it is Ross Lockhart, most particularly, who feels a deep need to enter another dimension and awake to a new world. For his son, this is indefensible. Jeff, the book¡¯s narrator, is committed to living, to experiencing ¡°the mingled astonishments of our time, here, on earth.¡±

    Don DeLillo¡¯s ¡°daring¡¦provocative¡¦exquisite¡± (The Washington Post) new novel weighs the darkness of the world-terrorism, floods, fires, famine, plague-against the beauty and humanity of everyday life; love, awe, ¡°the intimate touch of earth and sun.¡±

    ¡°One of the most mysterious, emotionally moving, and rewarding books of DeLillo¡¯s long career¡± (The New York Times Book Review), Zero K is a glorious, soulful novel from one of the great writers of our time.

    ÀúÀÚ¼Ò°³

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