Ian Green is a writer from Northern Scotland with a PhD in epigenetics. His fiction has been widely broadcast and performed, including winning the BBC Radio 4 Opening Lines competition and winning the Futurebook Future Fiction Prize. His short fiction has been published by Londnr, Almond Press, OpenPen, Meanjin, Transportation Press, The Pigeonhole, No Alibi Press, Minor Lits, and more.
"A radical, explosive story full of wild hope and venomous rage. Its near future apocalypse is not just prescient and subversive, but full of life, love and thrill in a way that makes it only breaths away from the world we are now. Its voice is challenging, unrelenting, and veering between heartbreak and humour. I feel like this book was written for me, specifically, but I know it’s for us. All of us. With its queer community, found family, the dilemmas of resistance and the agony of survival, Extremophile was a song to my soul and a punch in the gut. Read it. -- Hannah Kaner Absolute dirty-nailed cutting-edge biopunk. A world you can taste like a film of grime on the tongue. Phenomenally imaginative. -- Adrian Tchaikovsky A thrilling ride, full of invention and excitement -- Josie Long An electric charge of anger animates this gripping novel * The Guardian * Vivid, visceral and utterly compelling, Extremophile blasts new life into the cyberpunk genre. A heady mash-up of biology, punk, art, activism, hackers, murky morality and ultimately, hope, it had me hooked from the first page to the last. -- Stark Holborn An impassioned, compulsive riot. Imagine an upstart William Gibson setting a thriller amid the punk parties, bio-hack labs and liminal spaces of near-future London. -- Jamie Collinson Extremophile is a pure shot of literary adrenaline - achingly smart, gritty, funny and a hell of a lot of fun. Green’s background in genetic research elevates his portrait of a biohacking-addicted near-future London into a compelling and deeply plausible experience. Viscerally dark but full of hope, with characters who stay with you long after the last page, it’s an explosive joyride through our wildest impulses and darkest fears. Cyberpunk brought thrillingly up to date - absolutely brilliant. -- Molly Flatt A fast-paced action story full of violence, humour and smarts, Extremophile is also about grief, loss, hope and the climate catastrophe. Cyberpunk may be old hat, but BIOPUNX NOT DEAD! ... A cracking, action-packed slice of near future SF full of bio-hacking, punk rock and an overheating London. It also has much more depth and heart than you might imagine from that description. -- Will Ashon A Gonzoid view of the future-present through a kaleidscopic shot glass Extremophile rewrites the source code of cyberpunk to reveal the next revolution in hacked-up lines of DNA to preach a new gospel of hyper-evolution and day-glo ultraviolence. A keen music fan, Ian Green takes the reader through the subterranean world(s) of alternative sounds and scientific ambition beneath everyday civilisation, to reveal the splintering subcultures of a society at war with itself; where the anthropocene comes full circle to meet with its technological fallout as shards of received text and racing monologues cut across a thrilling narrative of conspiracy and rebellion. -- Adam Steiner, author of SILHOUETTES AND SHADOWS A near-future sci-fi adventure filled with fresh ideas and unique characters--I loved it! Biohackers. Eco-terrorists and a unique dystopian setting. Fans of climate fiction and cyberpunk will be up late turning the pages. Sign me up. -- A. G. Riddle Green's background in epigenetics lends weight and authenticity to the science... Glimmers of hope shine here amid the noirish gloom * Financial Times * With its clever, white-knuckle plot rooted in real science, this near-future ""biopunk"" thriller is a must read * Sunday Post * Green has written a visceral, doesn't-give-a-damn biopunk thriller that treats the ""punk"" part of that subgenre not as mere window-dressing but as an antifascist shriek against the injustices of a world ruled by malignant corporations and their pet governments * Interzone * A riot of a book, driving into the darker and forgotten areas of the Cyberpunk genre * SF Book Reviews * Convincing when it describes day-to-day, nitty-gritty urban extremes * SFX *"