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English
Miscellaneous
06 August 2024
A Most Anticipated Book for The New York Times, The Washington Post, Time, Goodreads, LitHub, and Book Riot

A Best Book of the Summer for Esquire, Electric Lit, and Town & Country

A People Book of the Week

From ""one of our most profound writers of speculative fiction"" (The New York Times),

this ""tense dystopian thriller"" (Time) and ""tender portrait of love and care in an uncertain world"" (Esquire) is an urgent and unflinching portrayal of a woman's fight for her family's security in a world shaped by global warming and rapid technological progress.

In a near-future world addled by climate change and inhabited by intelligent robots called ""hums,"" May loses her job to artificial intelligence. Desperate to resolve her family's debt and secure their future for another few months, she becomes a guinea pig in an experiment that alters her face so it cannot be recognized by surveillance.

Seeking reprieve from her recent hardships and her family's addiction to their devices, May splurges on passes for her family to spend three nights respite in the Botanical Garden: a rare green refuge where forests, streams, and animals still thrive. But when her children come under threat, May is forced to put her trust in a hum of uncertain motives to save her family.

Written with ""precision, insight, sensitivity, and compassion"" (Kirkus Reviews, starred review), Hum is a ""striking new work of dystopian fiction"" (Vogue) that delves into the complexities of marriage, motherhood, and selfhood in a world compromised by global warming and dizzying technological advancement, a world of both dystopian and utopian possibilities.
By:  
Imprint:   Miscellaneous
Dimensions:   Height: 213mm,  Width: 145mm,  Spine: 30mm
Weight:   363g
ISBN:   9781668008836
ISBN 10:   1668008831
Pages:   272
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Helen Phillips is the author of six books, including the novel The Need, a National Book Award nominee and a New York Times Notable Book. She is the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship and a Rona Jaffe Foundation Writers' Award. Her collection Some Possible Solutions received the John Gardner Fiction Book Award. Her novel The Beautiful Bureaucrat was a finalist for the New York Public Library's Young Lions Fiction Award and the Los Angeles Times Book Prize. A professor at Brooklyn College, she lives in Brooklyn with artist/cartoonist Adam Douglas Thompson and their children.

Reviews for Hum

"""Hum is a prescient, unnerving and excellent novel of a future that seems frighteningly possible. It's the story, in part, of a mother just trying to make her family happy and how the world punishes her for it. Helen Phillips writes with sharp insight and sly humor, making her critique of our current moment feel timely and timeless."" --Victor LaValle, author of Lone Women ""What's more intoxicating than a Helen Phillips novel? Her books have blown open the doors of what's possible with the art of storytelling--and her latest, Hum, is her best work yet: one that captures, with fire and grace, our future and what it means to love, to persist, and to be human. This is a hold-your-breath book. Buckle up and get ready to deeply feel the joy--the thrill, the magic--of reading."" --Paul Yoon, author of The Hive and the Honey ""A transcendent portrayal of artificial intelligence, love, the fate of families, and the emergence of synthetic beings beyond human imagination."" --Clifford A. Pickover, author of Artificial Intelligence: An Illustrated History ""There's a lot going on in this novel, but trust Helen Phillips to navigate it effortlessly.... It's Anxiety Central, but in a good way."" --Literary Hub, ""Most Anticipated Books of 2024"" ""An indelible family portrait and a narrative tour de force, Hum generates almost unbearable tension and unease from start to end. Stunning, strangely beautiful, and written from a place of deep compassion but also a clear and analytical eye. Helen Phillips, in typical bravura fashion, has found a way to make visible uncomfortable truths about our present by interrogating the near-future. I loved it."" --Jeff VanderMeer, New York Times-bestselling author of Hummingbird Salamander PRAISE FOR THE NEED BY HELEN PHILLIPS LONGLISTED FOR THE NATIONAL BOOK AWARD IN FICTION ""Like parenthood itself, The Need is frightening and maddening and full of dark comedy...Phillips, as careful with language as she is bold with structure, captures many small sharp truths. She is very good on drudgery and tiredness and marital resentment... With forensic precision Phillips identifies the price a parent will pay for tuning out just for a second, because that will certainly be the second when someone rolls off the bed or gets a finger trapped in the door...Everyday life, here, is both tedious and fascinating, grotesque and lovely, familiar and tremendously strange."" --NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW (EDITORS' CHOICE) ""Brilliant...It's not hard to see why high-wattage contemporaries like Lauren Groff and Emily St. John Mandel have lavished praise...a sort of narrative nesting doll, a story infused with both essential home truths and a wild, almost unhinged sense of unreality....What Helen Phillips (The Beautiful Bureaucrat) builds from the first paragraphs is too clever, and moves too quickly, to be easily ground down in a review. Even the vaguely unfinished ending, less a full stop than a sort of pregnant pause, feels somehow right; a fitting coda to her spare, eerie marvel of novel, both beautifully familiar and profoundly strange. (A-)""--ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY ""If the challenges of parenting young children have ever driven you to the brink, you'll recognize what's happening to Molly Nye--for about 10 pages. This fever dream of a novel starts like a thriller (someone's in the living room), morphs into speculative sci-fi (the intruder is from a separate universe) and ends up like nothing you've ever read before. In a good way.""--PEOPLE ""Molly's struggle to remain her full self while giving so much of herself away is electrifying...Mothers will recognize so much in this fresh novel -- but they aren't the only ones who should read it. Phillips has found a way to make these experiences universal, acknowledging the importance of the other -- the creature without whom none of us would exist.""--WASHINGTON POST ""A taut thriller...Between chills, readers will notice the pleasures of Phillips's prose. Her style combines the sensibility of a poet with the forward drive of a thriller...Phillips's crystalline style vividly evokes her characters. She draws them so precisely that before we know it, we're deep inside their lives...[A] bewitching, fiercely original novel.""--BOSTON GLOBE ""Hyponotically eerie...An ode to motherhood and a nightmarish rendering of its 'pleasures' and pains...Phillips structures her astonishing fifth book in edge-of-your-seat mini-chapters that infuse domesticity with a horror-movie level of foreboding, reminding us that the maternal instinct is indeed a primal one."" --LEIGH HABER, O MAGAZINE ""The Need is a taut, thrilling rendering of motherhood at its most psychologically terrifying.""--VANITY FAIR"


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