<b>Stunningly impressive</b><b> </b>...it is wonderful - maybe my top read of the year so far: disturbing, clever, beautifully written and, like all the best dystopias, it makes me even more grateful for the world I live in now
New Scientist
<b>An impressive debut. </b>Foster is a writer of imaginative daring and narrative dexterity
- Jeffrey Eugenides,
<i><b>Circular Motion</b></i><b> is a gift:</b> every paragraph offers something to make you think, laugh, feel or simply look up from the page and sigh in awe or recognition.
- Jonathan Safran Foer,
I'm a sucker for doomsday novels, but <i>Circular Motion</i> sucker-punched me right in the heart. <b>Brilliantly written and utterly absorbing</b>. Who needs gravity when Alex Foster keeps you absolutely grounded in his prose
- Gary Shteyngart,
A deep investigation of how time is valued in contemporary society, while also being <b>a deftly plotted page-turner</b>. I read it in just a couple of sittings; time flew
- Vauhini Vara, Pulitzer Prize finalist for THE IMMORTAL KING RAO,
The acceleration of Earth's spin begins gradually. At first, days are just a few seconds shorter than normal. Awareness of the mysterious phenomenon hasn't reached Tanner, a young man who flees his Alaskan hometown to work at CWC, a corporation which runs a network of massive aircraft that orbit the Earth, allowing people to visit Paris for an evening or order sushi from Japan. But a wave of social unrest presents challenges for CWC.
That unrest sweeps up Winnie. A high school outcast, she falls in with a group of teen activists who blame the company for the planet's acceleration. As days on Earth quicken to twenty-three hours, then twenty, the sun rising and setting ever faster, causing violent storms and political meltdowns, Tanner and Winnie's stories spiral closer together.
Three-hour days. Two-hour days . . .
A propulsive exploration of capitalism, technology, and our place within a system that dwarfs us, Circular Motion is one of the most ingenious debut novels of our time.