The Windup Girl: Winner of Five Major SF Awards

· Hachette UK
4.3
92 reviews
Ebook
448
Pages

About this ebook

WINNER OF THE HUGO, NEBULA, LOCUS, JOHN W. CAMPBELL AND COMPTON CROOK AWARDS

The Windup Girl is the ground-breaking and visionary modern classic that swept the board for every major science fiction award it its year of publication.

Anderson Lake is a company man, AgriGen's calorie representative in Thailand. Under cover as a factory manager, he combs Bangkok's street markets in search of foodstuffs long thought to be extinct. There he meets the windup girl - the beautiful and enigmatic Emiko - now abandoned to the slums. She is one of the New People, bred to suit the whims of the rich. Engineered as slaves, soldiers and toys, they are the new underclass in a chilling near future where oil has run out, calorie companies dominate nations and bio-engineered plagues run rampant across the globe.

And as Lake becomes increasingly obsessed with Emiko, conspiracies breed in the heat and political tensions threaten to spiral out of control. Businessmen and ministry officials, wealthy foreigners and landless refugees all have their own agendas. But no one anticipates the devastating influence of the Windup Girl.

Discover the multi-award winning The Windup Girl: both a heart-stopping dystopian thriller and a razor-sharp vision of our near future.

'Bacigalupi is a worthy successor to William Gibson' Time Magazine

'An astounding novel' Interzone

'Not since William Gibson's pioneering cyberpunk classic, NEUROMANCER (1984), has a first novel excited science fiction readers as much' The Washington Post

'An exciting story about industrial espionage, civil war, and political struggle, filled with heart-thudding action sequences' Cory Doctorow

'Clearly one of the finest science fiction novels of the year' Publishers Weekly (starred review)

'It's ridiculous how good this book is' Techland

'Postmodern Bangkok springs to life in Bacigalupi's brilliant dystopian tale of culture clash, recalling the best of China Mieville and Neal Stephenson' Library Journal

'The pace of the book is fast and relentless. It is a dark vision . . . As a portrait of a world far from our own but not unrecognisably so, it is finely done' Times Literary Supplement

Ratings and reviews

4.3
92 reviews
M. Alan Kazlev
April 13, 2015
The first half is excellent; an ecologically ravaged post fossil fuel biotech world, with flawed but sympathetic sympathetic characters each with their own agendas. Then the writer seems to lose the plot; first a major character is killed but continues as a ghost in the head of his assistant, and towards the end the whole thing falls apart in an orgy of Hollywood explosions and dumbness.
1 person found this review helpful
Patrick Keogh
May 7, 2016
Very good writing. Manages to maintain the balance between today-and-future Thailand with the not-now-but-maybe-soon future with a gritty realism. This gritty realism is driven by the ability to depict real characters with real motivations in a changed world. Novelty in genetics, in cybernetics, in so many things but with a current day basis.
Brin Confer
September 17, 2015
A bit of a misnomer really, the windup girl, while throughout the plot was only a relatively small part of the story. A look at post genetic engineering holocaust from a small nation view point. A new look at Thailand for me. Definitely worth the read.

About the author

Paolo Bacigalupi is a multiple award-winning SF author whose debut THE WINDUP GIRL has been one of the most acclaimed novels in this area to appear in recent years. He also writes critically acclaimed, award-winning short stories in addition to novel length fiction. Paolo currently lives in Western Colorado with his wife and son,

Reading information

Smartphones and tablets
Install the Google Play Books app for Android and iPad/iPhone. It syncs automatically with your account and allows you to read online or offline wherever you are.
Laptops and computers
You can listen to audiobooks purchased on Google Play using your computer's web browser.
eReaders and other devices
To read on e-ink devices like Kobo eReaders, you'll need to download a file and transfer it to your device. Follow the detailed Help Center instructions to transfer the files to supported eReaders.