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The Death of the Gods
The Death of the Gods
Oct 20, 2024 11:31 PM

Author:Carl Miller

The Death of the Gods

**Winner of the Transmission Prize 2019**

THE OLD GODS ARE DYING.

Giant corporations collapse overnight. Newspapers are being swallowed. Stock prices plummet with a tweet.

NEW IDOLS ARE RISING IN THEIR PLACE.

More crime now happens online than offline. Facebook has grown bigger than any state, bots battle elections, coders write policy, and algorithms shape our lives in more ways than we can imagine.

The Death of the Gods is an exploration of power in the digital age, and a journey in search of the new centres of control. From a cyber-crime raid in British suburbia to the engine rooms of Silicon Valley, pioneering technology researcher Carl Miller traces how power is being transformed, fought over, lost and won.

‘A timely and incisive book that grapples with some of the most significant issues of our time.’ Wired

'Uncovers the fascinating and often hidden characters that are changing the world. Essential reading.' Jamie Bartlett, author of The People vs Tech

‘A magisterial guide to the impact of the digital revolution on our institutions and our lives.’ Anthony Giddens

Reviews

A timely and incisive book that grapples with some of the most significant issues of our time. There will be countless volumes on "disruption" and "innovation" published this year, but Miller cuts through the noise and examines how the ascendancy of technology is fundamentally shifting economic models and the effect that this is having on society and individuals.

—— Greg Williams , Wired

The best sort of tech book: extensive field work, accessible, and ultimately about people rather than computers. The Death of the Gods uncovers the fascinating and often hidden characters that are changing the world. Essential reading if you want to know why the old rules don’t apply any more – and what might come next.

—— Jamie Bartlett, author of The People Versus Tech

There are plenty of books on the market exploring the the insidious impact of technology platforms on democracies, but Carl’s is one of the most gripping. He takes you on a journey through Silicon Valley’s rise to power, during which you meet hackers, cybercriminals, fake news factory owners, activists and psyops agents. It’s thrilling and terrifying in equal measure.

—— Olivia Solon

A whirlwind ride through huge forces shaping and disrupting the world. Miller encounters new elites and grassroots movements, state actors and companies as big as countries, nerds and visionaries, bad men and some pretty amazing women. Prepare to be terrified, exhilarated and occasionally inspired.

—— Catherine Mayer, author and co-founder of the Women's Equality Party

A highly readable and at times disturbing account of how in the digital age power over aspects of our everyday lives has shifted from long established to new and untried sources. Carl Miller deftly guides us through the darker recesses of the modern world to meet some of the new global demi-gods that now influence our lives in ways we need urgently to understand.

—— Professor Sir David Omand, former Director of GCHQ

A magisterial guide to the impact of the digital revolution on our institutions and our lives. Profound, yet packed with intriguing interviews and vignettes, this is a tour de force.

—— Anthony Giddens, Emeritus Professor at the Department of Sociology, LSE

Digital technologies are uprooting many long-held assumptions about how the world works, from politics and business to media and crime, forcing us to think again about the sources of power and the new ways it is being used. Carl Miller is the ideal guide to this strange new world.

—— Andrew Gamble, author of Between Europe and America and The Spectre at the Feast

Enthralling. Alarming. And the essential guide to the power map of the twenty-first century.

—— Liam Byrne MP

A series of horror stories that will pretty much convince you that your worst nightmares about the internet are well-founded. Here Miller's expertise is at its most effective... As Miller points out, the cascades of counter-narratives issued by Putin's cyber-goons are not meant to be believed, they are meant to destroy belief. Of course we are lying, is the real message, but everybody does. This is warfare and we need to recognise that.

—— Bryan Appleyard , Sunday Times

Highly readable... striking. Miller’s aim is not a new theory of power... the value of the book is in how its insights might trouble such theories and extend our understanding of the emerging intricacies. The question this poses is how theories of power might cope with the verve and dynamism of the shifting power base that Miller’s book deftly illuminates.

—— David Beer , Catholic Herald

The wisdom contained in this elegiac and intensely moving book doesn't need embellishing

—— Lady

It's not often you meet a mole-catcher, let alone read their story. Marc Hamer's uplifting writings shed some light on the velvety creatures burrowing beneath our countryside

—— National Geographic Traveller

[A] distinctive, quietly revelatory, book…a somewhat unlikely interplay of Hamer’s easeful poetry and observations with accounts of both the specialist life of moles and his own biography. Skilfully woven with eloquent simplicity, it offers a rich and sustained meditation on the task of apprehending the complex and delicate interconnectedness of life and land

—— Richard Greatrex , Church Times

A distinctive, quietly revelatory book... a rich and sustained meditation on the task of apprehending the complex and delicate interconnectedness of life and land. Its pages have much to teach us.

—— Church Times

A beguiling mixture of autobiography, practical handbook and philosophical treatise

—— Neil Armstrong and Hephzibah Anderson , Mail on Sunday, *Summer reads of 2019*

[A] wholly original book

—— Craig Brown , Mail on Sunday, *Books of the Year*

A double portrait: of the difficult, lonely, and intense domesticity of both moles and Hamer

—— New Yorker

Extraordinary... at once learned and readable, thrilling and beautifully written

—— Observer

Must read

—— Daily Mail

Medical science books are rarely as gripping as Unnatural Causes. It's grimly fascinating, and I suspect I'll read it at least twice.

—— Evening Standard

[A] rich literary canopy … Powers, one of a remarkable generation of polymathic American novelists including William T. Vollmann and the late David Foster Wallace, has produced a brilliant encyclopaedic [novel]A rich entanglement of discourses, disciplines, data, characters and styles, mirroring the most biodiverse ecosystem.

—— Times Literary Supplement

In his extraordinary 12th novel, Powers follows nine characters whose lives are bound up with the beauty, history, science, mythos and heedless destruction of trees … Passionately ecological in its themes, the novel doesn’t hammer at them. The green message becomes a natural element borne eloquently through the narrative.

—— Mail on Sunday

This eco-epic has affected me as no novel has for many years … The book brings to life the greatest problems of our time – climate change and biodiversity collapse – and gets under the skin in a way that just reading about the science doesn’t always manage … The structure of the book, meshing and connecting and interweaving, is explicitly and implicitly about ecology. But as rich and compelling as the human lives are, the trees are the stars. Powers conveys wonder about the natural world and an extraordinary depth of ecological insight: it’s this which makes the novel so powerfulThe Overstory has already been compared to Moby Dick. It is to trees what Herman Melville’s epic is to whales in that it changes our understanding of our relationship to a natural resource … The Overstory is a profound workThis is the first time I’ve read a novel that manages to celebrate and warn about the natural world in such a compelling and affecting way. It’s changed the way I look at trees, and I loved trees to begin with. We are being engulfed by an ecological crisis of our own making, which gives this book an urgency you should not resist.

—— New Scientist

A story about trees, nature and people, and the complicated relationships that hold the world together. Layered and intricate, it’s a wonderful epic … It’s a beautiful, brilliant and involving book, with a vital message at its heart.

—— Psychologies

Operatic … a novel devoted to “reviving that dead metaphor at the heart of the word bewilderment”.

—— Wall Street Journal

It can change the way you think about trees slightly, and it certainly did for me.

—— Jessie Burton, author of 'The Muse'

The Overstory is a visionary, accessible legend for the planet that owns us, its exaltation and its peril, a remarkable achievement by a great writer.

—— Thomas McGuane

This book is beyond special. Richard Powers manages to turn trees into vivid and engaging characters, something that indigenous people have done for eons but that modern literature has rarely if ever even attempted. It’s not just a completely absorbing, even overwhelming book; it’s a kind of breakthrough in the ways we think about and understand the world around us, at a moment when that is desperately needed.

—— Bill McKibben

A magnificent saga of lives aligned with the marvels of trees, the intricacy and bounty of forests, and their catastrophic destruction under the onslaught of humanity’s ever-increasing population … A virtuoso at parallel narratives ... gripping… Powers’ sylvan tour de force is alive with gorgeous descriptions; continually surprising, often heartbreaking characters; complex suspense; unflinching scrutiny of pain; celebration of creativity and connection; and informed and expressive awe over the planet’s life force and its countless and miraculous manifestations … [A] profound and symphonic novel.

—— Booklist (starred review)

Here is a big, brave, ambitious novel… The writing is breathtaking, the message is devastating. This book will fill you with wonder.

—— Saga Magazine

Formidably forks through time and place as it considers how best to care for our world.

—— i paper

An astonishingly rich book. Rich in ideas and imagination. Rich in drama, wisdom and truly illuminating facts about trees.

—— Caught by the River

There is a lot to learn from this novel.

—— The Skinny

Moby Dick for trees.

—— John Mullan

Alert to the large ideas and generous to the small ones; in an age of cramped autofictions and self-scrutinising miniatures, it blossoms.

—— Daily Telegraph

Brilliant at the futility of human action.

—— Sarah Crompton

A masterpiece of operatic proportions … What Powers means to explore is a sense of how we become who we are, individually and collectively, and our responsibility to the planet and to ourselves … A magnificent achievement: a novel that is, by turns, both optimistic and fatalistic, idealistic without being naïve.

—— Kirkus

His masterpiece.

—— Herald

You will careen through this book. The prose is driven. You don’t really get to draw breath … The writing is steel-edged, laser-sharp when Richard Powers wants it to be. When he sets out to nail meaning, it’s done. There are sentences you return to and wonder at.

—— Irish Times

This walk through the woods via words is a passionate paean to the natural world that prompts us to appreciate afresh our place on the planet.

—— i news

[I]t’s huge, it’s exciting, it’s wondrous … This really deserves to be read.

—— Bookmunch

The Overstory is a book you learn from.

—— Spectator

Dazzlingly written… Among the best novels I’ve read this decade… Despite its deep-time perspective, it could hardly be more of-the-moment

—— Robert Macfarlane , Guardian

A beautiful novel about humans reconnecting with nature in a fascinatingly, inventive world with colourful, rich characters, it will rekindle your love for nature

—— Asian Voice

An intriguing, powerful book

—— Maddy Prior , Daily Express

Absolutely blown away by this epic, heartbreaking novel about us and trees

—— Emma Donoghue

This extraordinary novel transformed my view of nature. Never again will I pass great tree without offering a quiet but heartfelt incantation of thanks, gratitude and wonder

—— Hannah Rothschild , Waitrose Weekend

A sweeping novel that skilfully intertwines many different stories of trees and people to create a paean to the hidden power and vital importance of the natural world

—— Country & Town House

Absorbing, thought-provoking and more than enough incentive to embrace your inner tree-hugger

—— Culture Whisper

The Overstory is filled with character and incident enough to engage anybody, but it's also filled with philosophy, science, poetry, and colour. It's a celebration of the world and humanity, but also tells of our coming doom. Perhaps above all it's a eulogy to trees. Eulogy is the right word because the novel celebrates the life, the beauty and wisdom of trees-but also their death. The novel also casts a cold-but loving-eye on humanity

—— Richard Smith , British Medical Journal

The Overstory has the mix of science and fiction that I so love; it widens my understanding and respect for the creatures who share this planet

—— KAREN JOY FOWLER

Stunning... It's been one of those rare books that has had a profound effect on me, and which has changed my perspective on life

—— Paul Ready , Yorkshire Post

Mind-boggling and visionary. The multi-stranded novel is a masterpiece in which science and poetry are deeply intertwined

—— Andrea Wulf, author of MAGNIFICENT REBELS , Guardian

A compelling read is that is near impossible to put down

—— Adoption Today

The Overstory is a prescient novel that urges us to take responsibility for our actions

—— Far Out

A masterpiece of storytelling at its very best. Powers weaves together science, poetry, nature and humanity so beautifully that it makes my heart ache and my mind fly

—— Andrea Wulf , Guardian

A wild and expansive novel, knitting together a glorious and diverse cast of characters, some of them human, some of them trees. I defy you not to be moved, and then angered about what we are doing to our planet and these glorious sentinels rooted upon it

—— Greg Wise , Week

My novel of the year was Richard Powers' masterpiece, The Overstory... it's a magnificent read

—— Mark Connors , Northern Soul, *Books of the Year*

The Overstory by Richard Powers is likely the most beautiful book ever written about people and trees

—— Andy Hunter , Spectator
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