Error loading page.
Try refreshing the page. If that doesn't work, there may be a network issue, and you can use our self test page to see what's preventing the page from loading.
Learn more about possible network issues or contact support for more help.

The Night Market

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
"The book's tone is Chandleresque, the conspiracy worrying Carver and Jenner expands to Pynchonian proportions, and the physical ick they encounter might have oozed out of a Cronenberg movie."—Washington Post

"It's Miami Vice meets The Matrix, and George Orwell is hosting the party."—Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

It's late Thursday and Inspector Ross Carver is at a crime scene: a dead man covered in an unknown substance that's eating through his skin. Suddenly, six FBI agents burst in and haul Carver outside and into a disinfectant trailer, where he's shocked unconscious. On Sunday he wakes up in his own bed, his neighbor Mia—who he's barely spoken to—by his side. He can't remember the past three days. Mia says police officers brought him home and told her he'd been poisoned. Carver can't disprove her, but his gut says to keep her close.
A mind-bending, masterfully plotted thriller—"like Blade Runner if it were written by Charles de Lint or Neil Gaiman"*—The Night Market follows Carver as he works to find out what happened to him, soon realizing he's entangled in a massive web of conspiracy. And that Mia knows a lot more than she lets on.

"Mystery and thriller readers will find much to love here, but fans of science fiction also should embrace this incredible work."—Bookreporter

*Publishers Weekly, starred review
  • Creators

  • Publisher

  • Release date

  • Formats

  • Languages

  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from October 23, 2017
      Moore (The Dark Room) sets this outstanding SF noir in a near-future San Francisco, where ocean current changes have made the rain nearly continuous, electric cars prowl the streets, and disposable LED postcard ads seduce the citizenry. When SFPD Det. Ross Carver and his partner, Cleve Jenner, answer a late-night summons to an expensive home, they find something odd: a man’s body “that looked like gray moss. Like a carpet of it spread across a rot-shrunken log.” Hazmat-suited FBI agents take over the crime scene and send the two to a portable decontamination unit. Ross awakens in his bed days later with his mysterious neighbor, the beautiful Mia Westcott, attending to him. He has no memory of that night, only the sense that something is wrong and a lingering metallic scent to guide him. Moore smoothly fills Carver’s quest for the truth with equal parts hidden menace and outright strangeness. This mystery feels like Blade Runner as if it were written by Charles De Lint or Neil Gaiman. Agent: Alice Martell, Martell Agency.

    • Kirkus

      November 1, 2017
      A sharp and scary near-future thriller that delivers a dark message about society's love affair with technology.After being called to an upscale home, San Francisco Homicide Inspector Ross Carver and his partner find a horror show, a dead body that's been eaten away by something that's left it looking like "gray moss. Like a carpet of it spread across a rot-shrunken log." The cops are still getting their bearings when they're ushered out by the FBI, hustled into a disinfectant chamber, then rendered unconscious. Carver wakes to find his mysterious neighbor, Mia Westcott, by his bedside, but he can't remember the past two days. Mia seems oddly eager to help him investigate, but he can't quite trust her. A game of cat and mouse, punctuated with gruesome murder, ensues, revealing a far-reaching, reprehensible plot. Moore's subtly futuristic San Francisco, beset by the buzzing of drones, crumbling buildings, and gangs of copper thieves, sets the ugliness of the physically and morally decaying city against scenes of ostentatious and very conspicuous consumption. A shocking act of violence at a luxury store between rabid patrons and out-of-control police officers is an eye-opener, as is one of the few things, besides the smell of ozone, that Carver remembers from his missing days: the Fairmont Hotel "draped entirely in black fabric, the gauzy cloth tied in place with red silk ribbons that circled the building." There are no easy answers at the culmination of Moore's unsettling, stylish noir, the third in a loosely connected trilogy set in San Francisco (The Dark Room, 2017, etc.). Good thing Carver isn't the type to give in or give up. The not-quite-nihilistic yet still utterly shocking revelations in the third act are the stuff of nightmares.You'll never look at a flock of sparrows the same way again.

      COPYRIGHT(2017) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 28, 2018
      Moore’s unusual new novel is both a love story and a cyberpunk police procedural, read dramatically and with appealing sensitivity by actor Cronin. Set in a slightly futuristic San Francisco, it begins with detective Ross Carver and his partner Cleve Jenner being called to a horrific crime scene late at night and being confronted by cold and impersonal FBI agents in hazmat suits who force them into a decontamination shower. A few days later, Carver awakens in his apartment, where he is in the care of his neighbor, the beautiful Mia Westcott. He has no memory of the night he visited the crime scene or the days since; it turns out neither does Cleve. Cronin captures the detective’s mixture of groggy confusion over what happened to him and his curiosity about the mysterious Mia—he doesn’t quite trust her, but he wants to and hopes she can lead him to an explanation of his disturbing blackout. That she does, with considerable detection on his and Cleve’s part, but with the revelation comes the discovery of a massively malevolent plot. Cronin’s performance adds depth and dimension to Moore’s disturbing portrait of an honorable man and an empathic woman who take a stand against evil. A Houghton Mifflin Harcourt hardcover.

Formats

  • Kindle Book
  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB ebook

Languages

  • English

Loading