"Heartbreakingly beautiful...prose as rich and textured as the characters and society it describes. [Cameron Reed] combines William Gibson's dazzling talent for technological extrapolation with Theodore Sturgeon's unerring knowledge of the human heart." –Susan Palwick
"The voice of
The Fortunate Fall is by turns ironic and vulnerable, clear and strong." –Maureen McHugh, author of
China Mountain Zhang "Vibrant, sweet, and tragic,
The Fortunate Fall is a tailored virus that rewrote some of my code....Attempts impossible things and succeeds brilliantly."–Jonathan Lethem, author of
Gun, with Occasional Music "The best novel about wired culture since the SF debut of Neal Stephenson."–Lisa Goldstein
"Confrontations reminiscent to me of nothing so much as the 'Grand Inquisitor' sections of
The Brothers Karamazov... it isn't often that we find a book which tackles dead-on the central conflicts between personal and political life, not to mention the question of the nature of the soul. Complex, strong and ambitious."–Suzy McKee Charnas, author of
The Furies "If there's a better first novel published this year, I'll eat my hard drive."–Emma Bull
"As good as books get." –Jo Walton
"A stunningly imagined and developed backdrop ... an assured, noteworthy, auspicious debut." –
Kirkus "This highly literate, grim and gripping example of latter-day cyberpunk counts as one of the most promising SF debuts in recent years." –
Publishers Weekly,
Starred Review "'Warm and human even as it's post human, ' as Jo Walton observes in her introduction, Reed's remarkable debut skillfully blends mind-bending speculation with riveting intrigue, alluring romance and harrowing drama, set in a prescient de-souled future."–Library Journal,
Starred Review "One of the most brilliant sf debuts in years" –
Booklist