The book of Malachi

Tracey Farren

Book - 2020

"Malachi is a mute thirty-year-old man, performing mind-numbing factory work, when he gets an extraordinary job offer. In exchange for six months as a warden on a top-secret organ-farming project, Frasier Pharmaceuticals will gift Malachi the power of speech and graft him a new tongue, after his was cut out when he was a boy... Far out to sea on an oilrig, Malachi finds himself among warlords and mass murderers. But are the prisoner-donors as evil as Frasier says? Do they deserve their fate?"--Fantasticfiction.com.

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Subjects
Genres
Science fiction
Thrillers (Fiction)
Suspense fiction
Published
London : Titan Books 2020.
Language
English
Main Author
Tracey Farren (-)
Edition
First Titan edition
Physical Description
325 pages ; 20 cm
ISBN
9781789095197
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Farren's thought-provoking and disturbing debut follows tortured characters who find solace in each other. For 15 years, Malachi Dakwaa has been wracked with survivor's guilt and punishing himself both physically and emotionally for the deaths of his family and friends, who were murdered by the same guerrillas who cut out his tongue when he was 15 in South Africa. He accepts a job as a warden in a remote island prison for violent offenders in exchange for the promise of a new tongue from Frasier Pharmaceuticals, an American company that secretly runs the prison. The Frasier reps who hire Malachi believe his inability to speak and feigned illiteracy make him perfect for the job, imagining him to be unable to communicate with the prisoners. But Malachi is smart and compassionate, and when he learns the prison is being used as an organ farm, he realizes that Frasier is far more dangerous than the people locked up in the prison. The descriptions of Malachi's self-harm and the vile conditions of the prison are visceral and stomach churning, but glimmers of hope save the story from total darkness and, though the rules of this dystopian world remain murky, readers will find it easy to root for both Malachi and the prisoners he befriends as they struggle against their circumstances. This striking horror novel is not for the faint of heart. (Oct.)

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