The Immortal King Rao: A Novel

· W. W. Norton & Company
3.6
10 reviews
Ebook
408
Pages
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About this ebook

Finalist for the 2023 Pulitzer Prize in Fiction
Nominated for the 2022 NBCC John Leonard Prize

Named a Best Book of the Year by NPR, Esquire, Vox, Philadelphia Inquirer, and Literary Hub

In an Indian village in the 1950s, a precocious child is born into a family of Dalit coconut farmers. King Rao will grow up to be the most accomplished tech CEO in the world and, eventually, the leader of a global, corporate-led government.

In a future in which the world is run by the Board of Corporations, King’s daughter, Athena, reckons with his legacy—literally, for he has given her access to his memories, among other questionable gifts.

With climate change raging, Athena has come to believe that saving the planet and its Shareholders will require a radical act of communion—and so she sets out to tell the truth to the world’s Shareholders, in entrancing sensory detail, about King’s childhood on a South Indian coconut plantation; his migration to the U.S. to study engineering in a world transformed by globalization; his marriage to the ambitious artist with whom he changed the world; and, ultimately, his invention, under self-exile, of the most ambitious creation of his life—Athena herself.

The Immortal King Rao, written by a former Wall Street Journal technology reporter, is a resonant debut novel obliterating the boundaries between literary and speculative fiction, the historic and the dystopian, confronting how we arrived at the age of technological capitalism and where our actions might take us next.

Ratings and reviews

3.6
10 reviews
Kyle Cortez
January 11, 2024
This teen fiction abandons even the most elementary level of plausibility by making virtually zero effort to incorporate any modern technical references. It's like someone wrote this without doing any research at all, and the reader is supposed to take the mechanics and applications vaguely & unimaginatively described with some type of magic. Also, the lack of emotional intelligence conveyed by these weakly developed characters makes the narrative far too predictable at every turn. This book was a waste of time that became more difficult to complete due to a lack of believability that actually evokes a sense of shame for having indulged this inexperienced novelists undertaking in bridging the gap between fantasy and reality.
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WraithFac3Dk3yholic86 Rottenrocker
June 30, 2023
Nice
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سرور رضایی
May 21, 2023
0/100000
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About the author

Vauhini Vara has been a journalist and editor for The New Yorker, The New York Times Magazine, and The Atlantic, and is the prize-winning author of The Immortal King Rao. She lives in Fort Collins, Colorado.

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