
Michael Crichton meets Marvel's Venom in award-winning author Seth Dickinson's science fiction debut, named one of The New York Times' Best SFF Books of 2024.
"Agonizing and mesmerizing, a devastating and extraordinary achievement."--The New York Times "Magnificent. . . . A science fiction action juggernaut."--Tamsyn Muir "Anna, I came to Earth tracking a very old story, a story that goes back to the dawn of time. It's very unlikely that you'll die right now. It wouldn't be narratively complete." Anna Sinjari--refugee, survivor of genocide, disaffected office worker--has a close encounter that reveals universe-threatening stakes. Enter Ssrin, a many-headed serpent alien who is on the run from her own past. Ssrin and Anna are inexorably, dangerously drawn to each other, and their contact reveals universe-threatening stakes. While humanity reels from disaster, Anna must join a small team of civilians, soldiers, and scientists to investigate a mysterious broadcast and unknowable horror. If they can manage to face their own demons, they just might save the world.Most anticipated by Goodreads and LitHub
Praise for Exordia "Agonizing and mesmerizing, a devastating and extraordinary achievement."--The New York Times "Dickinson brings the same richness of characterization that made his Baru Cormorant series (The Traitor Baru Cormorant, 2015) so compelling, but this one reads like a Michael Crichton thriller on psychedelics--in a good way."--Booklist, starred review "Magnificent. . . . A science fiction action juggernaut."--Tamsyn Muir, New York Times and USA Today bestselling author of the Locked Tomb series "A white-knuckled brilliant up-all-night thriller. . . Like Michael Crichton, but if someone cut the brake lines."--Max Gladstone, co-author of the New York Times Bestselling This is How You Lose the Time War "Exordia is an avalanche: an inevitable, overwhelming, pell-mell landscape-scale transformation of a book. Dickinson uses science fiction as an ethical scalpel, and the results are breathtaking: viciously funny, vivid to the point of horror, and entirely profound."--Arkady Martine, Hugo Award-winning author of A Memory Called Empire "Beautiful, introspective, and unbelievably tense. It feels like being in a hospital waiting room in the best and worse sense, the suspended moment right before you find out what's going on."--Cassandra Khaw, USA Today bestselling author of Nothing But Blackened Teeth "A mind-shredding first-contact epic. . . . There are nukes, alien brain locks, intergalactic warfare and a scope that keeps expanding long after the stakes seem clear. This thrilling novel grips hardest when Dickinson's characters must reason through the science of seemingly impossible phenomena."--Scientific American