Reader Score
72%
72% of readers
recommend this book
In 1852, Adler and Adolf Beck's father died on an expedition to a glacier, and their lives separated. One became a respected climate scientist, one a successful opera singer touring the world. Or so he claimed. But both remained in touch, if only to share the mysterious voices only they could hear.
Charles Ramsey also has a twin. It is 2050, and Greg is a journalist reporting on the climate-change inspired conflicts around the world. When Charles is made redundant from his job as a profiler for the police and sent home with a new experimental chip in his head, he is urged by his brother to explore a little-known aspect of their family history.
All of these people are connected. All of their lives will intersect. And the climate of their world will keep on changing.
English Lit Prof, Writer & Reviewer. Current research project: @SocialHums. Blogs on SF & Fantasy. #PVFS 🏳️🌈🏳️⚧️ Nonbinary (they/them).
This is both my @BSFA review of Christopher Priest's Expect Me Tomorrow and an analysis of to what extend it fits @niallharrison's concept of the overshoot novel as recently set out in his excellent article 'In Search of Green Overshoots' @strangehorizons https://t.co/uv8t2Br40R
Locus Mag: Science Fiction, Fantasy, Horror Reviews, Interviews, News... @locusmag.bsky.social Support us at https://t.co/y6ujJtwEXu or https://t.co/x6WinUd5h9
@garykwolfe reviews EXPECT ME TOMORROW by Christopher Priest: “the novel’s emotional center lies in the intertwined stories of the Beck twins and the Ramsey twins.” https://t.co/saoWNkcET2
Gollancz is the SF, Fantasy & Horror list of @orionbooks. The British Book Awards Imprint of the Year 2021! 🏆
Brandon also notched up a third nomination for 'Book of the Year', alongside the legend that is Christopher Priest with EXPECT ME TOMORROW, which spans generations and stretches from a Victorian mystery to a near-future climate crisis. https://t.co/BMbPYdfc0a