Fred Brounian and his twin brother, George,
were once co-CEOs of a burgeoning New York City software company
devoted to the creation of utopian virtual worlds. Now, in the summer of
2006, as two wars rage and the fifth anniversary of 9/11 approaches,
George has fallen into a coma, control of the company has been wrenched
away by a military contracting conglomerate, and Fred has moved back in
with his parents. Broke and alone, he’s led by an attractive woman,
Mira, into a neurological study promising to give him "peak" experiences
and a newfound spiritual outlook on life. As the study progresses,
lines between the subject and the experimenter blur, and reality becomes
increasingly porous. Meanwhile, Fred finds himself caught up in what
seems at first a cruel prank: a series of bizarre emails and texts that
purport to be from his comatose brother.
Moving between the research hospitals of Manhattan, the streets of a
meticulously planned Florida city, the neighborhoods of Brooklyn and the
uncanny, immersive worlds of urban disaster simulation; threading
through military listserv geek-speak, Hindu cosmology, the maxims of
outmoded self-help books and the latest neuroscientific breakthroughs, Luminarium
is a brilliant examination of the way we live now, a novel that’s as
much about the role technology and spirituality play in shaping our
reality as it is about the undying bond between brothers, and the
redemptive possibilities of love.
"Luminarium is dizzyingly smart and provocative, exploring as it does
the state of the present, of technology, of what is real and what is
ephemeral. But the thing that separates Luminarium from other books that
discuss avatars, virtual reality and the like is that Alex Shakar is
committed throughout with trying, relentlessly, to flat-out explain the
meaning of life. This book is funny, and soulful, and very sad, but so
intellectually invigorating that you'll want to read it twice." — Dave
Eggers
"This fascinating, hilarious novel, though set in the past, is the
story of the future: technology has outlapped us, reality is blinking on
and off like a bad wireless connection, the ones we love are nearby in
one sense, but far away in another. Yet at the book’s galloping heart,
it’s the story of what one man is willing to go through to find—in our
crowded, second-rate space—something like faith. This novel is sharp,
original, and full of energy—obviously the work of a brilliant mind.” —
Deb Olin Unferth, author of Revolution: The Year I Fell in Love and Went to Join the War