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THE DIMENSIONS OF A CAVE

Greg Jackson

A virtuoso journey into networks of power, our embroilment with new technologies, and the dangers of corruption, by an electrifying debut novelist.
When the investigative reporter Quentin Jones's story about covert military interrogation practices in the Desert War is buried, he is spurred to dig deeper, and he unravels a trail that leads to VIRTUE: cutting-edge technology that simulates reality during interrogation. As the shadowy labyrinths of governmental corruption unfurl and tighten around him, unnerving links to his protégé Bruce - who, like Joseph Conrad's Kurtz, disappeared into the war several years earlier - keep emerging. Greg Jackson's The Dimensions of a Cave is a virtuoso journey into networks of power, our embroilment with new technologies, and the dangers of corruption. It explores our drive toward war, violence, and venality, placing humanity and idealism under the spotlight. Greg Jackson is author of Prodigals: Stories, for which he received the National Book Foundation's 5 Under 35 award and the Bard Fiction Prize. In 2017, he was named one of Granta's Best Young American Novelists. His fiction and essays have appeared in The New Yorker, The New York Times, Granta, Tin House, Vice, Conjunctions, Virginia Quarterly Review, the Los Angeles Times, the Los Angeles Review of Books, and The Guardian, among other places.
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Published 2023-10-24 by Farrar, Straus and Giroux

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Greg Jackson, the author of an excellent short story collection, Prodigals, was listed as one of Granta's Best Young American Novelists in 2017, and yet it has taken until now for his debut - "a virtuoso journey into networks of power, our embroilment with new technologies, and the dangers of corruption" that "explores our drive toward war, violence, and venality, placing humanity and idealism under the spotlight" - to actually be published. I am anticipating that it will be worth the wait. Read more...

Greg Jackson is an athletically talented writer who packs so much into every single sentence and scene it almost scares me. His debut novel is somehow both a hardboiled thriller and a philosophical treatise with dialogues that would make Sorkin blush.

Greg Jackson's The Dimensions of a Cave is, sentence to sentence, a linguistic marvel, a genre-bending tale with moral and philosophical stakes as profound as they come.

Greg Jackson's prose is sly, wise, and almost self-consciously heroic, undaunted by the present moment, though it threatens to be our last.

The Dimensions of a Cave tells a very contemporary story... but it will still be read a century from now for the news it brings about the timeless riddle of the human self... This book seems as likely to last as anything I've read in years. It's increasingly rare these days to find a novelist with Greg Jackson's world-swallowing ambition, and rarer still for one to make good on that ambition as gloriously as Jackson does here.

Greg Jackson's first novel, after his terrific story collection, Prodigials, is an ambitious and challenging work about the lies that men and journalism and government tell about each other and themselves. If Bob Woodward were to find himself in a twenty-first-century Pynchon novel, this might well be the result.

"If this debut novel had a soundtrack, its theme song could be Bob Dylan's 'Ballad of a Thin Man,' and this would be the key line: 'You know something's happening but you know what it is / Do you, Mr. Jones?" Read more...

UK: Granta