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New Scientist recommends: Naomi Alderman’s sci-fi novel The Power

The books, TV, games and more that New Scientist staff have enjoyed this week
Daniela Vega (Sister Maria)
Daniela Vega is Sister Maria in The Power
Ludovic Robert/Amazon Prime Video

I have just finished the TV adaptation of Naomi Alderman’s science fiction novel (pictured above, on Amazon Prime Video), in which a biological quirk causes society to unravel. Young women begin generating electricity in a once-dormant organ, learning how to shoot sparks from their fingertips.

The global balance of power shifts overnight, as told through half a dozen parallel storylines set in different countries. We see revolution in the Middle East, near-biblical resurrection in the US and revenge in eastern Europe – with all the stories posing questions about the purpose and corrupting potential of physical power.

I am also nearing the end of Kazuo Ishiguro’s sci-fi novel . The setting appears to be an English private school in the 1990s, but in this alternate reality, mass human cloning is the norm. Everyday squabbles are interspersed with a dawning realisation of the twisted role the children will have to play as “donors”. Terrifying.

Thomas Lewton

Features editor

London

Topics: book / Culture / tv