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223 pages, Paperback
First published February 2, 2022
Enzi, a child of immigrants from some unnamed country, is a dyslexic stutterer. After his mom dies of cancer and his alcoholic dad loses his job, Enzi is taken out of his dad’s custody. He runs away at the age of fourteen and begins life as a drifter. Along his journeys, he frequents libraries, where he discovers a passion for maths and coding.
A few years later (we never know the exact timeline), Enzi is a self-taught programmer and has his own software business with a fellow coder named O’Neill. A big company named SLAM purchases their business and recruits them both as high-end executives. Enzi soon ends up doing some illegal work for a person named Tsai, who has his own secret financial agenda for hacking into SLAM’s databases and networks.
While all the above events unfurl, Enzi also meets a Japanese immigrant artist named Kaori, who, while still pining for “the lover of her life”- a guy named Jim, forms a bond with Enzi.
The plot basically involves Enzi’s sorting out whatever mess the others mentioned above make.
The story comes to us from the first person perspective of Enzi.
Every permanently successful writer had possessed this philosophy. It was a view peculiarly his own. It was a yardstick by which he measured all things which came to his notice. By it he focused the characters he drew, the thoughts he uttered. Because of it his work was sane, normal, and fresh. It was something new, something the world wished to hear. It was his, and not a garbled mouthing of things the world had already heard.