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Shaman or shamus? Atom is the detective who harasses anyone who comes near him. But even he wants to get to the bottom of what happened the night the City Brain Facility blew up. Blince, Benny, mobster Eddie Thermidor and the other denizens of Beerlight wonder what the hell he’s doing. Bugs, brain-stealing and inevitable thermonuclear disaster are given due consideration in this close-wired novel. There's no such thing as a normal angel - it's never done that way. ‘A jaw-droppingly dark and funny work’ – The Guardian‘Vivid, visceral and very, very good’ – The Face'If Raymond Chandler had gulped a handful of hallucinogens before sitting down to write a whodunit, something like Atom would likely have resulted' - Washington Post‘As on the button as tomorrow's news. This is toon-noir. He has a cold, accurate eye, a mocking wit and black, playful angle of attack which has learned something from cyberpunk but has that smack of idiosyncracy, that sense of exploring new territories, that laconic, confident humour which tells you this is exactly the book you've been waiting for.’ - Michael Moorcock‘A fabulous read; pacy, vivacious and brimming with a love of the formula’ – SFX ‘Laugh-out-loud funny. Eccentrically stylish’ – Starburst‘A kick in the frontal lobe, a sucker punch to the soul. Nothing short of spectacular.’ – sfsite.com‘Gloriously deranged. Sparkling prose. Viciously funny, furiously intelligent and totally uncompromising.’ – Waterstones ‘Enigma’ magazine

112 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 1, 2000

3 people are currently reading
140 people want to read

About the author

Steve Aylett

47 books158 followers
Steve Aylett is a satirical science fiction and weird slipstream author of books such as LINT, The Book Lovers and Slaughtermatic, and comics including Hyperthick. He is known for his colourful satire attacking the manipulations of authority. Aylett is synaesthetic. He lives in Scotland.

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5 stars
43 (25%)
4 stars
53 (31%)
3 stars
43 (25%)
2 stars
19 (11%)
1 star
11 (6%)
Displaying 1 - 17 of 17 reviews
Profile Image for 🐴 🍖.
490 reviews39 followers
Read
November 18, 2025
boris vian stretched in an even more tex avery direction, albeit sometimes @ the expense of lucidity
Profile Image for Scott.
11 reviews9 followers
July 10, 2009
In a fit of pique, I reread Steve Aylett's Atom last night, and was reminded of how much I love this book.

'Are you familiar sir, with the author Franz Kafka?'

'Sure. Greatest black author ever lived.'

'He wasn't black sir.'

'He probably is by now.'

'No matter - as I need scarcely remind you, Kafka was of a most singular personality. Why, he'd think nothing of riding on a hound, or sticking wax lips on his eyeglasses. Seeing the world for what it was, he passed the time by whining with artful care, and an attention to detail which could oxidise completely the face of a lying optimist. He would moan, sir, to a standard unimagined by the canker poets.
No amount of fashion and falsehood could conceal man's futility from his eyes. Even before the nearest war, mankind was an experiment repeated long past its demonstrable validity. It was without comfort, use or protection; mean, tarnished, and afraid. Like all who have sung such facts, he died denied and bleeding from the lungs.
Are you with me so far?'
Profile Image for Paul Dembina.
694 reviews163 followers
December 30, 2019
Bloomin annoying book. A Science Fiction Gumshoe detective "noir" which way over does the whole wise cracking shtick, adds in so many my head span and touches of surrealism that reminded me of another author I have an aversion to - Mark Leyner.
Profile Image for Runed Platypus.
109 reviews
December 4, 2019
Чуть более понятная версия "Кровь электрическая" в жанре нуар. Есть много интересных метафор.
Profile Image for Rick.
Author 9 books54 followers
October 22, 2007
Describing Steve Aylett’s wild ride Atom is a lot like holding water in your hands. The thought stays with you for a mere moment until it just runs through your fingers. You remember the experience vividly, but are unable to accurately explain the sensation.

Three figures emerged from Atom’s brownstone. A cloaked cadaver cradling its gored face, followed by a naked Atom and the fat gent carrying a fishtank between them. In the tank’s gloom rocked a giant mouth with a tail.

Atom is Taffy Atom, private detective (or private defective as he is referred to early on). His partner is Madison “Maddy” Drowner, weapons designer (Creator of such unique weapons as the Syndication bomb, which strips the pretext out of everything.) and best friend Jed Helms, an intelligent piranha. With even stranger villains, Aylett’s world is Dick Tracy on acid. Like a runaway Maltese Falcon, the plot defies description. With only glimpses and moments of what we know and how it should be, it all somehow makes sense.

It is a testament to Aylett’s skill that he keeps the reader’s rapt attention throughout. His sense of humor is dead on, with several passages demanding to be read aloud. His timing is exemplary, and Aylett knows when to give the reader a breather. With all the excitement and laughter, I loathed for the adventure to end. Luckily for me (and other readers), the climax is oddly satisfying.

"Ladies and gentleman," said Atom, "if you'll indulge me. I have assigned a musical note to every grade of human lie. Here's my rendition of the President's inaugural address." And he took out a clarinet.

Aylett maintains the insanity right up until the last page playing a game of psychic chicken and refusing to swerve. Atom takes you on a wild ride far afield of ordinary fiction (SF or not), and it’s a ride not soon forgotten.
Profile Image for Tuuli Tammenkoski.
259 reviews1 follower
September 13, 2024
Tervetuloa Beerlightiin, kaikenlaisten gangstereiden ja hämärähemmojen kaupunkiin, jossa presidentillä on skandalööseja suhteita minkä milloinkin merenelävän kanssa, kuolemaantuomitut muistavat ennen sähkötuoliin istumista lähettää kiitokset niin kaupallisille yhteistyötahoille kun rakastajilleen, ja jossa aivan kaikki on kaupan. Beerlightin eniten juoruiltu yksityisetsivä, tai -estävä Taffy Atomi alkaa Aivoviraston räjähdyksen jälkeen selvitellä minne Tony Curtisin aivot ovat kadonneet, apureinaan kiukkuinen tappajakala Jed ja huippuluokan asesuunnittelija Madison.

Aylettin teksti on näennäisen sekavaa, nopeatempoista ja hurjaa kyytiä eteenpäin syöksyvää, mutta tarkkaan harkittua ja kaikesta turhasta karsittua. Vauhti on kova, ja lukiessa saa usein palata takaisin ja miettiä, että mitä tässä nyt juuri onkaan meneillään.

Tarinankerronta on ääri-ironista, absurdia ja totaalisen omalaatuista. Missään ei ole järkeä ja kaikki mahdotonkin on mahdollista, jopa todennäköistä. Ja kun lakkaa yrittämästä etsiä minkäänlaista punaista lankaa ja hyväksyy täydellisen mayhemin, muuttuu kirja hyvinkin, no ei helppotajuiseksi, mutta omalla tavallaan selkeäksi ja tosi valloittavaksi ja mukaansatempaavaksi.

Meno on alusta loppuun hyvin, hyvin happoisaa, eikä hellitä hetkeksikään. Tätä on vaikea kuvailla, ja vielä vaikeampaa yrittää selittää mitä tässä oikein tapahtuu ja kuka ja miksi ja häh.

Vaativa, kaoottinen ja täysin naurettava lukukokemus. Tykkäsin!
Profile Image for Anthony Faber.
1,579 reviews4 followers
January 1, 2019
Another book in the same millieu as "Slaughtermatic". It didn't grab me as much, whether because the writing and/or plot weren't as good, or just because his style gets old, I don't know. Still a decent read.
Profile Image for Shane.
1,397 reviews22 followers
July 18, 2015
Aylett proved he was a genius in Bigot Hall and I also enjoyed Slaughtermatic but this one was kinda dragged on for me. There are definitely plenty of amazing/hilarious lines but I lost the plot somewhere around page 12 and never got it back. There were a lot of characters and that didn't help. It was strange in the end it seemed like they were all in the same scene but I'm not sure how or why.

Anyway if you're into insanity, clever writing and nebulous plots, this is a fun noir romp.
Profile Image for Robert.
669 reviews10 followers
November 5, 2010
I can't read avant-garde fiction quickly. But, Atom is pretty fun. I am reminded of Dick Tracy, the Movie, if made by David Lynch. There is definite and clearly plotted story here, unlike what I found in Mark Leyner's "My Cousin, My Gastroenterologist" (although Leyner made me laugh until I had to put the book down.)
Atom is an acid trip detective story. At times I felt the avant-garde-ness was getting in the way. I'll probably reread this and find one more by Aylett.

Recommended, very short to try.
Profile Image for Ari.
27 reviews
May 5, 2015
This book was brilliant, a real surprise. I thought it would be sci-fi, but in fact it was more like a detective story on acid. And even though it was a novel, it felt like a comic book with all the absurdity and colourful narrative. Strongly recommended to everyone.
Profile Image for Michael.
1,074 reviews197 followers
October 25, 2008
A neat little pamphlet of a book that I would classify as hallucinogenic noir for the 21st century. Aylett is a master of simile. I'll be curious to see if his other books are as rich visually.
Profile Image for Will.
23 reviews
October 13, 2008
Stylish, quirky, fluffy, like maybe uh, fiber optic brillo pad for the moment! Had actually forgotten that I'd read it.
Profile Image for Bob.
15 reviews1 follower
July 21, 2008
The wonderful world of detective noir meets reality bending writing. This book started me on Aylett quest that I have yet to end, I have everything he has written.
163 reviews1 follower
December 2, 2014
Loved the writing; a million one liners. Couldn't work out wtf was going on though; maybe this is my exhaustion, maybe it's bonkers; dunno.
Profile Image for Teija.
12 reviews2 followers
January 7, 2013
Monen mielestä hieno kirja ei valitettavasti avautunut minulle ollenkaan. Turhan nopeatempoinen.
Displaying 1 - 17 of 17 reviews

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