Paolo Bacigalupi’s novel, The Windup Girl, was recently released by Nightshade Books, and has been met with positive buzz from fans, authors reviewers alike.

The Windup Girl by Paolo Bacigalupi

Anderson Lake is a company man, AgriGen’s Calorie Man in Thailand. Under cover as a factory manager, Anderson combs Bangkok’s street markets in search of foodstuffs thought to be extinct, hoping to reap the bounty of history’s lost calories. There, he encounters Emiko…

Emiko is the Windup Girl, a strange and beautiful creature. One of the New People, Emiko is not human; instead, she is an engineered being, creche-grown and programmed to satisfy the decadent whims of a Kyoto businessman, but now abandoned to the streets of Bangkok. Regarded as soulless beings by some, devils by others, New People are slaves, soldiers, and toys of the rich in a chilling near future in which calorie companies rule the world, the oil age has passed, and the side effects of bio-engineered plagues run rampant across the globe.

What Happens when calories become currency? What happens when bio-terrorism becomes a tool for corporate profits, when said bio-terrorism’s genetic drift forces mankind to the cusp of post-human evolution? In The Windup Girl, award-winning author Paolo Bacigalupi returns to the world of “The Calorie Man” ( Theodore Sturgeon Memorial Award-winner, Hugo Award nominee, 2006) and “Yellow Card Man” (Hugo Award nominee, 2007) in order to address these poignant questions.

Bacigalupi also released a collection of his short fiction, Pump Six, which contains a prequel to The Windup Girl called The Calorie Man, and it’s been garnering some strong recommendations:

Paolo Bacigalupi is the best short-fiction writer to emerge in the past decade; he’s the Ted Chiang of the new millennium. He combines beautiful prose, startling imagery, and shocking ideas in unforgettable ways.
– Robert J. Sawyer, Hugo Award-winning author of Hominids

[These stories] are extrapolative – some rigorously so and some more whimsical. They can be visceral and violent. Viewed toward questions of prose and storytelling, they are well-written. But most importantly, they refuse to flinch from addressing today’s issues. They take today’s scientific, technological, economic, and especially environmental trends and examine them for what they might mean today and into the future.
The Fix

Thanks to Free Speculative Fiction Online, Bacigalupi’s Hugo nominated short story, The Calorie Man (along with a couple of other short fiction pieces from Bacigalupi), is available as a free download HERE.

You can find Bacigalupi’s website HERE.

Discussion
  • Rob B August 27, 2009 at 7:00 am

    I received a copy last week and plan on reading it soon. I liked the shorts I’ve read by him and this book looks terrific, both from a story and a physical design perspective

  • aidan August 27, 2009 at 8:05 am

    Ahh, I’m jealous! I don’t have any contacts with Nightshade, so I’ll have to be adding it to my next order from Amazon.