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The Egg Code [Hardcover]

Mike Heppner (Author)
3.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)


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Book Description

June 25, 2002
With astonishing scope, flair and originality, Mike Heppner’s debut explores our secret lives and most desperate impulses even as they are penetrated by a global web of mysterious provenance and dubious promise.

Few who live in Big Dipper Township have even heard about anything called the Egg Code; they’re busy enough as it is. At one end of this tiny Midwestern community, a motivational speaker starts choking on his own words, while at another, an impressionable dancer struggles to realize her recurrent dreams of flying. An estranged wife becomes a counterfeit folklorist, while an aging typographer is besieged by regret. And—in one household—a “living arrangements” salesman is harried to the verge of losing his livelihood, while his wife stage-mothers their talentless son and eventually decides to take destiny into her own hands.

Also nearby, however, is a lone hacker bent on destroying the demon among them all: a router, the Gloria 21169, that, along with thousands of others, trafficks in information from all the world over to comprise the Internet. But the Gloria, or the corporation that controls it, has taken command of the entire network, at a tremendous cost to this young man’s family and to the consternation of parties on both sides of the technological revolution.

The crisscrossing of these many lives reveals how much (if at all) these quantum shifts in our society have affected our hopes, behavior and prospects. As much Our Town as 2001, and as funny as it is suspenseful, The Egg Code is both a hugely entertaining novel and the announcement of a spectacular career.

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

A debut of remarkable depth and complexity, Mike Heppner's The Egg Code explores the influence of media and technology on a Midwestern community. The book's vast, nonlinear narrative investigates the lives of a handful of individuals with loose ties to a mysterious network management company called The Gloria Corporation. Gloria murdered the father of hyper-egotistical housewife Lydia Tree, manipulating her mother, expert cryptologist Kay Tree, into leaving her hometown to assist the developing company. Stuck in a dying marriage, Lydia's fortysomething friend Donna Skye remains devoted to her husband Derek, an author and motivational speaker on the brink of psychological collapse. Derek, a former Gloria employee, finds a friend in 24-year-old Scarlet, a sweet if hopelessly naïve disciple of his "easy steps" self-help philosophy. Scarlet's new boyfriend, Olden Field, is a self-proclaimed revolutionary who manages eggcode.com, a Web site devoted to spreading misinformation. As Olden's practices attract the attention of Gloria, his ad-exec friend Gray Hollows encounters legal trouble over a vaguely sexual ad campaign involving Lydia's son.

Though often as sprawling as they sound, these loosely connected narratives each reveal an aspect of communication's harmful effect on culture. Of particular interest to Heppner is the tragedy that results from the popularized belief in the potential for success without effort. The book's intertwining narratives and darkly humorous view of middle-class America recall the work of writer and film director Todd Solondz. Heppner, however, shows compassion and restraint in his albeit bleak assessment, rare qualities that help make The Egg Code a valuable, through difficult, work. --Ross Doll

From Publishers Weekly

Heppner's bumptiously clever debut novel revolves around a vague premise: the Internet has been taken over, or even formed, by one business: the Gloria Corporation. In an oblique way, Gloria affects the interwoven fortunes of an odd set of characters who live close to each other in Big Dipper Township. Lydia Tree, an outrageously aggressive woman trying to hustle her intellectually underachieving son, Simon, into a stage and screen career, is the daughter of Kay Tree, a cryptanalyst who tracked Gloria for the Defense Department. Steve Mould, Lydia's husband, is not up-and-coming enough for his wife, until he gets Simon a spot on the advertisements for the chain that owns the furniture store he manages. These lewdly suggestive advertisements are merely a ploy by their creator, Gray Hollows, to provoke his boss into firing him. Gray's friend, Olden Field, meanwhile, is producing a factoid site, Eggcode.com, in order to flood the Web with disinformation. Lydia, in a typically manic moment, has entrusted Olden with pictures of Simon for a bogus Net-driven celebrity campaign, and Olden misuses them for his site. Eggcode's pics of Simon eventually backfire on Gray's ad campaign, resulting in a concatenation of disasters: Gray's ardently longed-for firing, Steve's dismissal from his company, Lydia and Steve's divorce and Olden's arrest. Meanwhile, Lydia's friend, Donna Skye, the daughter of an old German code man who knows all about Gloria, is undergoing a shaky divorce from her husband, Derek, America's premier motivational speaker, who was sponsored by Gloria until he lost his faith. Heppner resembles the movie director Paul Thomas Anderson more than he resembles any fellow writer like Anderson's Magnolia, this novel operates on multiple levels, alternating among an evidently empathetic intelligence, an uncommon comic brio and outrageously sophomoric symbolism.
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 480 pages
  • Publisher: Knopf; 1st edition (June 25, 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0375412905
  • ISBN-13: 978-0375412905
  • Product Dimensions: 9.5 x 6.4 x 1.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 5.5 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,625,466 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

5 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.4 out of 5 stars (5 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A brilliant debut novel, August 13, 2002
This review is from: The Egg Code (Hardcover)
Many books have been written about the internet age, but few of them have provided both such contemplative and informed views as Mike Heppner's brilliant debut novel, The Egg Code.

From the minutiae of technical detail - i.e. TCP/IP, T1 lines, routers, etc. - which make this a valuable read for anyone merely interested in how the internet works, to the references to culture both pop and classical, this novel carries the reader on a psychological journey through the minds of characters so flawed and thus so human that we cannot help but sympathize with them - whether they be insanely ambitious mothers or Richard Nixon.

Despite the non-chronological story, Heppner manages to masterfully link characters and incorporate details so that the book reads with continuity. At once suspenseful and pensive, The Egg Code viciously slashes through the illusions of fact and truth - both in print and on the internet. And it may be this that truly makes Heppner's debut so brilliant - this is not merely a novel about the internet - this dares to examine the continuity of deception in human nature and the vast ability that people have to deceive themselves. In juxtaposing characters that on the surface seem almost diametrically opposite from each other, Heppner manages to bring our attention to their fundamental similarities, letting us see in them our most basic human flaws.

The Egg Code is a very satirical work, and yet should not be taken as a mere mockery of Midwestern America today. It is a much richer and deeper look into society as a whole, and into the evolution and corruption of the information dissemination process, from the earliest days of print to our current world of instant internet. Mike Heppner has truly created a modern masterpiece here, and it can only be hoped that his future works will be as stunning.

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Intelligent entertainment, July 28, 2002
By 
This review is from: The Egg Code (Hardcover)
At first glance, this would appear to be a sci-fi novel with a familar plot: someone is controlling the internet, or the internet has become conscious and is controlling itself, or something like that.

But after getting past the first chapter, it's obvious there is a lot more depth here. This book is about its characters. The (convoluted) plot is merely the backdrop.

The action is out-of-sequence and as such it is a very challenging book to read (although well worth the effort). The glue that keeps it all together is how much we care about, despise, laugh at, and cheer the Motivational Speaker, Earnest Salesman, Pushy Mother, Our Hero, and the Supporting Cast.

WARNING: This book requires an investment of time and energy. It's worth it. Even when you get confused by what's going on at any given moment, you can simply savor Heppner's snappy, funny, and engaging writing. "The Egg Code" is very long, but there are no wasted words.
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1 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Everything on the InterWeb is wrong., July 19, 2002
By 
shade (Chicago, IL) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Egg Code (Hardcover)
Well, ok, not *everything,* but a great chunk of information on the internet is purposely erroneous. Why? This book explores the history of printing and the spread of information, up to the computer age... including what happens when the information being spread is bad information.

Mike Heppner is a really cool person, and this book is witty and funny. Buy it. Read it. Reccomend it to other people.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
It had been years since a man had touched her like that. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
egg code, favorite scarf
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Derek Skye, Gloria Corporation, Crane City, Living Arrangements, Cam Pee, Donna Skye, Jim Carroll, Big Dipper Township, Martin Field, New York, Bartholomew Hasse, One Vision, Steve Mould, United States, Reggie Bergman, Gray Hollows, King Timahoe, Hedgemont Heights, Julian Mason, Kay Tree, Professor Objobway, Midwestern University, Scarlet Blessing, Thank God, Candace Mason
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