Exo

A debut sci-fi mystery set on an abandoned future Earth, featuring a twisty mystery straight out of a John le Carré novel, a group of larger-than-life characters who’d be at home in the work of John Scalzi, and a deeply weird and dangerous hyperdimensional entity to haunt the dreams of any reader of Kim Stanley Robinson.

Humanity is dying. Banished from the Earth, our descendants eke out lives in orbital habitats and moon colonies––and look with longing on our former home.

But Earth is deadly. Over hundreds of years, its oceans have transformed into an annihilating liquid entity––the Caul. Every living creature approaching its shores is irresistibly compelled to enter. . . and is never seen again.

Scientists, some of the few inhabitants left, work in facilities seeking to understand and stop the Caul. And scavenging the shores are the penitents—those who resist its siren lure.

Among them is penitent Mae Jameson, an octogenarian former Service agent who arrived on Earth thirty years ago to find her lover. When she encounters Siofra, a mute girl, wandering alone by the shore and returns her home, they discover the girl’s father, rogue scientist Carl Magellan, hanging from a noose. He’s been murdered. Unwilling to leave the matter in the hands of the facility Carl abandoned years ago, Mae takes Carl’s journals—which detail his obsession with the Caul and its mysteries—and sets about investigating.

In this page-turning, dual-timeline novel, both Mae and Carl’s quests for the truth put them at the center of a dangerous conspiracy. Someone believes they can use the secret of the Caul to shape humanity’s future, and they aren’t afraid to kill to keep control of it.

Reviews

"Dual timelines, a shockingly hyperdimensional setting, and flawed characters make this a must-read that recalls the work of Kim Stanley Robinson. Brush gives a familiar trope an original and exciting twist."

Library Journal, Starred Review!

"With a dual narrative, a twisty mystery, unusual science, and religious and political intrigue, Brush’s debut will find fans among both sf and mystery readers."

Booklist

"[E]arnest and detailed characterizations and worldbuilding mark Brush as a sci-fi writer worth keeping tabs on"

Publishers Weekly

"Colin Brush is a name to watch in the realm of speculative fiction. His breathtaking debut, Exo, emulates sci-fi greats like Kim Stanley Robinson and John Scalzi to explore themes of loss, coexistence, and human nature against the backdrop of a mesmerizing murder mystery. If you’re in the market for a thrilling whodunit with stratospheric stakes, don’t hesitate to give Exo a go."

Bookstr

"[I]t’s a haunting, slow moving book that you have to read slowly to ponder over... I enjoyed learning about the Caul, Mae and Sofria, and Brush’s prose, and the ending was satisfying!"

Takes Two to Book Review