
Anthem
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– Unabridged
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What does it take to change the world? The “epic adventure” (Booklist) of a band of unlikely heroes on a quest to save one innocent life who may end up saving us all.
For decades, Judge Margot Burr-Nadir has worked tirelessly, case by case, to administer justice from the federal bench of the Eastern District of the United States. Her position already seems like the highest possible honor. So she is surprised when a call comes from the President of the United States inviting her to accept his nomination to the Supreme Court—not least because in choosing her, in an unprecedented attempt to heal a divided nation, the President has reached across party lines.
For Margot, this should be among the brightest spots of an already charmed existence. But the call comes on a family trip to visit their oldest daughter, Story, who has, without warning, vanished as if spirited away in the middle of the night by forces unseen. Margot soon finds herself thrust onto the national stage in the middle of every parent’s worst nightmare.
The desperate search for Story’s whereabouts soon intersects with the mission of teenagers Simon Oliver, Louise Conklin, and a young man known only as the Prophet. Together, they have escaped from the Float Anxiety Abatement Center in Chicago on the trail of man known as The Wizard: an unimaginably wealthy, almost mythical figure of unspeakable evil who has for years been taking whatever he wants without reaping the consequences. Stopping him, this band of young people hopes to accomplish what their elders can’t or won’t do: fix a broken world.
Noah Hawley’s new novel is an adventure that finds unquenchable lights in dark corners. Unforgettably vivid characters and a plot as fast and bright as pop cinema blend in a Vonnegutian story that is as timeless as a Grimm’s fairy tale. It is a leap into the idiosyncratic pulse of the American heart, written with the bravado, literary power, and feverish foresight that have made Hawley one of our most essential writers.
- Listening Length15 hours and 24 minutes
- Audible release dateJan. 4 2022
- LanguageEnglish
- ASINB09JTRVT7R
- VersionUnabridged
- Program TypeAudiobook
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Product details
Listening Length | 15 hours and 24 minutes |
---|---|
Author | Noah Hawley |
Narrator | Noah Hawley, Shiromi Arserio |
Audible.ca Release Date | January 04 2022 |
Publisher | Grand Central Publishing |
Program Type | Audiobook |
Version | Unabridged |
Language | English |
ASIN | B09JTRVT7R |
Best Sellers Rank | #57,476 in Audible Books & Originals (See Top 100 in Audible Books & Originals) #3,826 in Suspense (Audible Books & Originals) #6,518 in Family Life #7,422 in Genre Fiction (Audible Books & Originals) |
Customer reviews
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Top reviews from Canada
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The writing is complex and suspenseful. The characters are troubled, driven, and impulsive. And the plot told from multiple perspectives and with a large cast of characters is tight and intense as it twists, turns, and unravels all the actions, motivations, personalities, and relationships within it.
Overall, Anthem is not the type of book I typically read but was nevertheless a menacing, pensive, unique page-turner with a fantastical thread that did a remarkable job of raising the question will the youth of today be able to weather the storms and handle all the responsibilities, catastrophes, and disasters that are sure to come.
A dark dystopian fiction that is brutally honest and depressing and eye opening. I loved the writing and the cleverly crafted plot and characters. There is a lot going on here and at times it gets a bit confusing and sometimes I felt things going over my head. But this is also a book that makes you work for your reading pleasure and pay attention. The author certainly touches upon just about every aspect of the current state of America that most can relate to and understand through the fictional adventures of “a band of unlikely heroes”. I would like to say more but it’s kind of impossible because this is a hard book to summarize and one you just need to try for yourself. It might not be for everyone but it’s definitely worth a read and one that will be hard to forget. 4.5⭐️
While I have been trying to see through the eyes of people who would believe the lies hoisted apon them by certain news-opinion channels/sites for a while, now, the process is a journey. One I want to take. I know my worldview is relatively myopic, and I want to change that. This book helped me view events in real life from both sides of the aisle, by making me view fictional events from both. I hope I can empathize with more people overall now. I think I can.
Some might think the novel is one-sided early on, depending on their worldview - and which talking heads they are fans of - but they will be rewarded with scathing indictments of the other side soon if they keep reading. Both sides take a beating throughout. But there is also hope present, on and for both sides. One will hopefully, in digesting this novel, see that these "sides" we think of are simple constructs, only held together by our willing participation in their existence.
If you liked Stephen King's The Stand, Robert R. McCammon's Swan Song, Omar El Akkad's American War, Neil Gaiman's American Gods and/or Neil Stephenson's Termination Shock, you'll likely dig this.
Top reviews from other countries

The idea that truth no longer matters is also talked through but no ideas on how to change it
Having said that the suicide of children in despair at the world they are going to inherit is one to think on ..
It is action packed from start to finish - a sequel detailing how they got on afterwards would be good ..

Narrative stakes don’t get much higher than the self-destruction of an entire generation of children, but subtlety isn’t on the menu. Astute social commentary morphs into crass nihilism at the service of a confusing thriller too convoluted and crowded with characters for its own good, let alone ours. Flashes of brilliance serve only to underscore how much the opportunity is wasted.
Hawley, who’s created highly entertaining fiction (including 2016’s Before The Fall) and television (Fargo, Legion) lost me with this one. A world on the brink deserves better than exploitative fiction parading as finger-on-pulse commentary. Or maybe I got this exactly wrong and the point is precisely that it doesn’t?


Reviewed in Australia 🇦🇺 on May 3, 2022
Narrative stakes don’t get much higher than the self-destruction of an entire generation of children, but subtlety isn’t on the menu. Astute social commentary morphs into crass nihilism at the service of a confusing thriller too convoluted and crowded with characters for its own good, let alone ours. Flashes of brilliance serve only to underscore how much the opportunity is wasted.
Hawley, who’s created highly entertaining fiction (including 2016’s Before The Fall) and television (Fargo, Legion) lost me with this one. A world on the brink deserves better than exploitative fiction parading as finger-on-pulse commentary. Or maybe I got this exactly wrong and the point is precisely that it doesn’t?



If, however, you read enough news, watch enough TV, pay attention to current events and wish to use books to escape…avoid this read.
It was tedious. Excessive…like a sciatic nerve pain that won’t abate.
I expected controversy. I expected a jolt. I did not expect the Jack Russel Terrier biting me in the ___ and never letting go for page after page after page. Too much—not a good thing.