‘An essential contribution to modern storytelling’ Emma Glass
‘With elegance and humanity, Migraine sheds light on some of our darkest and most urgent questions… What type of life can we hope to build in the aftermath of collapse? How might we love one another when we are walled off by the solitude of pain?’ Keiran Goddard
Opening in East London, Migraine follows two men as they cross the weather-ravaged city pursuing a doomed love.
The snow has melted, but the thaw reveals a world transformed. London is in ruins, its population a fraction of its pre-freeze level. The weather has become wildly unpredictable – huge pressure swings leading to powerful localised storms. And this has led to an epidemic of migraine. When a storm hits, the pain comes, along with a wide range of visual and haptic hallucinations named migraine ‘aura’.
The novel starts with Ellis, one of a very small proportion of the population who don’t suffer from weather-induced migraines, being struck by a migraine attack for the first time. After being blinded by hallucinations, he wakes in a ruined bookshop with its former owner, Sam, who pulled him to safety from the storm. No longer excluded from the migraine epidemic, Ellis decides to find his ex-girlfriend, Luna, and win her back. With Sam tagging along, he sets out from the bookshop and heads south.
Compelling and insightful, Migraine is concerned with questions such as: what does a society look like, if it’s organised around chronic pain? What kind of culture would this set of conditions produce?
‘With elegance and humanity, Migraine sheds light on some of our darkest and most urgent questions… What type of life can we hope to build in the aftermath of collapse? How might we love one another when we are walled off by the solitude of pain?’ Keiran Goddard
Opening in East London, Migraine follows two men as they cross the weather-ravaged city pursuing a doomed love.
The snow has melted, but the thaw reveals a world transformed. London is in ruins, its population a fraction of its pre-freeze level. The weather has become wildly unpredictable – huge pressure swings leading to powerful localised storms. And this has led to an epidemic of migraine. When a storm hits, the pain comes, along with a wide range of visual and haptic hallucinations named migraine ‘aura’.
The novel starts with Ellis, one of a very small proportion of the population who don’t suffer from weather-induced migraines, being struck by a migraine attack for the first time. After being blinded by hallucinations, he wakes in a ruined bookshop with its former owner, Sam, who pulled him to safety from the storm. No longer excluded from the migraine epidemic, Ellis decides to find his ex-girlfriend, Luna, and win her back. With Sam tagging along, he sets out from the bookshop and heads south.
Compelling and insightful, Migraine is concerned with questions such as: what does a society look like, if it’s organised around chronic pain? What kind of culture would this set of conditions produce?
Newsletter Signup
By clicking ‘Sign Up,’ I acknowledge that I have read and agree to Hachette Book Group’s Privacy Policy and Terms of Use
Reviews
'Migraine stages a future whose precursors, we feel, are already here. Fisher's writing is affecting, eye-opening, exacting, and it carries with it what I want to call kindness'
'For a story about civilisational collapse it's remarkable how intimate Migraine is, how lived-in, how rich in sense of place. Fisher has written a great London novel by sweeping nearly everything from the city and then leaning in close to what remains'
'With elegance and humanity, Migraine sheds light on some of our darkest and most urgent questions... What type of life can we hope to build in the aftermath of collapse? How might we love one another when we are walled off by the solitude of pain?'
'Samuel Fisher's prose moves with swift and sure tread across the glinting particulars of locality, until that condition, that curse, with its pains and pleasures, becomes universal. Our fate. Our challenge. Our discarded future'
'Migraine is a beguiling, sinuous wonder of a novel. Simultaneously a work of intimate psychogeography, and a mystery unravelling the interlacing breakdowns of climate, health and domestic coupledom, I didn't want it to end'
'An entrancing London parable that blends dystopia, witty social commentary and the radical edges of an apocalypse road movie. What more could you want?'
'Graceful and transcendent, Migraine is a kaleidoscopic odyssey of bodies, language and landscape. Sam is a master of the speculative and sensory - an essential contribution to modern storytelling'