The Discovery of an Anomaly Unleashes Conspiracy, Murder and Chaos
Tired of all the scags and his trigger-happy coworkers, Service Officer Martinex is relieved to be assigned a series of homicides. When none of the evidence points to anything physical, his investigation reveals a connection to two physicists, Alistair McCary and Davan Yazdani, who have made a revolutionary discovery of a powerful anomaly. Elsewhere, this anomaly drives untested beta that victimizes 12-year-old Joel Specchio, drawing him and the people around him into a conspiracy linked to the murders. All must untangle this web of deception to find out who or what the killers are, and stop them before they execute their world-dominating agenda.

Check Out These Amazing Reviews
In the pages of Randall Barnes’ novel I read “passion-filled protagonists: each flirting with disaster, each forging their own way, each jam-packed with romance.” However, these are pages in a novel the wispy sylph Natalie reads before her own life frays, becoming insensible. Her romance-starved friends, the scientists Davan and Alistair, try to make sense of a new and mind–and lab–shaking discovery. A pair of precocious pre-teen boys have got themselves into trouble with a tech called the ‘mingle.’ And away cross town, a cop, himself dabbling in an affair of the heart, investigates dead bodies, trying to make sense of non-sensical evidence.
Mome has no single protagonist; there is only the handful of people, some of which who know each other, some unaware of the others, all trying to understand what is going wrong. And the antagonist is hidden from us. An individual? A rogue foundation, a faceless corporation? Rogue tech? Who can you trust? In this future, half the people you meet are partially or totally synthetic, AI, “reps.”
These are everyday lives–employment, budgets, protocols, kids, quantum physics–of real people trying to navigate a technology-addled existance in the big city that suddenly has become “zerty.” In his debut novel Barnes takes pleasure in unwinding this dilemma, and transports us to a satisfying end
Show Less
Wendy B
First, don’t be intimated by the length. Barnes doesn’t waste a page. He gives you three different storylines that are very easy to follow. Each one is full of characters that are really easy to relate to, tons of fascinating futuristic gadgets, and many exciting discoveries. On top of that, there’s a murder mystery like no other at the center of it all. Also, you won’t be disappointed when all the storylines come together. Mome definitely has a different style than some of the other science fiction books I’ve read, but for me, it’s a book you won’t regret reading.
Show Less
Laura M Lyons
I really enjoyed MOME. I’m a science fiction fan but not a big on space operas, so I was first grabbed by the fact that the book revolves around a realization of the future that’s completely earth-bound and very accessible. it gave the whole thing credibility. The science felt real. The new technology was totally believable. The characters read like people you could meet on the street today. It felt like a clever mixture of Philip K. Dick and William Gibson combined with Fringe and film noir police procedurals. The best thing about MOME was the world-building, especially how the author invented new words and phrases to ground you in the future. If you like imaginative stories full of gripping intrigue, unique flourishes, and persuasive settings, I’d check out MOME.
Show Less
Joaquin Montalvan
If you’re a fan of science fiction that doesn’t skimp on the hard science but still gives you fast-paced excitement you may be the perfect reader for MOME. Take some theoretical physics and mix that with threatening virtual reality for a premise that brings unlikely partners together to solve a killer mystery. Randall Barnes creates characters you care about and a near-future world that looks and sounds enough like our own to easily draw the reader in, but develops the nuances of that world with language and atmosphere so we know we are not anywhere near familiar territory. I loved how Barnes uses language and technology and culture to fill out this familiar/strange setting. And the physics mystery at the core of the book is hugely engaging and intellectually challenging. It’s a page-turner with something to say about ethics in science and the capacity for heroism in each of us. I highly recommend MOME.
Show Less
Karen Hirsch
An intriguing blend of science fiction and mystery, filled with complex characters, escalating murders, and a web of conspiracies. McCary and Yazdani’s anomalies lead to high-stakes tension and uncover dangerous secrets. Definitely a book I would recommend!
Show Less
“Do not read MOME if you are unprepared to be entertained in a very deep and profound way. Randall Barnes guides us through the intricate depths of a high tech mystery with the extraordinary adroitness of a master storyteller. MOME is a beautifully written first novel, which creates a claustrophobic tension, that causes the reader to need to hang on so as not to be thrown off, or worse yet, to be stuck in the shadows of a nightmare forever. Barnes is a smart writer. I appreciate that. I suspect others will as well.”
Show Less
S. E. Feinberg

mitab

Randall Barnes
Randall Barnes has always been star-struck by creativity, whether it came through books, movies, television or music. Ever since he was young, he found himself drawn to an eclectic range of fiction, music, movies and television. The way words (and later sounds) could be used to tell a story fascinated him. Randall has taken that fascination and traveled the world as an English language teacher and then, after earning a PhD in Film Sound, he has contributed to multiple film narratives as a sound designer. In recent years, Randall has resumed his childhood passion for creative writing. His debut novel, MOME, is a tech noir that explores his deep interest in theoretical physics, all things technical and international cultures. He currently shares his Lake of the Woods home with a tuxedo cat named Teagan and spends much of time enjoying fiction and films that explore the creative fringes of science fiction, drama and comedy.
Want to hear more from Randall?
Sign up with your email address to receive news,
updates, and exclusive content
Latest Thoughts from Randall
This work transports you into a fictionalized version of Ireland. Here, the most famous of Irish writers (Joyce,
Joe‘s existential crisis is utterly altered after a life-changing bathroom visit. Jack’s method acting goes too far