• "The Affinity Charm": Bix Bouton, CEO of the social media company Mandala, is longing for a new tech innovation. He overhears that experiments are being done to externalize the memories of animals, which sparks an idea. • "Case Study: No One Got Hurt": Alfred Hollander is obsessed with authenticity. He performs outlandish acts to elicit genuine reactions from strangers, causing strife with his family. • "A Journey: A Stranger Comes to Town": Miles Hollander considers his life to be a failure, and Drew struggles with guilt over Rob's death. Their lives change when they meet. • "Rhyme Scheme": Lincoln works for Mandala as a "counter", someone who analyzes data from users to predict their behavior. He tries to figure out how to get coworker M to fall in love with him. • "The Mystery of Our Mother": Melora Kline recounts the family history of her anthropologist mother and absent father Lou. • "What the Forest Remembers": Charlene Kline uses Mandala to explore the memories of her father Lou on a trip in the 1960s. • "Bright Day": Roxy Kline, a recovering heroin addict, uploads her memories to Mandala and is ready to start a new life. • "'i,' the Protagonist": Chris Salazar works complacently for a company that "algebraizes" stories to basic tropes. On a frustrating trip with a coworker, he finds a new direction in life. • "The Perimeter: After": Molly Cooke, a teenager, experience tensions with her friends when new girl Lulu arrives. • "Lulu the Spy, 2032": Lulu Kisarian works as a spy for the Citizen Agent program. This story was first released in 2012 in serialized tweet format via
The New Yorkers
Twitter account under the title
"Black Box". • "The Perimeter: Before": Hannah, Molly's sister, recounts her mother's feud with their neighbor Jules Jones. • "See Below": A series of intersecting email threads between the large cast of the novel's characters. • "Eureka Gold": Gregory Bouton, Bix's son, mourns his father's death. • "Middle Son (Area of Detail)": As a child, Ames Hollander hits a surprise game-winning
home run in a baseball game. The story quickly recounts events of his future, then returns to the triumphant moment of his home run. ==Reception==