160 pages
English language
Published Sept. 26, 2016
The only tie-in book for USA s award-winning series MR. ROBOT, Elliot s journal Red Wheelbarrow is written by show creator Sam Esmail and show writer Courtney Looney. The notebook also holds seven removable artifacts a ripped-out page, a newspaper clipping, a mysterious envelope, and more along with sketches throughout the book. You ll discover the story behind MR. ROBOT season two and hints of what is to come. It is the ultimate journey into the world of the show and a key to hacking the mind of its main character.
This book is the ultimate journey into the world of the show and a key to hacking the mind of its main character. MR. ROBOT is a psychological thriller that follows Elliot (Rami Malek, The Pacific), a young programmer, who works as a cyber-security engineer by day and as a vigilante hacker by night. Elliot finds himself at a …
The only tie-in book for USA s award-winning series MR. ROBOT, Elliot s journal Red Wheelbarrow is written by show creator Sam Esmail and show writer Courtney Looney. The notebook also holds seven removable artifacts a ripped-out page, a newspaper clipping, a mysterious envelope, and more along with sketches throughout the book. You ll discover the story behind MR. ROBOT season two and hints of what is to come. It is the ultimate journey into the world of the show and a key to hacking the mind of its main character.
This book is the ultimate journey into the world of the show and a key to hacking the mind of its main character. MR. ROBOT is a psychological thriller that follows Elliot (Rami Malek, The Pacific), a young programmer, who works as a cyber-security engineer by day and as a vigilante hacker by night. Elliot finds himself at a crossroads when the mysterious leader (Christian Slater, Adderall Diaries) of an underground hacker group recruits him to destroy the firm he is paid to protect. Step inside the frontlines of this new kind of television show--one that explores, more realistically than any of its contemporaries, mental health issues, income inequality, data security, and corporate power, all through the lens of the generation just coming of age. The New York Times called it "relentless, sensational, and unabashedly suspenseful," the New Yorker called it "terrific" and listed it among the year's best TV, and Rolling Stone said it's "easily the year's most audacious drama" and the "best TV show of 2015." Stars Rami Malek and Christian Slater took home a Critics' Choice(R) Award and a Golden Globe Award, respectively, and the show itself received a Golden Globe Award and a Critics' Choice Award for best television drama. In Mr. Robot, Elliot Alderson is a troubled young computer coder who struggles with depression and paranoia. His day job as a cybersecurity specialist doesn't fully utilize his talents, so he turns to vigilantism in his free time as a "white hat" hacker, fighting for causes society fails to champion. He self-medicates with dangerous drugs, and, as he's drawn into the web of an anarchist known as Mr. Robot, we begin to understand the secrets he's been keeping from himself. Soon, Elliot's hacking skills plunge him into a battle to destroy a key centre of society's power and finance--the world's largest, and most maleficent, corporation. At the same time, we see that Elliot has been anything but a reliable narrator, with the details of his past and damaged psyche surfacing in ways that endanger the entire world.