Terry Miles is an award-winning filmmaker and the creator of the Public Radio Alliance and that network’s series of hit podcasts: Tanis, Rabbits, The Black Tapes, and The Last Movie. He splits his time between the dark emerald gloom of the Pacific Northwest and sunny Los Angeles.
Praise for Rabbits “Seemingly benign coincidences become clues to a mind-bending scavenger hunt in [Terry] Miles’s outstanding debut technothriller. . . . It’s a wild ride and it proves impossible to put down.”—Publishers Weekly (starred review) “A taut mystery for a time of conspiratorial madness, a frightening romp that forcefully reminds us of the terrible plausibility of conspiratorial thinking.”—Cory Doctorow, author of Attack Surface and How to Destroy Surveillance Capitalism “Spellbinding . . . a twisty, timey-wimey roller coaster that morphs seamlessly from treasure hunt to conspiracy thriller to escape room.”—Kirkus Reviews (starred review) “Rabbits chases the mysteries at the heart of gaming and popular culture. Cancel your evening plans and follow Terry Miles down the rabbit hole.”—Max Gladstone, Hugo and Nebula Award–winning author “Rabbits is a story for readers who don’t think the stakes in Ernest Cline’s Ready Player One were nearly high enough. And for those who think The Matrix didn’t have nearly enough conspiracy theories or coincidences. . . . And for anyone who believed that the TV series Lost was a bit too straightforward after all.”—Library Journal “Rabbits is an addictive puzzle box of a book that’ll have you obsessing over every little detail. Do not start this if you have plans that day—you’ll just end up canceling them.”—Rob Hart, author of The Warehouse “Exciting and thought provoking . . . Terry Miles’s debut novel, Rabbits, is all about reality: discrepancies, changes and patterns. Or, more precisely, it’s about the moments of unreality that we tend to shake off. . . . It will leave you looking for those discrepancies—in a sense, playing your own game of Rabbits—long after Rabbits is over.”—BookPage “Dude, I dug the hell out of this book. The mix of ’80s pop culture nostalgia and a thrilling mystery made it impossible to put it down.”—Derek Kolstad, creator and writer of the John Wick franchise