"I have created for each of you a fate, one tailored specifically for
your needs and desires. Each of you has a defining moment--not before,
not after--when a wrong turn or decision led to the disastrous outcome
that you and I mourn. To isolate that malignant moment is an exacting,
exhaustive process, which only the most well-trained and competent
professionals, armed with the most sophisticated of predictive models
and processing power, can accomplish. You can put your trust in me, as
you would in an expert surgeon, a surgeon of the soul."
On a distant planet overlooking Earth, the nameless protagonist of The
Compensation Bureau is one of a team of Actuaries at work on the
innovative Lazarus Project. Conceived in response to the shocking
violence observed in humankind, the project identifies people who have
wrongfully died at the hands of others--whether victims of war, hate
crimes, or random brutality--and attempts to compensate for the cruelty
and pain they faced in life and death.
But balancing the accounts for the sufferings and wrongdoings of
humanity proves hardly a clinical exercise. The Actuary soon finds
himself personally invested in the project's mission, and the goals of
the project itself are complicated as the fate of Earth's inhabitants
becomes more uncertain. The Compensation Bureau explores the power of
individual and collective action, from a writer hailed by The
Washington Post as "a world-novelist of the first category."