Advertising helps fund Big Issue’s mission to end poverty
Books

The Expansion Project by Ben Pester review – a surreal dismantling of corporate culture

When an employee loses his daughter at work, nobody recalls her being there. So what is actually real?

In Ben Pester’s debut novel The Expansion Project everything is off. The novel begins with Tom Crowley readying himself and his eight-year-old daughter Hen for “take-your-daughter-to-work day” at Capmeadow Business Park. However, when he arrives at work, he quickly discovers that it isn’t “take-your-daughter-to-work day”, nor has it ever been. Nobody knows what he’s talking about. Soon after, Hen vanishes somewhere in the labyrinthine depths of the business park, raising questions about whether Tom brought her there at all.

Deeply surreal and satirical, Pester’s debut is a James Herbert-inflected dismantling of office culture and corporate sprawl. As we descend further into its rabbit hole, the novel gradually reveals itself not as a straightforward prose narrative, but as a collection of interview transcripts annotated by a mysterious “archivist” in the far future. While Tom endures his day from hell, the Capmeadow Business Park is undergoing a vast and inexplicable “expansion project”.

Unmoored from any recognisable reality, the complex begins to sprawl into other realms. One evocative paragraph-length chapter describes the streets being “chewed at the edges” by a stray dog, only for the ground to heal and grow over itself. In the distance, a strange mound rises, “preparing to become a building of some kind”.

Decades seem to pass in Capmeadow at the blink of an eye and a strange mist haunts the complex. Any attempt to visualise the business park in the reader’s mind is nearly impossible. Consequently, The Expansion Project is a work that asks more questions than it answers. Pester puts a lot of faith in his readers.

When the novel is in full flow and constants such as time and location are no longer identifiable, there is little for the reader to grasp on to. You have to put your total trust in Pester and, sometimes, that can result in sections where you feel like you’re just reading words on a page. However, as an alienation effect, it works well.

The Expansion Project by Ben Pester is out now (Granta, £16.99). You can buy it from the Big Issue shop on bookshop.org, which helps to support Big Issue and independent bookshops.

Advertising helps fund Big Issue’s mission to end poverty
Advertising helps fund Big Issue’s mission to end poverty

Do you have a story to tell or opinions to share about this? Get in touch and tell us more

Change a vendor’s life this Christmas.

Buy from your local Big Issue vendor every week – or support online with a vendor support kit or a subscription – and help people work their way out of poverty with dignity.

Advertising helps fund Big Issue’s mission to end poverty

HELP VENDORS KEEP WORKING THROUGH THE COLD

For £36.99, help a vendor stay warm, earn an extra £520, and build a better future.
Grant, vendor

Recommended for you

View all
Chairman Mao was Trump but with added brains… and mango 
Books

Chairman Mao was Trump but with added brains… and mango 

Top 5 horror novels, chosen by British Fantasy Award-winning author Catriona Ward
Fiction

Top 5 horror novels, chosen by British Fantasy Award-winning author Catriona Ward

The Age of Calamities by Senaa Ahmad review: gorgeously bizarre, time-warping tales
Review

The Age of Calamities by Senaa Ahmad review: gorgeously bizarre, time-warping tales

Discipline by Larissa Pham review: the past sure is tense
Review

Discipline by Larissa Pham review: the past sure is tense

Win 2 exclusive screen prints from the iconic film Trainspotting!

Celebrating the film’s 30th anniversary in Big Issue – enter your details for the chance to win.