Despite much theoretical effort, there is no complete theory of the 'strange'
metal state of the high temperature superconductors, and its
linear-in-temperature, T, resistivity. Recent experiments showing an
unexpected linear-in-field, B, magnetoresistivity have deepened the puzzle.
We propose a simple model of itinerant electrons, interacting via random
couplings with electrons localized on a lattice of quantum 'dots' or 'islands'.
This model is solvable in a large-N limit, and can reproduce observed
behavior. The key feature of our model is that the electrons in each quantum
dot are described by a Sachdev-Ye-Kitaev model describing electrons without
quasiparticle excitations. For a particular choice of the interaction between
the itinerant and localized electrons, this model realizes a controlled
description of a diffusive marginal-Fermi liquid (MFL) without momentum
conservation, which has a linear-in-T resistivity and a TlnT specific
heat as T→0. By tuning the strength of this interaction relative
to the bandwidth of the itinerant electrons, we can additionally obtain a
finite-T crossover to a fully incoherent regime that also has a linear-in-T
resistivity. We show that the MFL regime has conductivities which scale as a
function of B/T; however, its magnetoresistance saturates at large B. We
then consider a macroscopically disordered sample with domains of MFLs with
varying densities of electrons. Using an effective-medium approximation, we
obtain a macroscopic electrical resistance that scales linearly in the magnetic
field B applied perpendicular to the plane of the sample, at large B. The
resistance also scales linearly in T at small B, and as Tf(B/T) at
intermediate B. We consider implications for recent experiments reporting
linear transverse magnetoresistance in the strange metal phases of the
pnictides and cuprates.Comment: 21 pages + Appendices + References, 4 figure