Showing posts with label 1932. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1932. Show all posts

Thursday, February 27, 2025

Brave New World

Brave New World by Aldous Huxley

This audiobook was a bit difficult to understand. The voice had a bit of a muffled accent that made it difficult to focus. (It didn't help that the language was nearly 100 years old, but dealing with futuristic topics.) It seemed different than the last time I read it. There is talk of time based on the time of Ford. A great deal of the first part is "historical" talking about the society and how science can help produce people optimistically. Soma is the magic drug used to control everyone and make them happy. Sex is a pleasure activity while reproduction happens via science. Free thinking is discouraged. People are bread to work just enough and to consume. Manual jobs are not eliminated simply so people could work.

There is a reservation of "savages" where people live primitive lifestyles that do not include all these scientific advancements. One person was born there from parents that were originally from the "modern" world. He did not fit with either group. There are more discussions with him and the others. There is also talk about exhiling to the remote places - and some of the benefits. Those in authority have some ability to "think" for themselves, while the standard people don't.

This is a well known dystopia. A better narrator would have made it better. The themes have been reproduced in many modern works.


Monday, December 16, 2024

1919

1919 by John Dos Passos

1919 is an interesting amalgamation of stuff. There are a few stories of characters. Most of the focus is on the working class characters with an attraction to Marxists. They live their lives. They don't tend to do anything special (though they may show up near significant events.) There are interspersed factual events and "multimedia dumps." Stylistically, it feels ahead of its time. There is enough attention to detail to the locations to make it feel accurate. I felt enough sympathy with the characters to want to continue to read their escapades, but not enough to want more.

Wednesday, November 14, 2018

Light in August

Light in August tells the story of various people in the small town south. A preacher is disgraced by the bad behavior of his wife. However, he refuses to stop preaching until he is locked out of the church. He finally resigns, but refuses to leave town, even after he is attacked. Gradually, he is forgotten. Too guys make whiskey. They leave town after an incident where their land lord is murdered and house burned down. Later one of them comes back to try to collect a reward for the death of the lady. He claims his friend was having an affair. His credibility seems to go way down - until he brings out the trump card of his friend having negro blood. Now the town trusts him. (Were southerners really that racist?) He also had come to town to escape the pregnancy of a girl. Alas, she has followed him, and now has another guy chasing after her. The various stories are woven together with a timeline that flows back and forth to gradually provide backstory and action. The background helps explain the "scars" of the characters and why they behave the way they do. (Even though the civil war ended a few generations earlier, racism is still going strong.) While the primary characters get most of the print, there are other characters, such as a "wanna be military" gun nut. The storytelling also seamlessly switches between different styles, helping things to move along quickly. The novel was much better than I anticipated.