Hey all.
Something is wrong and causing my scheduled posts not to post. Apologies for the big gap between posts. Are people finding value in the chapter by chapter discussion?
Thanks!
Hey all.
Something is wrong and causing my scheduled posts not to post. Apologies for the big gap between posts. Are people finding value in the chapter by chapter discussion?
Thanks!
Here’s a post for anyone that wants to discuss things that happen later in the book or later in the series that relates back to Chapters 5 & 6. Please post your spoiler-ish comments below.
Here are some of my notes from Chapters 5 & 6. I’d love to hear your thoughts in the comments below, but please don’t post any spoilers for someone who might be reading along. I’ll make another post for spoilers.
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Back to the present. I wish that I’d played to some kind of regret in having to kill the two enforcers in Piter’s territory and had that been why she didn’t kill the guard in Brennan’s territory. It feels like a missed opportunity.
I love the gleaming wall around Brennan’s territory. It’s meant to be a stark contrast to the rest of the city. Then we almost immediately hear about the cost of all of that progress. People killed, people disfigured– all in what we come to learn are industrial accidents.
It’s really easy for us to forget the costs that went into understanding things like electricity, radiation, and various chemical reactions. At all seems safe to us now because those things are understood, but often people got hurt or killed along the way to understanding those things enough to turn them into tools that we can use so casually.
If some sort of apocalyptic event happened, what technology would you set about trying to re-discover first? I think I’d shoot for electricity, but ideally someone else would still be around who has a much better understanding of stuff like Ohm’s law than I do.
Here’s a post for anyone that wants to discuss things that happen later in the book or later in the series that relates back to Chapter 7. Please post your spoiler-ish comments below.
Here are some of my notes from Chapter 7. I’d love to hear your thoughts in the comments below, but please don’t post any spoilers for someone who might be reading along. I’ll make another post for spoilers.
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So many tests have happened by the end of this chapter. Skye is once again sure she knows what’s going on, but Tyrell has a vastly different purpose than she realizes.
If this is your first time reading The Society, did you pick out any of the tests?
Here’s a post for anyone that wants to discuss things that happen later in the book or later in the series that relates back to Chapter 4. Please post your spoiler-ish comments below.
Here are some of my notes from Chapter 4. I’d love to hear your thoughts in the comments below, but please don’t post any spoilers for someone who might be reading along. I’ll make another post for spoilers.
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Skye is so sure of things here, operating on such a small amount of information, and completely mis-interpreting it.
Still, back in the ‘present’ she’s so far managed to avoid getting killed, captured, or otherwise doing something that would blow her mission. Not bad for a brand new spy with so little training.
Given that this is a book, something is going to have to go wrong to add some tension. What do you think is going to go wrong next?
Here’s a post for anyone that wants to discuss things that happen later in the book or later in the series that relates back to Chapters 2 & 3. Please post your spoiler-ish comments below.
Here are some of my notes from Chapters 2 & 3. I’d love to hear your thoughts in the comments below, but please don’t post any spoilers for someone who might be reading along. I’ll make another post for spoilers.
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Food. Skye needed to look like she was a little malnourished if she was going to fit in in the city, so I took a few moments to explain why she looked the part. I also took the opportunity to call out more excesses on the part of the Society.
The economist John Maynard Keynes predicted a long time ago that humans by now would only be working 15 hours a week. As I understand it, he figured that given a baseline standard of living, that as people became more and more productive because of machines and technology, that it would take less and less time for people to work enough hours to pay for their cost of living, and then they would have the rest of their time for leisure activities.
He turned out to be way off. I personally suspect that the acceptance of inflation that so many Keynesian economists champion has had some to do with that, but there is also no avoiding the fact that the standard of living in most developed nations has gone way up. Most of us live in air conditioned houses, a lot of children have their own rooms, it’s common to have 2 or more cars, and even a lot of teenagers carry around a computer in their pockets.
The Society was meant to be an example of what might happen hundreds of years in the future if technology continues to increase the productivity of the individual at the same time that standards of living cap out. If you spend most of your life living in a virtual reality, then that might serve to cap your cost of living, so it’s an interesting thought experiment.
Do you think that as we transition to spending more and more of our time into a virtual existence that it will reduce the cost for us to feel like we have a ‘good’ standard of living?
Something else that I really like about these two chapters is that they are sort of Skye’s origin story. At least that is what the reader comes away thinking. It’s not until much later that all of the other wrinkles regarding her true origin story surface.
Here’s a post for anyone that wants to discuss things that happen later in the book or later in the series that relates back to Chapter 1. Please post your spoiler-ish comments below.