A Canticle for Leibowitz Walter M Miller Jr Mary Doria Russell 9780060892999 Books
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A Canticle for Leibowitz Walter M Miller Jr Mary Doria Russell 9780060892999 Books
It's no Ready Player One (thank God).If you like that sort of fiction you probably won't get books like this or the Windup Girl or Shadow & Claw or...
Let's be honest; People today want a simplistic story delivered on a silver platter with little to guess at or wonder about.
Many of the classics just aren't for these people. The writing is tricky, inventive and complicated. The stories are often allusions to something else entirely. You'll have to think some.
This is basically a compilation of three books. Though the stories all seem to be on the same rail, they occur in different times. The first begins many many years after the fall of man (nuclear war). The second book begins many years after the events of the first. The third book is again fast forwarded WAY ahead of the other two. each encompasses the same basic story (monks and the church and collected items from the past) but also a much more horrible similarity; mans fall. Humankinds inability to escape its own destructive nature. Each book seems to have its own version of a "deliverer" (Christ like figure). I thought it all pretty interesting. But I'm not a fan of Teady Player One...
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A Canticle for Leibowitz Walter M Miller Jr Mary Doria Russell 9780060892999 Books Reviews
Out in the desert, a young would-be monk labors. He is on a mission for his monastery, a week of fasting and privation that all initiates must go through. As he works to create a shelter for the coming night, he sees a traveler approaching. No one travels the desert so he is filled with fear. The man approaches. He is a skinny old man, barely dressed and ready to fight anyone who he sees. He threatens the young man, then after a while, helps him by marking a stone to finish his shelter. After he leaves, the initiate removes the stone he has marked and finishes his shelter. Removing the stone creates a landslide and steps are revealed.
What has been buried is the entrance to a bomb shelter, for this is the age after the world has gone through nuclear annihilation. Few people remain and those that do mistrust each other. Roaming tribes kill everything in their path and intellectuals are disdained as they were the ones who created the bombs that ruined civilization. As the initiate explores, he finds a box with fragments of writing. Even more amazing, the fragments carry the name of Leibowitz, who is the man for whom the monastery exists. For these monks are charged with preserving what little writing and knowledge exists. They bury barrels of writing material in remote places and copy the words of existing manuscripts, even when they have no idea what the words mean.
What follows is a bleak exhibit of humanity. The reader sees the world through the eyes of time. Over the centuries, men start to value knowledge again. They rediscover the natural principles that underlie all progress, and painstakingly, over centuries, civilization rebuilds to the point that sophisticated machines and computers once again exist. Yet, every time progress is made, it is accompanied by the human nature that cannot help but tear it down again.
This novel is considered a classic of science fiction. It demonstrates a fear of learning and an underlying negativity about human nature. Yet, along with the bleakness, there is always a tendril of hope, someone who risks all in order to learn and spread knowledge. This book is recommended for science fiction readers.
An amazing novel. Anyone who starts questioning why they're reading it, during the first few chapters (as I did), my advice is to stick with it. There's too much here that needs to be heard. Miller combines futurism, history, faith, science, cynicism, sarcasm, allegory ... to warn us, from his vantage point of a half-century ago, about a future some now see on the distant horizon. And then it will be repeated all over again. The book is downright scary in that respect.
Keep in mind that Miller was writing in the 1940s and 1950s. Among other things, he has characters argue or mull over intelligent design, euthanasia, "removable" conscience, politicians placating their country's "patriotic opinionated rabble," the line between church and state, and the destruction and rise of civilizations over millennia. Two examples of some phrases that jumped out at me
- When scholar Thon Taddeo questions how a great civilization could destroy itself, the answer from the monsignor is "Perhaps ... by being materially great and materially wise, and nothing else."
- Brother Joshua, about to colonize space in order to save shreds of civilization as his current world implodes, thinks that, "the closer men come to perfecting for themselves a paradise, the more impatient they seemed to become with it, and with themselves as well." Joshua thinks that a dark world can yearn and hope, but a world "bright with reason and riches" begins to "sense the narrowness of the needle's eye," and the realization rankles.
My one complaint is that Miller uses way too many Latin phrases that I didn't take time to look up the first time through. (And I'm Catholic and even studied Latin in high school.) I will re-read this book with a dictionary at hand in order to mine even more from its depths.
It's no Ready Player One (thank God).
If you like that sort of fiction you probably won't get books like this or the Windup Girl or Shadow & Claw or...
Let's be honest; People today want a simplistic story delivered on a silver platter with little to guess at or wonder about.
Many of the classics just aren't for these people. The writing is tricky, inventive and complicated. The stories are often allusions to something else entirely. You'll have to think some.
This is basically a compilation of three books. Though the stories all seem to be on the same rail, they occur in different times. The first begins many many years after the fall of man (nuclear war). The second book begins many years after the events of the first. The third book is again fast forwarded WAY ahead of the other two. each encompasses the same basic story (monks and the church and collected items from the past) but also a much more horrible similarity; mans fall. Humankinds inability to escape its own destructive nature. Each book seems to have its own version of a "deliverer" (Christ like figure). I thought it all pretty interesting. But I'm not a fan of Teady Player One...
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