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The Machine Stops
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August Science Fiction and Fantasy: The Machine Stops
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Rosemarie, Northern Roaming Scholar
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rated it 3 stars
Aug 01, 2018 05:53AM

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You're welcome, Catherine.
I read this story earlier in the year and found it an intriguing story, and quite a change from his other books.
I read this story earlier in the year and found it an intriguing story, and quite a change from his other books.



I noticed that when I read it too. Wells seemed to foresee our society of instant communication but no real face to face interaction.

Did you mean E.M. Forster? Only now I realized that he is the same author who wrote "Howards End" or "Passage to India".


Did you mean E.M. Forster? Only now I realized that he is the same author who wrote "Howards End" or "Passage to India"."
Rosemarie has read this and commented on the story in a Goodreads group. She knows it's Forster and not Wells. She also referred to how different it is from his other work in Message 3. Her 'Wellsian' slip is funny because, if I didn't know this book and was asked a trivia choice of Wells or Foster as the author of a novel with this plot, I'd be 99% sure it was Wells.

I think they worshipped the Machine and were so dependent on it, that their survival is questionable without it. They were unable to do anything for themselves. However, there were a few who went to the surface, but we don't know how many there are.

His mother Vashti, seemed to be part of the former group. She actually kissed the book, and prayed to it, to restore order again!


I note that the real Vashti was
Queen of Persia and the first wife of Persian King Ahasuerus (mentioned in the Book of Esther). Is this significant?
Bernard, both British, both with two initials before the last name. Is that a coincidence.
But seriously, I have read almost all of Forster's novels so I will just go stand in the corner and meditate.
But seriously, I have read almost all of Forster's novels so I will just go stand in the corner and meditate.

This story combines a dystopian authoritarian outlook, as exists in other books, with a dystopian social communication outlook, which is its more intriguing and remarkable perspective. I waver between 3 and 4 stars on this one. If 3 stars, it's primarily because, as mentioned by others, this could have used a few more pages, at least to true novella size, to provide more insights and answers.
NOTE: I ultimately gave it 4 stars, giving precedence to it's early and unique dystopian social communications perspective.

Rosemarie, as the former queen of slips, Freudian or otherwise,I understand your pain.I think you can safely come out of the corner now.It's perfectly ok!🤗

Even though I thought they treated the Machine as a god, I didn't see the connection to the Church. The comparison makes sense to me. The organized Church may have forgotten its original function, just as the original function of the Machine was to serve, not control.

I see those who made it to the surface and survived as rebels. That generation would not restart the Machine, but if they have descendants.....who knows?


I agree - he was very creative to write this so long ago.

I think the book alludes more to people being a slave to modern technology than it was about the dogmas of the church. Although a few scenes do depict ritualistic behaviour.
Having said that, Rosemarie, I hope no descendants restart the machine. Assuming they haven't already! :)
I just started the story. After reading the scene of Vashti and Kuno video chatting, I wonder how mind-boggling Forster would find my reading his science fiction on an electronic tablet.
Forster was clearly ahead of his time in writing this story. We have evolved from people going to houses to communicate face-to-face to simply talking over the phone to now texting someone instead of any direct communication. Even nonverbal correspondence has shifted from writing letters to emails to, again, texting. Our communication is becoming less and less personal with more reliance on technology in our daily lives than past generations likely ever thought possible. Are we really that far away from not physically seeing people in our everyday world unless we must? Vashti was anxious ever seeing a person in real life. That is what social anxiety could maybe become, if we continue down this path.
To answer your question Peter, I think people would always eventually go back to technology, or the machine, but it might would take a long time. After several generations pass, the stories of the disastrous experiment with life under the machine would fade and possibly be thought of as myth. Then, people may try the machine again to make life easier. At a certain point, however, technology could make life TOO easy and impersonal.
To answer your question Peter, I think people would always eventually go back to technology, or the machine, but it might would take a long time. After several generations pass, the stories of the disastrous experiment with life under the machine would fade and possibly be thought of as myth. Then, people may try the machine again to make life easier. At a certain point, however, technology could make life TOO easy and impersonal.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Machine Stops and Other Stories (other topics)The Machine Stops (other topics)