The Not a Book Club Club discussion
John Scalzi
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LI: Part 1: Chapters 1–7
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I haven't read Ramez Naam either - I may need to check him out. Although - you guys keep giving me more good books to read - I need more time!!
Here's a discussion question. If the neural networks and threeps were available now/to everyone one would you get the network? Would you then use a threep or just use the network to plug in the world?
I'd really love to plug the internet into my head if it was safe. I'd worry about a virus or having someone steal my inner most thoughts.
More importantly, I'd be afraid of the surgery. I wear glasses and I doubt I'll ever get LASIK. Too worried about going blind.
More importantly, I'd be afraid of the surgery. I wear glasses and I doubt I'll ever get LASIK. Too worried about going blind.


The book so far is not what I expected (not in a bad way). I liked how the novella set up the whole background and the book takes place 25 years later. I was expected to be walked through the outbreak all over again in the book.
So far threeps and the human "carriers" (forget the term they use in the book) that can hosts the hadens remind me of sleeves from Altered Carbon.
Also, about the carriers...They haven't had surgery to implant neural networks, right? It's just a freak mutation that happened to a small percentage of the people that had stage 2 haden's but were never locked in? I found that part a little hand wavy.


Ah ok...This is my first Scalzi book. I am liking the ideas/concepts, the science part is just a little hand wavy for my tastes :)


Yeah. I like how car rental places also rent threeps. Instantly having your conscious anywhere is appealing.

I know the answer, but I'm torn on if it's a spoiler or not. Probably not, considering the answer came from a promotional video with both readers that audible put out.

Agreed with Alex that the characters immediately jump right off the page. No forced BS. Finding Scalzi to be a very fun writer. Some excellent dialogue and the dinner party was interesting as hell. Can't wait to see where this is going and I already know I'll be reading more of his work from this little taste

Admittedly I haven't read that much Sci-Fi so I was kind of hesitant about his stuff but this has been right up my alley so far.
Oh and I did read the novella first and glad I did. The background info has helped a lot



Very light and easy read, bringing you right into the characters, world, and action, but no spectacular awesomeness. I don't know which direction it will develop - more towards Fuzzy Nation or desastrous Redshirts (didn't like that one).
But what I know is that it is a perfect change after having read dense Annihilation and slow Cyteen.
Books mentioned in this topic
Annihilation (other topics)Cyteen (other topics)
I'm doing the Wil Wheaton audio, and it's as good as usual. I still don't get the two versions though.
I haven't read Ramez Naam, but I've yet to find a SciFi author whose books are as fun as Scalzi's.