2025 Reading Challenge discussion

This topic is about
The Book of Strange New Things
note: This topic has been closed to new comments.
ARCHIVE 2015
>
The Book of Strange New Things: Part IV (Contains Spoilers)
date
newest »

message 1:
by
Kara
(new)
-
rated it 3 stars
Dec 29, 2014 01:28PM

reply
|
flag
what a magical book! i'm really impressed with faber. this story really spoke to me. i can't wait to see what everyone else thinks.

I finished reading this morning - and I've given it a somewhat mediocre 3 star-rating. A little surprising given how others have responded to it.
(And I wonder if people who usually read a lot of sci-fi first contact and space colonization stories have a generally different opinion of it than readers who usually stick to literary fiction?)
It will be interesting to see how others feel about the story by the end of it!
I don't read a lot of sci-fi fiction. Do you? I wasn't expecting a sci-fi tale and so I really dismissed a lot of the inconsistencies in that part of the story since I felt that the story itself was bigger than those details.

But, like Amanda, I was really upset by how - or when - it ended. I expected there to be more!


So now that I've had a few days to marinate, I might actually rate this 3.5-4 stars instead of 5. There are some lingering questions beyond the sci-fi details. If this had been a meditation of faith without the scifi elements, I think that Faber would've hit the 5 stars.
Why did Grainger flip? And not until Peter came around? It seems she'd been on Oasis for a while and despite the hints at her past (kinda disappointed that we don't find out much about her backstory; it's like he dropped the self-harm angle and then focused on this friction with her Dad instead) what is it about Peter that triggers her humanity, so to speak?
Peter's gotta be the densest and most naive drug addict in the history of literature. I just can't get over how unprepared he is for this mission and how Pollyanna-ish he comes across.
Overall, I still really like the book. There are some passages that really speak to me. I've recently been interested in reconnecting to my spirituality so maybe this was just a case of right book, right time. And it got me to order a copy of Heart of Darkness, which it clearly draws some inspiration from. I'm tempted to read it next...
Why did Grainger flip? And not until Peter came around? It seems she'd been on Oasis for a while and despite the hints at her past (kinda disappointed that we don't find out much about her backstory; it's like he dropped the self-harm angle and then focused on this friction with her Dad instead) what is it about Peter that triggers her humanity, so to speak?
Peter's gotta be the densest and most naive drug addict in the history of literature. I just can't get over how unprepared he is for this mission and how Pollyanna-ish he comes across.
Overall, I still really like the book. There are some passages that really speak to me. I've recently been interested in reconnecting to my spirituality so maybe this was just a case of right book, right time. And it got me to order a copy of Heart of Darkness, which it clearly draws some inspiration from. I'm tempted to read it next...



I agree that it would have been nice to learn more about other people's backstories. It seemed like Faber went out of his way to show that many of the USIC workers had troubled pasts, but that point was never fully developed.

At the end of the book, you still don't know what's happening on Earth, hardly anything about the Oasans, Grainger's past, Jesus Lover Five's condition, what happened to Tartaglione and Kurtzberg... NOTHING is explained.
I'm okay that him and Bea weren't reunited by the end of the book (although I hope they do reconcile), but some things needed to be resolved.

The religious theology parts of this book were quite good. I also enjoyed the writing. It's the science fiction story that I found disappointing.


With regard to Tartaglione, they weren't able to "catch" him, so it seems he is going to continue to live on his own.
That was my take on it, anyway!



There's also the classic Dune, which is definitely pretty science fiction-y. It focuses more on people and society than technology, though, which I like. I also love that the Dune universe is full of people who can do incredible things with their minds. Computers are forbidden because of a past war with machines, so people are forced to spend that time developing their own minds and capabilities. The rest of the Dune series get progressively weirder, but the first one isn't too weird and is one of my favorite science fiction books.
I really recommend Wool Omnibus, which is a collection of highly readable short stories about a world where the land outside is completely desolate, so people are forced to live in underground silos. This one is also more about the people and their society.

Alisia, there are so many different flavours of science fiction! If you want to keep exploring the literary fiction/science fiction overlap, I'd suggest Margaret Atwood's Oryx and Crake as a good one. If you're interested in the blend of science fiction and theology/religion, then A Canticle for Leibowitz or Parable of the Talents could be good (though possibly depressing) choices.

The same things could have happened to Peter and Bea had he been sent to a remote place on earth without her. In that case, he would have been more attuned to the various crises that occurred, but might still have been unable to fully grasp the effect on her, and too committed to his mission to leave soon enough to really prevent the problems in their relationship.
I like the way Faber found a way to restore Peter's faith through Jesus Lover Five. Peter's connection with this particular Oasan was special, and so it was fitting that in his moment of spiritual crisis, Lover Five would be the one to restore clarity to his thinking.
I do wish that we learned what USIC stands for (no, Karina, you didn't miss it!), as well as how they knew that these catastrophes were about to happen. I think that if there is a sequel to this book, we might learn that USIC is a truly evil entity, and is responsible for much of what is happening on earth.
Overall, I found it to be really thought-provoking and well-written. I gave it 4 stars.


Was that because we realize that the Oasans don't heal physically from injuries?
I can't even list all the loose ends that frustrated me in this book, yet I loved the story. I feel like I got so wrapped up in the details and sub-plots that I missed the big picture.
For example - was one of the purposes of the USIC to procreate and populate this other world? Because that certainly wasn't happening. Also - was it ever explained why the Oasans moved their home farther away from the USIC headquarters?

How meta...this is how I felt about the whole book.

Overall I thought the book was well written and had some interesting characters. Even though you don't learn too much detail about them, I think that makes you want to keep reading, thinking you will.



Their past and their future

How meta...this is how I felt about the whole book."
HAHAHA, agreed!


(But the author's wife died from cancer during the writing of this book, is that so? I see the whole novel as an analogy, including the upsettingly abrupt ending.)


But you're right it does make more sense now.

I think it's kind of a "life is unresolved" message, but that doesn't leave me any less frustrated. I think if the author hadn't set up all of these mysteries throughout the book, the lack of an ending wouldn't have bothered me so much.


Overall, this was pretty awful book.
This topic has been frozen by the moderator. No new comments can be posted.
Books mentioned in this topic
Oryx and Crake (other topics)A Canticle for Leibowitz (other topics)
Parable of the Talents (other topics)
Cloud Atlas (other topics)
Dune (other topics)
More...