The Mary Sue Books and More Club discussion

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Alif the Unseen
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March Book: Alif the Unseen, Chapters 0 through 5
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Hana
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Mar 02, 2015 10:30AM

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Do we have anyone who has lived in the Gulf? I'm interested to know how accurately depicted the culture is.


So how many others thought immediately, "oh my god he got it on with a werecat"???!
Also, I love the melding of tech and mythos. Such a good meeting.

I didn't...but I do now...:-)"
Did I spoiler?!!!! It was just like, OH! for me, the whole- orange and black... warm fur smell... WARM FUR! I was actually kinda like, ick... do you really wanna have warm fur be a descriptor for a lover?...

ok ok ok. good good. don't wanna spoiler it for anyone!


I see it the most in how he treats and talks about Dina versus how she speaks and acts.


I agree with others that Alif is unlikable, but this kind of unlikable is familiar to me. I work in tech, and this type is everywhere. Off-kilter world-view, self-centered... but at the core, there's some home for a better human being.


Chapter zero, was bizarre. I really didn't understand what I was reading, except that it was supernatural in nature. Then the first couple of chapters were very boring. I'm a Graphic Artist in real life, but my brain takes a vacation with all the tech talk.
I didn't really like Alif's character. He's kind of whiney, and a little on the vindictive side, wanting to emotionally hurt Intistar.
It didn't even start to get interesting until we were introduced to Vikrim.


Aside from my massive psychological ladyboner for jinn stories, I've been enjoying the early signs of tying together technology and mysticism, which are both scholarly pursuits in their own rights and which I've always felt are perfectly suited to each other.
My feelings on Alif himself are pretty mixed: he's incredibly immature and an asshole, but in a way that it seems like Wilson is aware of and wants us to acknowledge. I hope he grows more tolerable as a person over the course of the book, especially if it involves the women in his life continuing to save his ass. Dina in particular seems like she's going to be interesting, what with her nuanced approach to her religion, strong will, and general wisdom.

Anyway, a few musings I've found interesting:
1. True names and the dangers of metaphors - this seems to only have been touched on so far, but I've read other books that touch on this, and it really interests me.
2. Chapter 0, when Reza talks about assigning each element of each story a number and create a code...it immediately made me think of computer code and how it would relate to Alif.
3. Language - There is so much about language in just the few chapters we've read already...real-world language, as well as the language of the jinn and computer language. I think what I liked best was this line: "So much of what he felt did not translate."
There are a few others, but I don't wan to take up too much space. And I agree, the warm fur as a lasting impression of a lover was a little...ick. Lol. Can't wait to read the rest!!



I kept forgetting that this is a fantasy book so it took me by total surprise when those elements came in.
