Beyond Reality discussion

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The Last Murder at the End of the World
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The Last Murder at the End of the World (5/25): Finished Reading *Spoilers OK*
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Yeah, I'm further, and it's getting interesting, but it's so long. And I don't particularly care for mysteries. I'll persist, though, thank you.
I agree that it's more mystery than SF in its focus, though it's a science fictional setting. I've read two of his other books, and they are also mysteries set in unique settings. I always enjoy it when things about the setting are revealed little by little, which to me is the fun of a mystery in a SF or fantasy setting, because you don't automatically know the rules like you would in the "real world". Though I enjoyed this quite a bit, I still think that The 7 1/2 Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle is my favorite of his (and it's best appreciated if you go into it knowing nothing, so I'd say don't even read the cover copy).


And there's the suggestion that these 'made people' are going to eventually awaken the humans - why? Doesn't seem like a good idea to me....

"This is the trap Niema fell into. Accepted close-to-human is being human enough. Thea can't make the same mistake."
"My mom let me be afraid for a couple of weeks. Then, one day, she walked me out to the pier, right to the water's edge, and told me that everything we fear finds us eventually, so there's no point trying to outrun it."
" Powerful people usually are [afraid]; they have the most to lose."
I had to return my copy already - I'm in the middle of end-of-school-year stress, I'm sorry I haven't responded! Brain is a bit dead right now. If I have a chance I'll come back and ponder!

"This is the trap Niema fell into. Accepted close-to-human is being human enough. Th..."
All of these quotes are about fear I think, why were you intrigued?

I am actually more interested in discussing the questions in the post I made prior. About the Bibles, and about humans vs. "crums."


Which prompts me now to wonder - where in the world is this haven? It wouldn't have to be in the West....
I actually know quite a few scientists who are devout believers. As I’m always telling my students, science and religion are not opposites, they’re just different!

Agree entirely. Reading the Bible literally absolutely is opposite of science. I often become very cranky when people try to bridge the differences about reality given in religious texts and science discoveries.
I’ve always thought of the difference as that science requires evidence, while religion requires faith and faith is belief without needing evidence (which is valid, just not scientific).
And yes, it is possible to be a devout believer without reading the Bible literally.
Back to the book - I’m Jewish and used to being surrounded by Christians of various degrees of belief, so it didn’t really stand out to me as odd, more that chance happened to preserve believers.
And yes, it is possible to be a devout believer without reading the Bible literally.
Back to the book - I’m Jewish and used to being surrounded by Christians of various degrees of belief, so it didn’t really stand out to me as odd, more that chance happened to preserve believers.

Shel, it could be chance. And/or it could be the author is Christian. And/or, and this just occurred to me, it could be that the author needed a way to incorporate the line "the meek shall inherit the earth."
Just one more thing I'm still wondering about. Why would the made people want to wake the humans? (Why would someone advise them to, and why might they want to, and would it be a good idea given the particular world-building in this book?)
Cheryl wrote: "And/or, and this just occurred to me, it could be that the author needed a way to incorporate the line "the meek shall inherit the earth."
Now that makes sense! :)
I think some of the made people have been conditioned to see the humans as authority figures who are somehow "higher" in a hierarchy and therefore should be awakened. Is it a good idea? I'm less sure of that one. I guess if they truly would have the knowledge to make the world safe again it would be worth it?
Now that makes sense! :)
I think some of the made people have been conditioned to see the humans as authority figures who are somehow "higher" in a hierarchy and therefore should be awakened. Is it a good idea? I'm less sure of that one. I guess if they truly would have the knowledge to make the world safe again it would be worth it?

Unless the author wants to write a sequel, in which case there's the hook. ;)

Can't say as I really thought the bible was a necessary addition to the story. Not sure "the meek shall inherit the earth" was enough requirement to include it. Though, in times of uncertainty, people often find religion to be comforting, so maybe it was just there to show that one person was trying to find meaning in this new world.
I am also not sure awakening the humans seems like a good idea and I like to think that maybe they will come to the same conclusion, or they will at least put some precautions in place before they do.

I get the same kind of vibe off this story. Where it is told from the perspective of the made person, the not human, and yet we as the reader feel deep sympathy with the made person and not with the rather off putting 'real' humans.
It is interesting to think of this in real life and how humans often treat other humans as 'lesser than' and then use it as an excuse to treat them like slaves, or animals, or exterminate them. Rather than seeing everyone as valuable. A rather despicable human trait, to spend so much time punching people down, rather than lifting them up.

What is even more of a despicable trait, a majority seem to support, and become a fan of, those who punch down, giving money and voting for them, or following their leadership.
Books mentioned in this topic
Klara and the Sun (other topics)Klara and the Sun (other topics)
The 7 1/2 Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle (other topics)
The Giver (other topics)
The Last Murder at the End of the World (other topics)
Spoilers OK here!