Reviewed by Cameron Trost on
"Right square in the tradition: you kick people in the balls and expect them to do the apologizing. Because of you and people like you, we sit here in the richest country in the world surrounded by sick kids-"
You guessed it...or did you?
"The Sheep Look Up" isn't a novel in the traditional sense. You're not going to read a "story". This is a mish-mash of nightmarish snippets that you can dip in and out of (highly recommended for sanity's sake) without losing track of the overall direction the book is dragging you in. This is the literary equivalent of watching a 24/7 news broadcast, but decidedly more insightful. John Brunner took trends that were already well underway in the seventies and let them drag him into the future. What's most disturbing of all, of course, is that reading this book today, you can't help but affirm that much of what he wrote happened (and is happening) in almost precisely the way he described it. This doesn't make him a prophet; it just means he was paying attention and extrapolated his analysis of society as he got it down on paper using appropriately disjunct, anguish-inducing prose. And the hungry sheep? Well, they're still looking up, and their numbers are growing exponentially.
Reading updates
- Started reading
- 11 December, 2021: Finished reading
- 11 December, 2021: Reviewed