Reviewed by Joséphine on
Instead of impending annihilation, she becomes a science experiment because Berk, her former Pod mate and friend, who is in training to become a Scientist, manages to convince the Scientists to preserve her life. That decision is not indefinite but it gives Berk time to figure out how to save Thalli. It is from this point onwards that things become interesting. What is humanity without emotion? Readers come to see what it must be like to learn about emotion for the first time. Happiness, anger, sadness, etc. are so integral to our lives that we rarely stop to think what life would be like if it were entirely rational. This whole concept in itself intrigued me and it is that which first drew me to this book. Also, I can rarely resist books in which music is integral, so it was a bonus when I read about Thalli’s role as a Musician and how she would lose herself in music.
While I had no problems with the outright religious messages weaved into the story, I do think it’s important to note that it very clearly is a book of Christian narrative fiction. Some readers may not appreciate this but the quest for the Designer is part of what propels the plot forward. It is also what gives Thalli glimpses of a greater purpose. It also added another facet to the discoveries of what life on earth was like before the nuclear war that wiped out most everyone besides the Scientists who managed to establish The State and save themselves.
Fuller review here.
Reading updates
- Started reading
- 8 September, 2013: Finished reading
- 8 September, 2013: Reviewed