Title: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Samwise on January 26, 2008, 11:45:23 AM A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller. (http://www.amazon.com/Canticle-Leibowitz-Walter-Miller-Jr/dp/0060892994/) Should be in your local bookstore or library under science fiction.
Plan on starting spoileriffic discussion in February. (edit) I'm going to add a poll to this topic to try to track how many people are working on it and how many have finished it; that way we can start spoilers early if everyone finishes early. Vote "not yet" now, then remove your vote and change it to "all done" once you're finished, kk? This will be a bold experiment. Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: bhodi on January 26, 2008, 11:54:08 AM Hell yes, great book.
Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Morat20 on January 26, 2008, 12:54:39 PM Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Samwise on January 26, 2008, 01:15:21 PM Unless you've read it recently enough that it's really fresh in your mind, I'd suggest rereading it. Especially if you read Cat's Cradle last time around.
Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: lamaros on January 30, 2008, 07:31:09 PM If anyone is interested I read an article that goes in to some detail about the Catholic elements of the book that I found interesting and informative. If anyone might be interested in reading it let me know via PM or something as it was obtained via uni (it is a journal article) and I don't want to be hosting it. It's a quick read.
I found the article mentioned here: http://www.infography.com/content/040281001962.html I can probably obtain most of the others listed there for people if they don't have a way of accessing them. This is just for personal pleasure. I don't mean to define the discussion along any of these lines by mentioning this. Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: MaceVanHoffen on January 30, 2008, 11:01:41 PM I'm having a surprisingly hard time finding this book. I was hoping to pick it up locally, but neither B+N or the local store Copperfield's has it. My local library has all copies out. I'll probably drive down to Berkeley, since there's more bookstores there than up here in the sticks.
Anyway, I might be late to this discussion. Too bad, since everyone I talk to says this book is great, and oh why haven't I read it yet!? Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: bhodi on January 31, 2008, 07:11:41 AM If you really want to read this, but have exhausted all other options, and don't mind reading at the computer, you can PM me.
Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Samwise on January 31, 2008, 09:49:29 AM I'm having a surprisingly hard time finding this book. I was hoping to pick it up locally, but neither B+N or the local store Copperfield's has it. My local library has all copies out. I'll probably drive down to Berkeley, since there's more bookstores there than up here in the sticks. Anyway, I might be late to this discussion. Too bad, since everyone I talk to says this book is great, and oh why haven't I read it yet!? According to the poll, most people are still in the process of acquiring the book, so we'll hold off on discussion for another week at least, I think. I'm slightly shocked that B+N didn't have it; even the shitty little book store (http://www.booksinc.net/) here in Alameda had a copy, and it never has ANYTHING. :ye_gods: Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: MaceVanHoffen on January 31, 2008, 11:49:14 PM So, I'm halfway through this book, and I have to say that Samwise will be denied my black spot. This is a great read. I'm glad I bought it (found a small bookstore in a town a few highways over), as I will most definitely reread it.
I shall refrain from spoilerage, but I think calling this book sci fi does it an injustice only because so often sci fi gets relegated to "light" reading. It's got some real meat to it, good discussion fodder. I'm reading this at the same time as Dan Simmons' Ilium, so it's taking me longer than usual to finish. I bought Ilium at the same time, and dammit it's good too. Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Soukyan on February 01, 2008, 09:04:55 AM I, too, am about halfway through Canticle, but it is a re-reading so whenever the discussion starts, I'm ready for it.
Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Morat20 on February 01, 2008, 09:52:21 AM So, I'm halfway through this book, and I have to say that Samwise will be denied my black spot. This is a great read. I'm glad I bought it (found a small bookstore in a town a few highways over), as I will most definitely reread it. Canticle made the list in a Sci-Fi lit class I took about ten years ago. (For the record, it was joined by: Frankenstein, War of the Worlds, Childhood's End, Solaris, Neuromancer, The Lathe of Heaven, The Left Hand of Armageddon -- there were nine, and now I can't remember the last one.).I shall refrain from spoilerage, but I think calling this book sci fi does it an injustice only because so often sci fi gets relegated to "light" reading. It's got some real meat to it, good discussion fodder. I'm reading this at the same time as Dan Simmons' Ilium, so it's taking me longer than usual to finish. I bought Ilium at the same time, and dammit it's good too. Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: lamaros on February 01, 2008, 05:57:15 PM Mmm, solaris.
Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Miasma on February 01, 2008, 06:36:57 PM I'm enjoying the book but am getting irritated by the amount of untranslated Latin in it. Exactly how much am I missing out on because I dropped out of Latin class during grade eleven in the only school in my province that still taught it?
Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Strazos on February 01, 2008, 07:44:52 PM Just got it today. I won't get much of a chance to read it until Monday night.
Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Morat20 on February 02, 2008, 10:01:46 AM I'm enjoying the book but am getting irritated by the amount of untranslated Latin in it. Exactly how much am I missing out on because I dropped out of Latin class during grade eleven in the only school in my province that still taught it? Very little, IIRC -- it's really there for the medieval monk flavor. If it's important, it'll be translated. If there's something you really want translated, I can give it a shot. It's been, um, 14 years since I took Latin. I still remember a bit!Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: bhodi on February 03, 2008, 09:20:03 PM Sic transit mundus - How you all doing on the reading? When can we start talking again?
I'm enjoying the book but am getting irritated by the amount of untranslated Latin in it. Exactly how much am I missing out on because I dropped out of Latin class during grade eleven in the only school in my province that still taught it? Here you go (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Latin_Phrases_in_A_Canticle_for_Leibowitz).Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Margalis on February 03, 2008, 09:23:50 PM Might have to skip this round unless my local Borders has a copy tomorrow.
Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: bhodi on February 03, 2008, 09:28:56 PM I forgot to mention, if you are interested in the audiobook version, a 15-part serialization of the novel that was adapted for radio by John Reed and broadcast in 1981 by NPR, you can PM me for info on that as well. It has several actors and was well done.
Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Viin on February 04, 2008, 08:41:17 AM I ordered this from Amazon earlier last week but don't have it yet. Free 2 day shipping my ass.
Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Morat20 on February 04, 2008, 10:31:16 AM I ordered this from Amazon earlier last week but don't have it yet. Free 2 day shipping my ass. I have a copy I've kept safe for two decades now -- still trying to get the wife to read it. When I think of the "classics" of Sci-Fi, this one really stands out as the most approachable -- mostly because it transcends genre.It really is a phenomenal work. Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Viin on February 04, 2008, 11:15:08 AM I look forward to reading it - I'm almost done with Deadhouse Gates (http://www.amazon.com/Deadhouse-Gates-Malazan-Book-Fallen/dp/0765314290) and I could use a break.
Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Strazos on February 04, 2008, 07:11:45 PM I'm really liking it so far. I would be shocked if this book WASN'T some sort of inspiration for the Fallout games.
The plot itself moves a bit slowly (I'm only about 1/3rd into the book), but it's so well written that I just don't care. Nice choice, Samwise. Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Margalis on February 04, 2008, 07:19:10 PM When I we going to start discussing? Sounds like many people, myself included, are having trouble picking it up.
We should probably pick the next book much earlier. Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: lamaros on February 04, 2008, 11:14:40 PM The next book has been picked, see the other thread.
Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Rendakor on February 05, 2008, 03:13:20 AM Neither Borders nor Barnes & Noble around here had it in stock. Will check my college library tonite, but don't hold discussion on my account.
Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Soukyan on February 05, 2008, 07:02:30 AM I don't know where most of you live, but the bookstore stock in your area must suck. They have copies of this book in every Barnes & Noble (3) and Border's (2) and Half-Price Books (2) near me. Also, Amazon for the win.
http://www.amazon.com/Canticle-Leibowitz-Walter-Miller-Jr/dp/0060892994/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1202224624&sr=1-1 (http://www.amazon.com/Canticle-Leibowitz-Walter-Miller-Jr/dp/0060892994/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1202224624&sr=1-1) If that copy is too expensive for you, there are links to mass market versions that people are selling for as little as $0.01. Plus shipping of 3.99 puts it at a cool $4 USD. Not bad at all. Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Viin on February 05, 2008, 07:47:12 AM You guys can probably start - there's enough people done (and a lot waiting for the book). I'll catch up in a few days.
Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Samwise on February 05, 2008, 08:34:37 AM Let's hold off until next week. By then at least half of us should be done.
Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: MaceVanHoffen on February 05, 2008, 12:20:23 PM I'm on my second pass through the book. I read it too fast the first time, as I thought I was running out of time for this discussion. All that Latin is bringing back memories of my youth in Catholic school, damn nuns rapping my knuckles with their rulers ...
Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Strazos on February 06, 2008, 06:43:25 AM I'm also seeing some parallels with the Chinese Cultural Revolution; hell, you could swap the word [spoiler]simplification for Cultural Revolution and not be too far off...kind of scarey in a way.
Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: cmlancas on February 11, 2008, 02:12:21 AM I really will be picking this up, probably Wednesday. I treated myself to Hemingway's "The Last Good Country" (short story) the other day and have been doing a spot of research related to an idea I have. :awesome_for_real:
Anyway, that being said, I hope to be done with Canticle by Thursday or so. Edit: I picked it up today. Will be leafing through in the next few days. Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Strazos on February 14, 2008, 05:29:52 PM Just finished it tonight....wow, pretty amazing piece, with a powerful ending.
PLZ2bdiscussing Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: lamaros on February 14, 2008, 05:32:28 PM Maybe we should make this a biannual bookclub?
Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Viin on February 14, 2008, 07:07:33 PM Heh. I'm half way done, should be done soonish. Good so far!
I think I read stuff pretty lightly though, we'll see what kinda comments people have .. :P Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Samwise on February 14, 2008, 10:25:47 PM I say we go ahead and open the floor on this one. I'm already done with the next book, FFS. (Who's picking the next next one?)
There's a lot to say about Canticle, so I'll just start with the reason I picked it. After Cat's Cradle I found myself unaccountably disappointed with the ending (that is, with the entire world senselessy perishing in ice), and I realized that this was strange because there are a good number of books I really like that involve the end of the world, like this one. So I thought it'd be fun to revisit it and compare notes. Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: lamaros on February 14, 2008, 11:11:17 PM So you think they don't just die up there in space?
(I think I'm picking next, but I'll give it a while. no need to overload people when we're just begining this book) I liked this, I found it very enjoyable. I'm probably even less inclined to agree with much of the world view expressed in it that I am with Cat's Cradle, but I found the actual writing itself more fun to get through. I found the first part by far the best, the later bits I wasn't as keen on. Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Morat20 on February 15, 2008, 09:48:48 AM So you think they don't just die up there in space? It was pretty heavily implied -- if not out right stated -- that humans already had several colony worlds. I imagine they just scattered among those, keeping the knowledge alive.It just occured to me that this was very obviously the inspiration for part of a B5 episode.... Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: bhodi on February 15, 2008, 10:36:05 AM It just occured to me that this was very obviously the inspiration for part of a B5 episode.... Correct. The end episode of the 4th or 5th season, I forget which. JMS has said that he pulled it directly from this book :)Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Samwise on February 15, 2008, 12:20:30 PM So you think they don't just die up there in space? It was pretty heavily implied -- if not out right stated -- that humans already had several colony worlds. I imagine they just scattered among those, keeping the knowledge alive.It was outright stated. The monks' mission was to head to the nearest existing colony (Centarus) and put down roots, establishing a new diocese and potentially a new papacy (if they were cut off from Earth) so that they could ordain new priests and eventually new bishops from among the colonists. If they were successful in establishing themselves and growing their numbers, they could then send missions to the other colony worlds, with copies of the accumulated knowledge of mankind going to each one. Something that I had somehow glossed over in my earlier readings of this book was the significance of Zerchi's warning before their departure to never return to Earth, lest they find it guarded by an angel with a flaming sword. On first reading I assumed he was talking about Earth being a scorched radioactive wasteland, but within the context of Rachael's appearance as (apparently) a new breed of ageless and innocent human, it takes on the suggestion of Earth eventually becoming a new Eden, with the humans who might ruin it with the fruit of knowledge forbidden from ever returning. If that was in fact his meaning (that the knowledge/Memorabilia shouldn't be brought back to Earth, for Earth's sake), it seems like a strange stance for a booklegger to take. Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Strazos on February 15, 2008, 03:43:36 PM I found the direct parallels to Cultural Revolution China to be very interesting, down to the killing of any sort of intellectual, or even anyone who was literate.
I also found reading this book to be sort of tragic, because I can totally imagine people in reality to be stupid enough to try their hand at nuclear holocaust. Especially in a world where humans know what would happen, but go forward with the nukes anyway. Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: lamaros on February 17, 2008, 04:02:30 PM It was outright stated. The monks' mission was to head to the nearest existing colony (Centarus) and put down roots, establishing a new diocese and potentially a new papacy (if they were cut off from Earth) so that they could ordain new priests and eventually new bishops from among the colonists. If they were successful in establishing themselves and growing their numbers, they could then send missions to the other colony worlds, with copies of the accumulated knowledge of mankind going to each one. Something that I had somehow glossed over in my earlier readings of this book was the significance of Zerchi's warning before their departure to never return to Earth, lest they find it guarded by an angel with a flaming sword. On first reading I assumed he was talking about Earth being a scorched radioactive wasteland, but within the context of Rachael's appearance as (apparently) a new breed of ageless and innocent human, it takes on the suggestion of Earth eventually becoming a new Eden, with the humans who might ruin it with the fruit of knowledge forbidden from ever returning. If that was in fact his meaning (that the knowledge/Memorabilia shouldn't be brought back to Earth, for Earth's sake), it seems like a strange stance for a booklegger to take. That's similar to the reading I took, but I think I had the idea of the existing colonies being failures of sorts, and that the monks would have to fix that if they wanted to make a 'real go' of it. I've still got the book at home so I'm going to take another glance over it tonight and see if I just made that up or there's a reason it's in my mind. I'm not going to mess up this thread with other readings, but I found that some of the stuff I read about the catholic aspects (this was written before that big ol' catholic council) made some of the booklegger/religion/science stuff in the book come into a clearer focus. It certainly gave me a clearer appreciation of the book as a reflection of the author's time as opposed to just a story or vehicle for ideology. I think there's a lot of 'mess' in the book; conflict between these various positions is raised but never exactly put to bed, whether through desire to reflect some of that confusion or inability to come to resolution. You can certainly read a long way in to Rachael, but I think that it's one of the weaker bits of the book (actually I think the whole third section goes down an almost didactic hill) and what is presented there doesn't resonate or engage me as much as the earlier stuff, where the various conflicts seem more natural and balanced. Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Strazos on February 17, 2008, 05:56:36 PM Agreed. I did not like the 3rd portion so much either, except for the Very end.
Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Viin on February 19, 2008, 09:09:54 AM Finished this up, great book. Just goes to show you what a buncha bastards we are. :uhrr:
I did find it interesting that they insisted on carrying forward knowledge (to the new colonies) when it was plain that mankind couldn't handle it without eventually trying very hard to destroy itself. Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Morat20 on February 19, 2008, 09:36:45 AM Finished this up, great book. Just goes to show you what a buncha bastards we are. :uhrr: Someone, somewhere, would get it right. I don't worry about atomic holocausts anymore, but advances in nanotechnology and synthetic biology have similar potential for devestation. I did find it interesting that they insisted on carrying forward knowledge (to the new colonies) when it was plain that mankind couldn't handle it without eventually trying very hard to destroy itself. It doesn't have to be a flame deluge. Grey goo, too many immortals running around, or custom plagues created by script kiddies would do it. Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Samwise on February 19, 2008, 10:09:55 AM You do have to think long and hard about the wisdom of continuing to carry forward that knowledge. I figure that even if it wasn't, we'd rediscover the technology on our own (we found it on our own the first time, right?), but by that point we'd probably have completely forgotten the previous apocalypse and there'd be nothing preventing history repeating itself. By preserving the memory of the Deluge along with the technology that led to it, you can at least hope that by the time that technology is rebuilt the people who possess it will still remember the consequences of misusing it.
You really have to feel for the monks in the third part of the book seeing that hope get shot to hell. But like Morat said, after N apocalypses somebody is bound to figure out that blowing up the world is bad, right? Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Miasma on February 19, 2008, 03:30:13 PM But like Morat said, after N apocalypses somebody is bound to figure out that blowing up the world is bad, right? Yeah, but the people in power don't listen to guys like that, they listen to the ones who promise them even more power.The nanotech/biological possibilities are pretty scary. At some point the only thing that could stop an apocalypse would be one all powerful government in charge of the whole of humanity. Pick your futuristic dystopia now before it's too late! Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: lamaros on February 19, 2008, 04:03:22 PM Do you genuinely believe that?
I dunno, it might be a bit silly to sit here now and say "I don't think we'll ever have an apocalypse", but that's the way I lean on this issue. Not one deliberatly motivated and casued by human conflict, anyway. Do people think that our views on this might be differetn based on where we live? Is there more inclination for people in the US to hold such fears for humanity? I don't know anything on the subject, but it would be interesting to see what % of apocalypse stories come out of the various parts of the world. Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: cmlancas on February 19, 2008, 04:05:31 PM I'm only on like page 25, but every time I think of the desert wasteland, I start thinking about an area between the Pakistans and Northern India. Don't ask me why, I just do.
I know there's a bunch of shit always in the news about America and how it sucks, but I think if a nuclear war erupted, it'd be between those three countries. That region is all KINDS of fucked up. Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Miasma on February 19, 2008, 04:16:10 PM Do you genuinely believe that? Technology will eventually become powerful enough that any small country or major corporation will be able to come up with a doomsday mechanism. Probably (hopefully) not in my lifetime but within the next couple hundred years sure. The chance of apocalypse is directly related to how many people have the ability to initiate it either intentionally or by accident. Once nanotech becomes cheap enough that they just ship you a medium and an SDK to program it we're pretty much screwed. There are at least nine countries who have nuclear weapons now, that only took fifty years and the pace of progress is accelerating.I dunno, it might be a bit silly to sit here now and say "I don't think we'll ever have an apocalypse", but that's the way I lean on this issue. Not one deliberatly motivated and casued by human conflict, anyway. Do people think that our views on this might be differetn based on where we live? Is there more inclination for people in the US to hold such fears for humanity? I don't know anything on the subject, but it would be interesting to see what % of apocalypse stories come out of the various parts of the world. I'm only on like page 25, but every time I think of the desert wasteland, I start thinking about an area between the Pakistans and Northern India. Don't ask me why, I just do. Oh yeah, there's a very good chance of those two going at it. A few wars in the in the recent past, shared border, religious extremists on both sides. That's an accident waiting to happen.I know there's a bunch of shit always in the news about America and how it sucks, but I think if a nuclear war erupted, it'd be between those three countries. That region is all KINDS of fucked up. Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: lamaros on February 19, 2008, 05:26:24 PM I guess I don't have as low a view of humanity, despite the ligetimate potential of such events. Which, given the evidence, is possibly an irrational belief.
Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Samwise on February 19, 2008, 06:22:02 PM I guess I don't have as low a view of humanity, despite the ligetimate potential of such events. Which, given the evidence, is possibly an irrational belief. The escalating conflict in part 3 was uncomfortably plausible IMO. I can definitely see the US and China getting in a dickwaving contest with nuclear weapons. "Well, we won't use dirty fallout as long as they promise not to, BUT..." Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Miasma on February 19, 2008, 07:06:41 PM I guess I don't have as low a view of humanity, despite the ligetimate potential of such events. Which, given the evidence, is possibly an irrational belief. The escalating conflict in part 3 was uncomfortably plausible IMO. I can definitely see the US and China getting in a dickwaving contest with nuclear weapons. "Well, we won't use dirty fallout as long as they promise not to, BUT..." Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: DeathInABottle on February 19, 2008, 07:21:00 PM I leant this out to a friend years ago and never got it back. :heartbreak: Hands down one of my favourites, so I'll probably tag along on the conversation.
Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Viin on February 19, 2008, 07:45:27 PM The nanotech/biological possibilities are pretty scary. Which is why we should read Neuromancer (http://www.amazon.com/Neuromancer-William-Gibson/dp/0441012035)next! Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: lamaros on February 19, 2008, 07:53:14 PM The escalating conflict in part 3 was uncomfortably plausible IMO. I can definitely see the US and China getting in a dickwaving contest with nuclear weapons. "Well, we won't use dirty fallout as long as they promise not to, BUT..." I certainly agree with that. That kind of diplomacy will probably never go away. I'm more thinking (hoping) that once things escalate to a certain point then some kind of innate humanity kicks in and people take that step back. Like what happened with the Cuban Missile Crisis (though, I'm not an expert on that so maybe me view here is naive). Are there people in this world who would destroy humanity completely if there were able? Probably. But I like to think that these people are very very few, and so mad that they will be their own barrier to ever having the ability to do so, no matter how far technology comes. Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: DeathInABottle on February 20, 2008, 06:07:35 PM The escalating conflict in part 3 was uncomfortably plausible IMO. I can definitely see the US and China getting in a dickwaving contest with nuclear weapons. "Well, we won't use dirty fallout as long as they promise not to, BUT..." I certainly agree with that. That kind of diplomacy will probably never go away. I'm more thinking (hoping) that once things escalate to a certain point then some kind of innate humanity kicks in and people take that step back. Like what happened with the Cuban Missile Crisis (though, I'm not an expert on that so maybe me view here is naive). Are there people in this world who would destroy humanity completely if there were able? Probably. But I like to think that these people are very very few, and so mad that they will be their own barrier to ever having the ability to do so, no matter how far technology comes. That aside, what do you think Miller is saying about human nature? You're talking about an "innate humanity", and while this seems to be evident in the book's protagonists, it doesn't show in the broader human race. The faceless types with their fingers on the buttons certainly don't have this sort of humanist restraint. It seems like Miller's either got a very negative view of human nature, or a very negative view of the effects of the institutions that cause people to act the way that they do. Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Samwise on February 20, 2008, 10:16:56 PM That aside, what do you think Miller is saying about human nature? You're talking about an "innate humanity", and while this seems to be evident in the book's protagonists, it doesn't show in the broader human race. The faceless types with their fingers on the buttons certainly don't have this sort of humanist restraint. It seems like Miller's either got a very negative view of human nature, or a very negative view of the effects of the institutions that cause people to act the way that they do. I think Dom Paulo's conversations with Thon Taddeo are an important piece of that puzzle, since it seemed to me like Thon Taddeo sort of represented the start of a slide away from "wisdom" in favor of "knowledge", if that makes sense. Basically the same sort of cleverness-for-its-own-sake that scientists were characterized by in Cat's Cradle, but not as exaggerated. The point at which Paulo became completely fed up with Taddeo was when Taddeo proposed his idea that modern-day humans were an inferior race created by the "original" humans, and that this was the explanation for the fact that they didn't seem to be as clever. As Paulo saw it (and I think this is accurate), he was looking for a way to shirk responsibility for humanity's failures while at the same time elevating the importance of his own accomplishments. Even if his particular idea didn't take hold, it's that same sort of refusal to take responsibility for one's actions while exulting in their importance that ultimately dooms the planet. Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: lamaros on February 21, 2008, 02:57:05 PM I actually found Taddeo's arguments here (not that one, but some of the others) to be pretty strong, and Paulo's a bit more.. well, just opinions. I'm not sure if that was intentional from the book's view, or I was just continuing the arguments out in my head and reevaluating them, but I didn't feel that I was on Paulo's side and against Taddeo's (that kind of narrow 'sides' view, soo self-importantly opinionated that in creates distinctions is something I dislike).
There's the serious hypocrisy that Miller outlines, the "saving things for the future" yet then begrudging that future when it arrives. Taddeo seems much more focused on a real human situation, and the step from him to the third part seems unfair. I think that Miller does just choose to paint people without some human aspect in order to reach his end, where when painted better this doesn't follow unavoidably. Even still, the conflict between the priest and the doctor in part three shows that Miller's contentions are still rooted in confusion. It seems to me that confusion is the theme of the book. His resolution seems to be to try and break it down in to parts; the dispair of the apocalypse, the hope of a fresh start, the miracle of birth, etc etc. While this is all well and good it comes across to me as nothing less than contrived. As the confusion is in the heart of every character in the book (except perhaps the Jew and Rachel) than this simple breakdown doesn't address this internal/eternal dilemma. Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Samwise on February 24, 2008, 12:47:13 PM Taddeo seems much more focused on a real human situation, and the step from him to the third part seems unfair. I think that Miller does just choose to paint people without some human aspect in order to reach his end, where when painted better this doesn't follow unavoidably. The downward slide to the third part of the book wasn't so much a continuation of Taddeo as it was the consequences of Taddeo's position, which was analogous to the position of the pre-Deluge "wise men" who were subject to the "princes". Taddeo was a good person and was working to improve the world, but to do that work he had to basically be subservient to Hannigan and accept the risk that Hannigan (or the princes that followed him) would use what he learned for less than noble ends. Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: lamaros on February 24, 2008, 05:12:37 PM The question remains if Taddeo is going to be a lasting influence on human history, or if everything he did was going to be filtered through Hannigan's influence.
Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Prospero on February 24, 2008, 06:06:25 PM I think that question was answered to some extent in the 3rd book where the abbot can't remember Taddeo's name. For all his brilliance he was just a small footnote in history.
Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Strazos on February 24, 2008, 06:17:59 PM But when you get down to it, isn't that the nature of advancement in science; standing on the shoulders of those who came before you, to grasp for something that was previously beyond anyone's reach?
Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: lamaros on February 24, 2008, 10:58:28 PM I think that question was answered to some extent in the 3rd book where the abbot can't remember Taddeo's name. For all his brilliance he was just a small footnote in history. But my whole point is that part three is 'bad' and doesn't necessarily follow from what is presented from before hand. Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Samwise on February 25, 2008, 10:38:59 AM I think that question was answered to some extent in the 3rd book where the abbot can't remember Taddeo's name. For all his brilliance he was just a small footnote in history. But my whole point is that part three is 'bad' and doesn't necessarily follow from what is presented from before hand. How many stories are there where each new chapter is a completely deterministic progression from the previous one? :headscratch: Nobody, including Miller, is going to argue that the events presented are the only possible way that the initial premise could play out. It's a story, not a mathematical proof. Unless you're arguing that not only does it not necessarily follow, it necessarily doesn't follow. Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: lamaros on February 25, 2008, 01:41:47 PM Doesn't follow doesn't mean that there is only one way it can follow.
I could write a story of a man in three parts, but if the man is not a man in the third part then it does not follow if there is no possible way for the man to cease to be a man yet not cease to be. It might follow if there is such a way, but if such a way is not presented in the story or well known generally then it becomes a stretch regardless. There is the distinction between possible and probable. We are going off what has come before (in this novel) when reading this novel, if we are bringing in from the outside in order to fortify the third part rather than arguing from what is presented earlier then we are making a possible argument, not a probable one. What I am saying is that the probable arguments have a range (one might say they are unconsciously introduced) that the third part does not account for (because it is not self-consious). Indeed, my argument would be that Miller writes the story as if it is deterministic or at the least determined (think of the cyclical nature, the providence of characters, the biblical references, the vultures, etc), thus his progression must necessarily follow unless it is to become inconsistent in the third part. I feel that it doesn't and is inconsistent. Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: lamaros on February 25, 2008, 02:24:14 PM Getting back to discussing the story itself a bit more closely, this is a comment I want to question.
Nobody, including Miller, is going to argue that the events presented are the only possible way that the initial premise could play out. It's a story, not a mathematical proof. The initial premise is that there is a war, civilization has been retarded and is beginning again. Life plays out and we end up with another war with similar or more devastating results. This is the course of action that is traced in the book. The idea of human history as being caught in cyclical trap of its own making are not new to this novel, but they are very much the focus of it. For anything else to happen but another war would make this a different book. No one will argue that you can't write a book about such a subject and yet have a different ending, but we can argue that the ending of this book cannot be anything else without becoming a different book. You can actually break the novel down as a (very simple) mathematical proof if you desire. A + B + C = 'Canticle'. Three parts make up the whole. We can ask ourselves what 'Canticle' is and reach a host of opinions. We can ask ourselves what we see in A, B and C and reach a host of opinions. We can argue that there is an inconsistency between the opinions we hold about 'Canticle' and A, B, and C, and that this inconsistency comes from C. You can argue that my opinions of A, B, C or 'Canticle' are 'wrong', and it is this that is the basis of the perceived inconsistency, and perhaps you can make a good argument for it, but that comes down to the textual argument. My point on that was briefly stated earlier: That Taddeo the person does not resonate in part 3, in a novel that is about three stages of human life/history, one passing to the other. To draw him in part two and then to colour him out at the last is inconsistent. Why put him there if only to ignore him? I cannot discern a path or pattern or meaning; to me it remains a gap. I think discussing the book in this specific regard would be the most useful way of addressing our positions if we desire to continue to do so. Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Prospero on February 25, 2008, 03:10:06 PM Man... I don't know what the FUCK you just said, Little Kid, but you're special man, you reached out, and you touch a brother's heart.
Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Samwise on February 25, 2008, 03:22:04 PM My point on that was briefly stated earlier: That Taddeo the person does not resonate in part 3, in a novel that is about three stages of human life/history, one passing to the other. To draw him in part two and then to colour him out at the last is inconsistent. Why put him there if only to ignore him? I cannot discern a path or pattern or meaning; to me it remains a gap. I think discussing the book in this specific regard would be the most useful way of addressing our positions if we desire to continue to do so. Oh, there's very much a gap between parts 2 and 3. Intentionally so, I think. Like Prospero said, there's a little bit in part 3 where it's explicitly pointed out that Taddeo was ultimately a footnote in history, and that the Poet of all people had become a venerated folk hero, with his glass eyeball (the one Taddeo had brought back to Hannegan as a gift) preserved as a valuable relic. I actually took this (and a couple of the other things you mentioned, like the vultures) as evidence of unpredictability rather than determinism -- you can't always tell how important a given person or event is, or what the consequences will be a millenium later. Bumpkins like Francis and the Poet are remembered for centuries after their more notable contemporaries have been forgotten. And it's all the same as far as the vultures are concerned. Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: lamaros on February 25, 2008, 03:47:13 PM Oh, there's very much a gap between parts 2 and 3. Intentionally so, I think. Like Prospero said, there's a little bit in part 3 where it's explicitly pointed out that Taddeo was ultimately a footnote in history, and that the Poet of all people had become a venerated folk hero, with his glass eyeball (the one Taddeo had brought back to Hannegan as a gift) preserved as a valuable relic. Hmm, well the Poet himself wasn't really around, seeing how he had been completely misread. I'm not disagreeing about Taddeo as a person being a footnote, I think that's entirely reasonable, it's just what he was saying seemed to fall entirely by the wayside. The poet didn't, his influence was felt, just misunderstood (deliberately or otherwise), where as Taddeo's position has no lingering echo. Unless you're going to count the doctor as that, but for me it didn't come off as an echo but more a new voice. (Which might be me misreading it, or Miller not connecting them that well). Because like it or not, stated or not, Taddeo is a significant figure. Whether or not people of the future know about the significant figures of today is not the point, their influence in the now endures that it will be felt in the future. But all I felt coming out of Taddeo in the future was some barren science, which seemed to imply that the rest of his character, known or otherwise, did not resonate. To me that seems impossible. Quote I actually took this (and a couple of the other things you mentioned, like the vultures) as evidence of unpredictability rather than determinism -- you can't always tell how important a given person or event is, or what the consequences will be a millennium later. Bumpkins like Francis and the Poet are remembered for centuries after their more notable contemporaries have been forgotten. And it's all the same as far as the vultures are concerned. I take it the other way I guess. To look at the vultures: They are a constant, almost godlike in that they are unchanging observers from on high, watching some kind of human play act itself out (at the end of each part we draw back, away from the stage we have been watching, to these observers). With that notion of them watching comes the idea that what is being played out is being played out according to some design or pattern; determined in one way or another. As for figures. You can't always, but in some cases I think you can. Hitler for example, will be felt forever on, in one way or another. It doesn't matter if people know the specifics of his actions, his person, or the reaction of others to those things; they are so fundamental in altering many people's perspectives of the world that they will echo down the ages. Taddeo was the same. For figures like Plato and Aristotle (or the Poet) it is a hard thing to judge, but for some I think you can. Man... I don't know what the FUCK you just said, Little Kid, but you're special man, you reached out, and you touch a brother's heart. :grin: Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Prospero on February 25, 2008, 04:54:37 PM Because like it or not, stated or not, Taddeo is a significant figure. Whether or not people of the future know about the significant figures of today is not the point, their influence in the now endures that it will be felt in the future. But all I felt coming out of Taddeo in the future was some barren science, which seemed to imply that the rest of his character, known or otherwise, did not resonate. To me that seems impossible. His contributions as a scientist were significant and remembered, but not his belief system. Taddeo was not in a position of enough power to propagate that particular meme because Hannigan had his own warlike vision that he wanted to push. In a modern context, how much do we know about the belief systems of Maxwell or Newton? It's unlikely their contributions to science will be forgotten, but their vision of how science should be used is totally lost, or at least mostly ignored.As for figures. You can't always, but in some cases I think you can. Hitler for example, will be felt forever on, in one way or another. It doesn't matter if people know the specifics of his actions, his person, or the reaction of others to those things; they are so fundamental in altering many people's perspectives of the world that they will echo down the ages. Taddeo was the same. For figures like Plato and Aristotle (or the Poet) it is a hard thing to judge, but for some I think you can. Hitler == Hannigan. I think mainstream history frequently only reflects on those at the top of a society. It's one of the reasons we though everyone in 14th century England got married at 14; we only ever looked at the nobles and assumed the rest must have followed suit. How many mainstream history books cover Caesar's advisors? They probably had a huge influence on how the Roman empire developed, but they weren't the top of the pyramid. Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: lamaros on February 25, 2008, 05:05:11 PM His contributions as a scientist were significant and remembered, but not his belief system. Taddeo was not in a position of enough power to propagate that particular meme because Hannigan had his own warlike vision that he wanted to push. In a modern context, how much do we know about the belief systems of Maxwell or Newton? It's unlikely their contributions to science will be forgotten, but their vision of how science should be used is totally lost, or at least mostly ignored. Maybe in popular knowledge. Newton as a person reformed the mint! Supposedly because his gay lover left him and he channeled his anger against those clipping coins! Anyway, Newton is not a comparable example, because Newton is just one of many many people. More well known perhaps, but the reality of his situation does not make him as isolated genius in the realm of Taddeo. Also, I'm not saying that Taddeo should be know as a philosopher or anything, just that he should be more or less than 'science' if he is to be anything, and Miller makes him something. Quote Hitler == Hannigan. I think mainstream history frequently only reflects on those at the top of a society. It's one of the reasons we though everyone in 14th century England got married at 14; we only ever looked at the nobles and assumed the rest must have followed suit. How many mainstream history books cover Caesar's advisors? They probably had a huge influence on how the Roman empire developed, but they weren't the top of the pyramid. Exactly. The fact is if we just looked at Ceaser and tried to work out how the Roman empire worked it wouldn't make sense, and if we just looked at Ceaser and tried to project a future off his back we'd get something very different to what we have. Yet Miller seems to take Hannigan as the one significant influence to the exclusion of everyone else. We don't live today in Ceaser or Hilter's image (not so clearly or directly, anyway), so why does it make sense to assume that their future follows in Hannigan's and only Hannigan's? Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Prospero on February 25, 2008, 11:04:34 PM warning: I don't have my book here, and I have baby on the brain, so I may be making stuff up. Please call me on it.
Also, I'm not saying that Taddeo should be know as a philosopher or anything, just that he should be more or less than 'science' if he is to be anything, and Miller makes him something. Or at least you keep thinking Miller makes him something. Clearly the third book shows that he was in fact nothing. He did not get the ear of history, he did not dramatically change the course of human history, and thus however badass he seemed in his own time, his visible influence on history was minimal. History's a bitch.Exactly. The fact is if we just looked at Ceaser and tried to work out how the Roman empire worked it wouldn't make sense, and if we just looked at Ceaser and tried to project a future off his back we'd get something very different to what we have. Yet Miller seems to take Hannigan as the one significant influence to the exclusion of everyone else. We don't live today in Ceaser or Hilter's image (not so clearly or directly, anyway), so why does it make sense to assume that their future follows in Hannigan's and only Hannigan's? I wouldn't say that history was following in Hannigan's footsteps. His goal was to bring together the region under his control, not wipe everyone out in a dick waving contest. To follow that pattern, book three should be about the America-like nation trying to take over some other nation, at least if Miller was that heavy handed in his story telling.But he's not. I think you are trying to link the books together too much. I see them as three completely separate stories that just happen to occur on the same planet. I think the third book tries to show how time changes history. It seems pretty obvious that this one Hannigan dude didn't send humans irrecoverably down the path of nuclear war, we just happened to get there again because we're too dumb to realize those weapons should never be used. I think the second book is a discussion of how Miller thinks that scientists should be wary of sacrificing their morals for the pursuit of knowledge. I see it as Cat's Cradle all over again. Taddeo was so single minded in his pursuit of knowledge that he was willing to work for Hannigan even though he knew that his advances would come at the expense of human life. He resolved his cognitive dissonance by believing the pursuit of knowledge was for the greater good, even though clearly he didn't agree with Hannigans's actions. If he had run off and joined the monks at the end of book 2, book 3 could have been totally the same. Also I keep wanting to call Hannigan: (http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/e/e9/Zapp_Brannigan.png) It hurts my head to imagine him as an evil warlord. Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: lamaros on February 25, 2008, 11:15:53 PM Eh, I can't really see one of the/the major character of part two isn't 'something' or how the three parts are not closely related in that they are parts of the same book, but I don't think we're going to get any further here without repeating ourselves so I'll :nda:
Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Samwise on February 26, 2008, 08:34:07 PM Now for a sharp left turn: what was the point of Benjamin? I'm pretty sure that he's the Wandering Jew of medieval folklore, but how does he fit into this story?
My thinking is that his main role is to lend some sort of temporal perspective, much like I see the vultures, in that he was there before the latest world-changing scientific discovery, he'll still be there after, and he doesn't care much about any of it. I also remember thinking that his dialogue with Dom Paulo was significant, but I've already forgotten why -- will have to reread that bit. :-P Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: lamaros on February 29, 2008, 07:19:21 PM I don't think anyone else cares to actualy discuss things Samwise. Maybe I should say something provocative so they get involved with this thread again and start abusing me.
Looks like book club is closed. Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Samwise on February 29, 2008, 07:42:29 PM Are you saying that we can't have nice things?
Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Prospero on February 29, 2008, 10:54:53 PM Ugh, replying means I have to engage the brain... thing.
I think the wandering jew is there to prevent the reader from letting any anti-religion sentiment from coloring their view of the book. While a person may think God is just a figment of peoples imagination in the real world, in the book there is clearly some sort of divine force. I'm not anti-religious, but I still think it changed the way I saw the church in the book. I also thought there was something to his interest in Taddeo, but now I can't remember, and I lent the book out. Alackaday. Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: cmlancas on March 01, 2008, 04:25:06 AM It's exam week for me at my university. I still have Canticle in my bathroom (aka place of reading) and am still plodding through. I think I'm at page 100 or so.
Sorry >< Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Miasma on March 01, 2008, 12:37:10 PM I don't know what Ben was all about either. I guess we have to assume he is the same Ben from the very beginning which adds an odd bit of magic/fantasy into the book. Was he looking for the Jewish Messiah or for the second coming of Christ? And was the second coming the mutant head because it could be considered an immaculate conception?
And what was the last paragraph alluding to? Best I can come up with was some allegory about how the worst, most desperate parts of us will always survive, even if everything else is destroyed it will just go and rest in some dark place and hunger. Maybe the shark was original sin. I mean you can normally come up with some pretty wild ideas on what an author meant in regular books but since this one had so much deep religion running through it the possibilities are infinite. You would basically need to sit down with Miller and ask "so, what the fuck was that all about?" to get anywhere near the truth. Edit: And what was written on the back of Ben's sign at his home that was so damn clever? Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Samwise on March 03, 2008, 01:05:58 PM Was he looking for the Jewish Messiah or for the second coming of Christ? Could be both. In folklore, the Wandering Jew is a man who taunted Jesus on Golgotha and is cursed by God to have eternal life on Earth until he witnesses the Second Coming. If you try to fit Ben and his apparent religious beliefs into that, then he knows he can't pass on until he sees the Messiah, but he's not necessarily convinced that Jesus was the true Messiah in the first place; what he's waiting for is what Christians would call the "Second Coming", but he might see it as more of a "First Coming". I think his reaction to Taddeo was genuine -- maybe he'd been hearing about this legendary figure performing "miracles" (of science) and thought there was a chance that he was one he was waiting for. I'm still puzzling over what exactly Rachel is supposed to be. My initial reading was that she was the Second Coming (immaculate conception, end of the world, et cetera), but I'm inclined more now to think that she's more of an Eve -- not the end of life on Earth, but a new beginning. I guess those two aren't necessarily mutually exclusive, though...? Title: Re: F13 Book Club Part 2: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Miller Post by: Morat20 on March 05, 2008, 10:20:49 AM Now for a sharp left turn: what was the point of Benjamin? I'm pretty sure that he's the Wandering Jew of medieval folklore, but how does he fit into this story? He's there for the same point Bombadil was in LoTR -- he represents the unknown. Not necessarily "something outside of science", but a reminder that even with all the knowledge stored by the Church or acquired by man, there will always be mysteries and enigmas. |