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Cargando... The People of Sand and Slag {novelette}por Paolo Bacigalupi
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Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. I've read this one at least a couple of times before, and have shoved it into people's faces and insisted that they sit down right there and read it. It's a 'Boy and His Dog' story. It's a scathing rant against what humanity's doing to the world. It's possibly an extension of the same future hinted as being to-come in 'The Wind-Up Girl.' And it will make you cry. sin reseñas | añadir una reseña
Contenido enPump Six and Other Stories [Limited Edition] por Paolo Bacigalupi (indirecto) Premios
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I half wish I'd never read this. The visceral reason is because I love dogs, and hate to see them in peril. The intellectual reason is that in Bacigalupi's dystopian vision, the future is bleak because human beings are, by nature, monsters.
I might be forgiven for guessing, at first, that I was reading about artificial people. Their seeming indifference to pain, their ability to regrow amputated limbs, their diet of sand and rock, and their immortality all suggested that the characters in this story couldn't possibly be human. And then I realized that they were a step in human evolution, people living in a symbiotic relationship with creatures called "weevils" that give them the ability to recover from any injury, and to live, presumably, forever.
And in the end, though they've become like gods, they still have all the faults of humans but magnified now that there are no consequences. As a result they're casually cruel and thoughtless. They seem to have lost the ability to care about anything, to value traits like love and loyalty. They wonder, at one point, why the last mortal poet (nice play on the idea of an "immortal" poet) refused immortality. They love his work, but don't get what it is he's telling them.
I wish I'd never met them, and yet the power of this story is undeniable.
*SPOILER* They kill the dog. ( )