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What Members Thought

Welcome my son
Welcome to the machine
Where have you been?
It's alright we know where you've been
- Pink Floyd: "Welcome to the Machine"
EM Forster is known primarily for a handful of Edwardian-Era novels, most of which have been lushly adapted to the silver screen by notable award-winning directors such as David Lean and James Ivory. But this short story, originally published in 1909 as a response to a utopian novel written by H.G. Wells, stands apart as a bleak dystopian look at a future Earth ...more
Welcome to the machine
Where have you been?
It's alright we know where you've been
- Pink Floyd: "Welcome to the Machine"
EM Forster is known primarily for a handful of Edwardian-Era novels, most of which have been lushly adapted to the silver screen by notable award-winning directors such as David Lean and James Ivory. But this short story, originally published in 1909 as a response to a utopian novel written by H.G. Wells, stands apart as a bleak dystopian look at a future Earth ...more

Creepily plausible. The bit where everyone avoids direct experience/knowledge of a thing, in favor of talking/ writing about what other people said about what other people thought about what other people wrote about a thing rang disturbingly prescient in our "post-truth" world of alternate facts. Also the woman spending her whole life interacting with her reality totally through buttons and screens. *shiver*
...more

Jul 07, 2014
Laura
rated it
liked it
Shelves:
british-literature,
e-books,
science-fiction,
short-stories,
audio-books,
read-2014,
dystopia
From BBC Radio 4 - 4 Extra Debut:
Written in 1909, a tale of the future where the machine has become an all-powerful god. Stars Gemma Jones and John McAndrew.
You may read online .
I would never imagined that E M Forster had wrote any science fiction book before I have read Richard's review. ...more
Written in 1909, a tale of the future where the machine has become an all-powerful god. Stars Gemma Jones and John McAndrew.
You may read online .
I would never imagined that E M Forster had wrote any science fiction book before I have read Richard's review. ...more

(3.5 stars) If you're a Forster fan and stumbled into this anomaly, you might have been as confused as I was and thought why he of all people decided to write a sci-fi story, or, more importantly, would it actually be good?
Luckily, it's well worth the read. Well-written and with an eerie ending, it's especially recommended for those whose gadgets have been glued into their hands and brains instead of being mere tools of communication. A monochromatic world, completely devoid of original thought ...more
Luckily, it's well worth the read. Well-written and with an eerie ending, it's especially recommended for those whose gadgets have been glued into their hands and brains instead of being mere tools of communication. A monochromatic world, completely devoid of original thought ...more

This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it,
click here.

May 22, 2011
Kathy Jo
marked it as to-read

Feb 22, 2013
AmberBug *shelfnotes com*
marked it as to-read
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
short-stories

Jan 11, 2016
Meredith
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Mar 31, 2018
Carrie
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Lucy
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Seymone
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Oct 02, 2019
Theresa Wright
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Margaret
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Nov 27, 2019
Allison
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Feb 08, 2020
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