[personal profile] asterroc
I just started the audiobook of "The Giver" by Lois Lowry, and I'm nearly done, it's a short and enthralling read. It's aimed at young adult readers, but it's really secretly hard Sci-Fi / speculative fiction in the grand style of old: it proposes a future setting and explores how people (in this case an 11-year-old boy) would react within that setting. [livejournal.com profile] calzephyr77 I think it was you that liked YA and wanted to read more SF; this one is definitely worth the (short) read. The audiobook production tries to enhance things by adding ambience music; I recommend the print version instead.

Edit: I didn't realize that this book had been out forever, so it didn't occur to me that there might be spoilers in the comments. There are, though not horrible ones as of yet. Just don't read the comments if you don't want to be spoiled.

Date: 2010-09-15 11:26 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] zandperl.livejournal.com
Now that I'm done reading it, I could finish your comment. :) Yeah, it does seem surprising to me that there are sequels, though they wouldn't necessarily have to be about the same character.

But the aspect of whether things are "done" isn't what I'm baffled by, I want to know whether he was a success or a failure.

Date: 2010-09-15 07:07 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sildra.livejournal.com
I tried to be as vague as possible so that it wouldn't be spoilery, but I guess it's possible for anything to be a spoiler. Oh well.

Based on your comment and [livejournal.com profile] q10's (six years ago he would have been about 10 years older than I was when I read it) I think it might be that there's an interpretation of the ending that adults tend to come up with, and one that kids tend to come up with, and the author meant the latter (it is a kids' book after all). I can't even imagine coming up with the pessimistic interpretation when I was not-quite-13.

Date: 2010-09-20 02:24 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] zandperl.livejournal.com
As an adult reader, I suspect that the "optimistic" interpretation of the ending would not have even occurred to me had I not known that there were sequels. The coincidental appearance of the same object that had been in the first memory was just too much, and to me said it could not be real.

What I found intriguing in the ending was whether the main character was actually another failure just like his predecessor, and his mentor was too kind to tell him so but instead led him on this wild goose chase.

I guess there's another interpretation of the ending, that the mentor's powers were even stronger than we thought, and that he somehow bent reality to place that object atop the hill, or that the "memory" had been contemporary rather than from someone "back and back".

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