Monday, 27 May 2013

Brave New World (87) - somebody's paradise

What a book! Brave New World, by Aldous Huxley should be read by everyone. It's a chilling exploration of what the future could hold if the majority of humanity turned it's back on ... well, what makes it "human". This is supposed to be utopia ... no illness, no ageing, no fear of death, no violence, no family and no religion ... well, kind of! Everyone is bred in test tubes, with eggs being divided and redivided to create myriads of twins. Whilst growing up, all babies and then children are conditioned to the way of life they have been bred to live - whether they are "alpha" or "gamma" or whatever. Different types of people are "happy" with their lot, no matter how grim their work - it's what they have been bred and conditioned to think and feel. Ambition is long gone. If people do start to "feel" uncomfortable - then there is a very simple solution - they just drop a dose of "soma" and all is well once again. In effect, everyone is drugged up to the eyeballs most of the time. Whether it's work, play or recreational sex - of which there is plenty - everyone knows their place. Living in this world is Bernard, who doesn't quite fit the mould. He cannot get to grips with his place in the world and is full of resentment. When he happens upon a "savage" - a boy who has grown up in the wild - where people do get fat or sick, but do believe in God or Buddha or whatever, he brings him back to "civilisation" in the hope of glory. The savage makes sense of the world through the Shakespearean plays he has read since an early age, and which he quotes to express his thoughts and feelings. Initially excited and intrigued by this civilisation, he soon becomes disgusted and turns his back on it. This is a great book - it is disturbing, funny, tempting and thought provoking, but a great story too. More books should have this effect on their readers. This will definitely stay with me.

My STAR rating: FIVE

Length: 237 print pages.
Price I paid: £1.00 in a second hand bookshop.
Formats available: print, audio CD or download, ebook

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