In the end, the wowness and importance of the novel's ideas as well as the segments that I thoroughly enjoyed carried the book to a strong 3.5 star rating. I need to parse my rating of this book into the good (or great), the bad and the very fugly because I thought aspects of it were inspired genius and parts of it were dreggy, boring and living near the border of awful. THE REALLY GOOD/EXCELLENT - I loved the first third of the book in which the basic outline of the "Brave New World" and it Instead you rely on the system, the soma, the conditioning.I need to parse my rating of this book into the good (or great), the bad and the very fugly because I thought aspects of it were inspired genius and parts of it were dreggy, boring and living near the border of awful. When you slip away from happiness, you drink a soothing beverage called soma “to calm your anger, to reconcile your enemies, to make you patient and long-suffering.” Rather than bothering with the complexities and instability caused by families and marital relationships, in this society “everyone belongs to everyone else.” You have no mother. You have a predestined role, and in that role you are happy, desiring nothing greater. Huxley fabricates a world centered on the pillars of “Community, Identity, and Stability,” one that has chosen to “shift the emphasis from truth and beauty to comfort and happiness.” This society achieves comfort and happiness through pre-birth conditioning of its members. The conversations prompted by this novel are no less relevant today than when the book was first published 83 years ago. Huxley’s readers are shocked, not by how shallow his future is, but by how similar it is to their own.īrave New World is a stunningly current novel that presents social critique through a dystopian world. It’s no cautionary tale, but an indictment of the principles we live by. Huxley’s dystopia is not about the future. It is a call to the masses and to the human heart to reconcile what we are becoming with all that we should become. As readers, we can’t shake the notion that Huxley’s future gains stability at the cost of what truly gives us life: purpose, love, and belonging.Īt the start of each school year, to reclaim my educational footing (as much for myself as for my students), I take to the chalkboard and define what fiction is: “an imaginative response to a social reality.”īy implication, all serious fiction is prophecy. They exchange happiness for pleasure and quality for quantity.
Fordians live by a narrower bandwidth, free from the chasms of life, but also alien to its heights. Instead it’s to change the terms, to constrain and redefine the goal. For the people of “Our Ford,” the best way to “have it all” is not, actually, to have it all. To us, perhaps, it sounds like the citizens of the World State have it all. The novel is set in an era called After Ford (A.F.) and by 632 A.F., global civilization has solved over-population, geo-political violence, unemployment, class conflict, and social malaise-all within the pillars of Community, Identity, and Stability. Published in 1932, Aldous Huxley’s futuristic, anti-industrial dystopia, Brave New World, offers a blithe picture of a bleak possibility. Book Review: The Age of Miracles by Karen Thompson Walker