Bradley's Reviews > Walkaway

Walkaway by Cory Doctorow
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it was amazing
bookshelves: 2017-shelf, sci-fi, worldbuilding-sf, transhumanism, political, fanboy-goes-squee

Wow!

I admit I went in blind to this only know the title, the cover, and the fact that I've been a big fan of Cory Doctorow ever since Little Brother. I thought it was going to be something of a thriller with perhaps a political and especially an awesome technological bent to it.

I didn't expect it to be this huge! The ideas in this novel can easily be ranked up with the very biggest novels of the last century.

Let me explain: Walkaway as a term is nothing more than dropping out of the ranks of the norm, of going off to live simply, if not precisely without tech, then at least giving up on the whole rat race that is defined here as the "default". It's not hippies, although there are those, too. It's a collection of all the people that this world has no use for, the people that despair under debts they can't pay, lives that bring them no joy, of people who realize that they have always been slaves in everything but name.

These are the people who walked away from it all. It's in the future so we have an honest free beer with open source technologies, 3d printers much more advanced than what we have here that works with everything from clothing to medicines, and the open idealism that collides with regular assholes that you'll find in any human population.

Only, these communities are benefited with social modeling techniques, even newer tech that can scan and model human minds, and much more... in everyone's hands. These are people who gave up on wealth and status to live in all kinds of communes and social experiments, many of which fail but each improves upon the last until better and better open source societies are created, improved upon, and tested... and while this shouldn't have been a big deal to the rest of the world that was busy doing its old thing, the Walkaways stumbled upon success and success, outperforming and making the "Default" society jealous... and you know what jealous people do when they have guns and they want what the defenseless have.

I'm just barely scratching the surface here. There's a lot of great characters, a lot of really beautiful stories and situations and social experiments and theory on human consciousness. There's a lot of tragedy and hope, too, spread out over a great long span of time. A lifetime, you might say. But by the end, who's to say how long that is?

This is really creative and hard-hitting exploratory SF. This is the stuff that will stay in my consciousness long, long after hundreds of lighter SF have rolled through me. This is that kind of novel that can change or break a whole society if it takes off.

Now, I can't say that I absolutely agree with all the points that Doctorow makes, but his vision of the future and the erudition and thoughtful expression of all these fantastic ideas more than makes up for any complaints I may have. He's a believer in humanity. He believes in people.

There's something truly wonderful about that.

Hope.
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Reading Progress

January 9, 2017 – Shelved
January 9, 2017 – Shelved as: to-read
June 28, 2017 – Started Reading
June 29, 2017 – Shelved as: 2017-shelf
June 29, 2017 – Shelved as: sci-fi
June 29, 2017 – Shelved as: worldbuilding-sf
June 29, 2017 – Shelved as: transhumanism
June 29, 2017 – Shelved as: political
June 29, 2017 – Shelved as: fanboy-goes-squee
June 29, 2017 – Finished Reading

Comments Showing 1-22 of 22 (22 new)

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message 1: by Trish (new)

Trish Is this book based on the famous internet meme of the little girl smiling evilly while standing in front of her parents' house that is burning? :D


Bradley I wish. But no. It's referring to walking away from our problems. It's hard sf with very serious social-mode exploration. It even starts out with a communist party... as in, putting the party back into communism. :) The novel opens with free beer in a form that can create itself. If you piss in the right batch of hops, it functions as a starter for the next. :)


message 3: by mwana (new)

mwana Ok now I want to read it. But I don't like sci-fi. You've broken me. :-(


message 4: by Wendi (new)

Wendi Lee Great review! I'm putting this in my TBR list, I've only read 'Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom,' but I was definitely impressed.


Bradley If you start with this then you're taking a huge step to the dark side. It's no average SF and it dances very well to its own beat. :)


message 6: by mwana (new)

mwana Brad wrote: "If you start with this then you're taking a huge step to the dark side. It's no average SF and it dances very well to its own beat. :)"

But I don wanna. But I have to because my brain gets itchy when I get curious


Bradley It's okay. It won't kill you. :)


message 8: by mwana (new)

mwana Brad wrote: "It's okay. It won't kill you. :)"

And now Kelly Clarkson is playing in my head. :-/

Did you get me email?


Bradley The one from yesterday? I thought I posted! If it didn't go through, then happy birthday! :)


message 10: by Trish (new)

Trish Brad wrote: "I wish. But no. It's referring to walking away from our problems. It's hard sf with very serious social-mode exploration. It even starts out with a communist party... as in, putting the party back ..."

Walking away from problems ... I wish that was always possible. I'd do it all the time (yes, I know that's not really the solution but I don't even care anymore).
Hey, maybe we should write the book about the meme-girl. *evil grin* She was definitely not walking away from a problem but solved it (her way). BWAHAHAHAHAHA!


Bradley Sigh... yeah... such a classy story, too! :)


message 12: by Trish (new)

Trish :D
You write the literary parts, I get to write the blood and gore.


Bradley Such a one-track mind!


message 14: by Trish (new)

Trish That's why I need you as my co-author!


message 15: by mwana (new)

mwana Brad wrote: "The one from yesterday? I thought I posted! If it didn't go through, then happy birthday! :)"

It didn't ☹
THANK YOU 😊

Is this book the size of a Bible or a Tolstoy?


Bradley No, no, nothing that big. Regular size. :)


message 17: by Jim (new)

Jim but if you can make anything you need, what's the point? and why are books like this always so simplistic? evil is black, good is white. what we do is good, what they do is evil. i'm sure we all know the downsides of capitalism, but the idea that "we" can all live together if we are nice is hardly new, or accurate. humans aren't machines or systems, they are individual, irrational, feeling animals. the current world systems are a failure, but acting as if a lot of people haven't played a part in them is naive and irresponsible. Doctorow may be smart, but we've already turned over too much of the running of the world to smart people, and look where we are now...


Bradley I wouldn't say this novel was all that black and white or simplistic at all. It has a political agenda, sure, but it also did a very admirable job of exploring the rabbit hole of such technology. And, of course, what a role one would take in a truly anarchistic society. Or *attempted* anarchistic society. :)

And btw, that last comment about smart people is odd, lol. Don't attribute the failures of our world on smart people. It's all power plays and greed, rather, and letting those with stronger wills take what smart people have built and twist them to ugly means. Talk about simplistic! You'd have me believe we should all be as stupid as dogs in order to have a better society! It's a good argument so long as you're the master and don't have to follow the same rule. lol


message 19: by Shan (new) - added it

Shan Wow, terrific review. Trepidatiously adding this to my list. And BTW, Brad, I think you're responsible for at least half the books in my TBR pile.


Bradley I would apologize, but since I've been having fun with so many books, I'm not going to do it. :)

:)


message 21: by [deleted user] (new)

I thought about reading this one some distant time in the future. You made me really curious.


Bradley I hope so! Some SF is richer than others. This is one of them. :)


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