From the Bookshelf of Catching up on Classics (and lots more!)…
Find A Copy At
Group Discussions About This Book
*
Short Story Classics
By Bob , Short Story Classics · 1 post · 708 views
last updated Sep 01, 2015 05:35AM
The Cherry Orchard - November 2025
By Bob , Short Story Classics · 17 posts · 63 views
By Bob , Short Story Classics · 17 posts · 63 views
last updated Dec 03, 2025 01:38PM
showing 10 of 42 topics
view all »
Other topics mentioning this book
Darren (Daz The Slug)'s Personal Challenges
By Darren · 474 posts · 548 views
By Darren · 474 posts · 548 views
last updated Dec 01, 2025 07:39AM
What's everyone reading right now?
By Trisha · 8025 posts · 3208 views
last updated Jun 16, 2021 08:32AM
Rosemarie's "Too Many Books- Too Little Time" Personal Challenge
By Rosemarie · 208 posts · 484 views
By Rosemarie · 208 posts · 484 views
last updated Nov 29, 2025 08:34PM
Erin's 2018 Classics Bingo Challenge
By Erin · 38 posts · 84 views
By Erin · 38 posts · 84 views
last updated Dec 15, 2018 08:26AM
Angie Embraces Optimism--2018 Classics Bingo
By Angie · 22 posts · 121 views
By Angie · 22 posts · 121 views
last updated Jun 24, 2018 03:11PM
Ann's "I Am Going To Be Full" - Challenge Buffet
By Ann T · 26 posts · 88 views
By Ann T · 26 posts · 88 views
last updated Oct 24, 2020 05:12PM
Lagullande's 2020 "Eyes Are Bigger Than Your Stomach" Challenge Buffet
By Lagullande · 13 posts · 29 views
By Lagullande · 13 posts · 29 views
last updated Dec 25, 2019 09:07AM
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:
audio-books,
short-stories,
e-books,
british-literature,
read-2014,
science-fiction,
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 here.
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 here.
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
Who knew EM Forster wrote science fiction? Great novella that speaks to our reliance on machines. I read a free online version, which I would recommend (just ignore all the typos!): http://archive.ncsa.illinois.edu/praj...
...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
Jan 11, 2016
Meredith
marked it as to-read
Mar 31, 2018
Carrie
marked it as to-read
Sep 19, 2018
Lucy
marked it as to-read
Sep 25, 2019
Seymone
marked it as to-read
Oct 02, 2019
Theresa Wright
marked it as to-read
Oct 23, 2019
Margaret
added it
Nov 27, 2019
Allison boozy bookworm
marked it as to-read
Feb 08, 2020
Renate
marked it as to-read
Jan 27, 2024
Karigan
marked it as to-read
Feb 01, 2024
Katie ♥
added it
May 01, 2025
Sharon
marked it as to-read

















