The Sword and Laser discussion

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Wool
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Wool: Discuss Book 1: Wool
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Rob, Roberator
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Apr 30, 2013 03:27AM

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Yup. I believe that's what my omnibus edition called it too. Would have to redownload it to check though.

Yeah, my library has a bound edition of the first novella, and the title is just Wool.

I was pretty skeptical while reading it too, so it's probably better than I thought it was.
I like how much content Howey can squeeze out of a moment without losing my attention.
That impressed me.


What was your "what the hell" moment?
We can post spoilers about the first book here.


The fake images were for the suits, to ensure the cleaners would do their job.
The cleaners would see the fake images and be tricked into thinking the world had healed.
Wanting everyone else to come out, they would clean the lenses.
Those inside the silo saw reality.
The outside world was a poisonous wasteland after all.
That's how I interpreted it.

@8: I thought so too, but I can understand how the characters might think something along the lines of "those poor things" and turn to clean. Also, I think that the mittens initially made it difficult to remove.

I thought the same thing too. It is all well and good tricking the people doing the cleaning into thinking that by cleaning the sensors they will show the people inside the world is healed but if they decided to try and get the suit off first the whole thing would fail.
They made them so hard to remove so people couldn't go out, say 'Looks nice' and pop their helmet off but even if they just struggled to try it for a while they risk the suit failing before the cleaning has finished.

Keep reading.



I'll repeat my last post, keep reading.

I honestly wouldn't be surprised.

Everything the wearer sees is generated by the program and a hidden camera."
That is how I read it here, but I have a problem reconciling this with later interactions with the helmet.

Does nobody notice the faceplate when they are putting the helmet on? Or is it too dark or do they assume it's a one way tint?

Much prefer this style of laser book, to the 'space opera'.
I'm not sure how the books are picked each month? But whomever suggested this one - thanks. :)

As to many questions others have about how and why things happened outside, just keep reading. It will be explained.

Does nobody notice the faceplate when they are putting the helmet on? Or is it too dark or..."
The helmet is described as "silver masked" ("He couldn’t see Allison’s face through her silver-masked helmet,...") so I took it to look like a one-way mirror. I'd imagine that the camera would already be active so it might appear transparent as it was being fitted to the wearer.

Yes, that would make sense - It's just that later interactions with the helmet don't appear consistent
(view spoiler)

When an author gives me characters with enough life I'm more willing to overlook the inconsistencies that others are bringing up with the cleaning suit and the viewscreen. If he had focused on describing the Silo and it's society in detail like a gazetteer, rather then showing it, I might be more bothered. I think the questions that were left in my mind are really encouraging me to keep reading.

They will think "I was right!" and want to share their discovery with their friends and family on the inside in the only way they know how.

I was totally captivated by the first chapter. I thought the first chapter sort of explained the book's tagline: "If the lies don't kill you, the truth will". The truth definitely killed Holston!

Great recommendation!!! It's been sometime since I've been unable to stop myself from putting a book down.
I have just started 'Shift' now :-)



I get this from the how his view goes black toward the end, as if the batteries powering the camera & internal view screen had died.

I don't know. His actions seemed kind of selfish to me, just doing the cleaning and then walking off into the sunset. But again, I may be misunderstanding it.

I was impressed with the writing too.

To the person that mentioned something about how useless the suits were but some how the silo survived. The way I've been reading it so far suggests that they don't have the knowledge or technology of the people who built the silo. I feel like the society inside has lost a lot of knowledge over the years.

I think the reason is that the people in the silo would never believe it. They wouldn't be able to accept that they have been lied to for all of that time. Each "cleaner" does the job out of a kind of pity for those left behind.
That was my take from it.

Holston's story is heartbreaking. At the same time, the society is very cruel to trick the cleaners and provide them with what they know are faulty suits, essentially killing them soon after they step outside.

Take one of us and put that helmet on our head and sure we would notice that we were looking through a camera. Many of us have experienced virtual reality helmets and some have seen HUD technology first hand. But in the silo, nobody has seen any technology like this, it is hidden from them...they grow up with the view screens and a few CRT type monitor screens on their limited computers. The helmet view would not be suspect because none had ever seen a digitally altered view of the world.
There is a conspiracy there of the suit makers and the people who "know the truth" and why they do what they do is for later books to explain.
The visor is only described as being rough with wires. So we don't know what kind of tech is being used. Maybe it's a mind tap. Maybe it's projecting directly on the retina in a way that isn't detectable.
I *love* the subtletly of having the buildings in the distance whole and even some buildings that weren't there. It's only afterwards you realise this must be an older recording of what it used to look like. But at the moment when it's described, it had me confused. If the buildings were still whole someone must be maintaining them... Well, now I know.
Far more of a bother to me than the visor was why he cleaned the lens. More, why everyone cleaned the lens. If I was one of the people put outside for murder, or some other crime, which is implied as a punishment, why would I clean? I didn't want to go outside.
And even if I'm a person like Holston or his wife, once I realized what was true-- I'm not sure I'd clean. I'm pretty certain they don't think cleaning the lens will show people the true picture suddenly. They think the image is being manipulated. Holston's internal reasoning that he was just imitating others *might* hold for him, although it seems out of character. However, I can't believe everyone put out for cleaning would think along the same lines.
This first book reads like a great short story with a twist ending. I'm curious to see if it binds itself to the rest of the book or ends up just feeling like a prologue.
In the end though, I love this. Post-apocalyptic silos with a mystery. I'm in!
I *love* the subtletly of having the buildings in the distance whole and even some buildings that weren't there. It's only afterwards you realise this must be an older recording of what it used to look like. But at the moment when it's described, it had me confused. If the buildings were still whole someone must be maintaining them... Well, now I know.
Far more of a bother to me than the visor was why he cleaned the lens. More, why everyone cleaned the lens. If I was one of the people put outside for murder, or some other crime, which is implied as a punishment, why would I clean? I didn't want to go outside.
And even if I'm a person like Holston or his wife, once I realized what was true-- I'm not sure I'd clean. I'm pretty certain they don't think cleaning the lens will show people the true picture suddenly. They think the image is being manipulated. Holston's internal reasoning that he was just imitating others *might* hold for him, although it seems out of character. However, I can't believe everyone put out for cleaning would think along the same lines.
This first book reads like a great short story with a twist ending. I'm curious to see if it binds itself to the rest of the book or ends up just feeling like a prologue.
In the end though, I love this. Post-apocalyptic silos with a mystery. I'm in!

I thought the whole idea was an execution? Everyone knows that when you are sent out there you die.

True, it is a death sentence. But I just think it is cruel to make the condemned person believe things are better outside. Why give them hope of a life in a better world, when they will die horribly, anyway?

Well, i can see why they do it and not be cruel. It could be that the sight gives them comfort in their last moments. Would it be better to show them hopelessness and death?
There is no good way to send someone on a death trip. I don't know why they don't just shove them outside or shoot them. Perhaps that is yet to be revealed.

People weren't sent to clean often.
Holston and his wife were the last two, three years apart.
Both of them were sent to do the cleaning because they expressed a desire to go outside.
William wrote: "Tom wrote: "If I was one of the people put outside for murder, or some other crime, which is implied as a punishment, why would I clean?"
People weren't sent to clean often.
Holston and his wife w..."
Sure but they weren't the only ones described.
People weren't sent to clean often.
Holston and his wife w..."
Sure but they weren't the only ones described.

I feel this goes down to mental conditioning. There are things that don't make sense to those who live outside of the situation.
Sometimes I wonder why Samurai would commit seppuku at the whim of their liege lord, or why polynesian island cults developed waiting for planes to return with their salvation.
The characters talk about the strict mental conditioning that they receive as children in the silo. These people who are sent out may just clean the visor because that is what you do when you leave the silo. It's amazing what a little conditioning can do the mind.
Cleaning the visor may be a pavlovian response.

This is a reason I came up with when I read the book earlier this year.
The reason the Cleaners clean the lenses is because they think they've won, that everyone inside is stupid. They want to clean the lenses so that the people inside don't need to come out. That is their way of getting back at the people inside. Remember the fuzzier the view the more likely someone else will be sent out. And the Cleaners don't want to share this "Paradise" with those who just sent them out.

Edit - I feel like I keep arguing on behalf of the author.
I didn't think the reasoning in the story was rock solid, I just thought it was good enough.


No not with Holston, just the Cleaners in general. Like Tom said, the ones who were put out for crimes.
I can't remember it well but I'd say Holston would have been more of a sense of duty.
Tastykimchi wrote: "Sure but they weren't the only ones described."
I feel this goes down to mental conditioning. There are things that don't make sense to those who live outside of the situation.
Sometimes I wonder..."
Yes, that is exactly what Howey seems to be saying. I just found it little hard to buy, personally. If it works for y'all, don't let me stop you. Personally I find it a little hard to believe that the variant personalities would all respond especially the same way especially when the selection bias is people on the fringe od acceptable behavior already.
I feel this goes down to mental conditioning. There are things that don't make sense to those who live outside of the situation.
Sometimes I wonder..."
Yes, that is exactly what Howey seems to be saying. I just found it little hard to buy, personally. If it works for y'all, don't let me stop you. Personally I find it a little hard to believe that the variant personalities would all respond especially the same way especially when the selection bias is people on the fringe od acceptable behavior already.
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