The Sword and Laser discussion

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Wool
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Wool: Discuss Book 1: Wool
Tastykimchi wrote: "I would really like to make "Clean the lens" a term similar to "you're damned if you do, you're damned if you don't"
"Well Jeff," Kwan said as he pulled the whiskey from the shelf, "the asteroid i..."
YOLO
"Well Jeff," Kwan said as he pulled the whiskey from the shelf, "the asteroid i..."
YOLO

"
This was exactly how I felt. But I was willing to suspend disbelief because the real kicker is the revelation about the helmet. That hooked me. There are so many possible deceptions there - like - if the screen isn't transparent, then they must have a 3d image of the wearer's face projected externally as well for people watching the cleaning to look at.

I have something for this but I can't remember what book it was in and don't want to spoil anything.

I've read the book so in spoiler tags maybe?

I've read the book so in spoiler tags maybe?"
I wouldn't want anyone else to read them thinking they were spoilers from book 1 only.


Keep reading . . . . .

That's a special circumstance though. That person didn't have a standard-issue suit, if I'm reading between the lines correctly.

I agree, also how many of them died in the suit thinking if they could just get it off they'd live? It seems excessively cruel.
I don't see why the landscape would cause you to clean but if that is true then at least have it malfunction so they die knowing they were tricked.

Yes I'm also surprised that hasn't happened, particularly among the convicted. Or perhaps it has and it just wasn't reported. After all, if the lens isn't cleaned, as far as the population is concerned, maybe no one has gone out. They could theoretically keep kicking people out the airlock until they run out of suits or people...

"
I think it could be a relatively simple half-silvered mirror type affair. There ought to be LED substrates that are effectively transparent/translucent when viewed from behind at least in the near future. The bendy stuff is certainly already possible. Tom would probably know - he reports this stuff...




For sure, if they can play one set of false imagery, they can play another. We only have Holsten's account at this time.

I also had a bit of trouble suspending belief on this at first. Then I considered that if someone had the ability to change the view in the visor, why did the view on the displays have to be a "Live Feed". Why couldn't it be a delayed feed and if someone who goes outside decides not to clean the lens, why not just display a saved view from some other cleaning event and a rerun of the view outside until your next cleaning.

David Sven wrote: "There are so many possible deceptions there - like - if the screen isn't transparent, then they must have a 3d image of the wearer's face projected externally as well for people watching the cleaning to look at."
In the same paragraph Holston says he did watch his wife and he couldn't see her face "through her silver-masked helmet".
Joshua wrote: "Tom wrote: "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..."
Intriguing!
Intriguing!
I really enjoyed the first story and was totally suckered. I'll have to be more on my guard going forward.
Personally I didn't give any thought to why the criminals would all clean the lenses. I still don't really need one.
I'm definitely excited to continue on.
Personally I didn't give any thought to why the criminals would all clean the lenses. I still don't really need one.
I'm definitely excited to continue on.


Keep reading.

As to..."
I know right? LOVED that!




I was pretty impressed by the way he just kept twisting. He may be a misogynist dickcheese, but he can spin a yarn.


It does work wonderfully in the short story, but for me it makes less and less sense the further the story goes.
I do admit I was in the "the suit is killing him, not the outside" crowd, so the twist was really well done.

It does work wonderfully in the short story, but for me ..."
I think the real reason people are sent out to clean is to make an example for the rest of the citizens. The need a constant reminder that the air outside is toxic so they will live in fear inside the silo, especially when the worst crime imaginable is wanting to go outside.
It's less about the actual cleaning of the camera lens and more about making sure there is another body piled up on the hill reminding the citizens that death is just outside the door.


Honestly, the Silo itself reminded me of The Sunset Warrior

Side note to the people who quote a question and then write 'keep reading': You do know that's actually kind of a spoiler, don't you? I mean, I'm pretty spoiler sensitive, and others aren't so much, but to me, saying that tells me which things will be covered later, and makes me reluctant to ask any question, because what I'm really doing is wondering, and I want to keep wondering until I find out otherwise, and I'm happy for others to wonder with me if they, like me, don't yet know, but if you already know and say 'keep reading' that kind of kills some of the surprise for me. Also, it doesn't really add anything to a discussion: it sort of kills it. Just assume we will keep reading. :)
Personally I don't find it as much of a spoiler as I find it pointless.
I guess some people might suddenly quit, but personally if I have a bunch of questions, I'm going to keep reading to see if they are answered.
I guess some people might suddenly quit, but personally if I have a bunch of questions, I'm going to keep reading to see if they are answered.

Personally I didn't give any thought to why the criminals would all clean the lenses. I still don't really need one.
I'm definitely excited to continue on."
Hmm, this is exactly what I felt. Reading through this thread now (only partway into Book 2, so without good knowledge of what's to come), I guess I can kind of question why "they always clean the lenses," but I'm an engineer, not a psychologist, I do very poorly with "human things." ;) (Side note, my sister and brother-in-law ARE psychologists, as is my mom, I wonder what they'd say...maybe I'll ask this weekend)
I will say that for myself, I've been in situations I was "prepared for" and expected to respond one way and responded completely differently. They're usually high-stress situations. Guess you never know what you'll really do.

...that doesn't add much to the discussion but I wanted to chip in. Engineers are cool. Mad respect, yo.


That thought crossed my mind too. Where did they get the wool?

I haven´t read the next books yet, well the second one, but at first I thought that they were also poisoned, I guess I was didn't wanted to admit that the exterior is a hostile wasteland. I just suffered when Holston died.

Interesting question, isn't it? Why would they be using pig milk for coffee if they have sheep? Why aren't there more references to mutton than corn? For all the mentions of vegetables, there are no mentions of what goes to feed the sheep and "pigs", and only one mention of the smell of pig manure (which is amazingly foul and probably deserves its own chapter) yet no one has seen a pig. Also, if they have farm animals down there, why aren't their wastes being used to fertilize the farms, fuel a methane digester, etc.
I think there's a lot more to these omissions than meet the eye, and I shall be quite sorry if my hopes do not come to some sort of expository fruition.

I think they don't mean wool in that way, I think the book is called wool because of the thing that cover their eyes.

I think they don't mean wool in that way, I think the book is called wool because of the thing that cover their eyes."
Yes, I'm reading a little deeper into the text than just the title. Thanks so much for recognizing same.

Yes, I'm reading a little deeper into the text than just the title. Thanks so much for recognizing same.."
My point was that if there are no sheep then there would be no wool. In fact they probably have no idea what wool is. Hence the phrase 'pull the wool over their eyes' would have absolutely no meaning :)

Sure, except that the pads are (allegedly) made of wool, so where the heck is it coming from? (view spoiler)

And yet, it didn't feel like that sort of story, with the predictable happy ending. It felt like there were mysteries that went WAY deeper than "Duh, folks, the screen is a projection, you can leave whenever you want."
As much as one part of me wanted Holston to live happily ever after, another part of me knew that wasn't the better story, and was rooting for the better, more unexpected story.
Part of me wanted to go down the rabbit hole, all the way to the bottom, and leave poor Holston to have tea and cyanide with his dead wife.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Sunset Warrior (other topics)Against the Fall of Night (other topics)
The City and the Stars (other topics)
"Well Jeff," Kwan said as he pulled the whiskey from the shelf, "the asteroid is going to hit earth." He pauses to gulp the whiskey, "Might as well clean the lens"