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Wool: Discuss Book 2: Proper Gauge
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Rob, Roberator
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Apr 30, 2013 03:28AM

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Chapters 8-13 of the omnibus.
Audible time 1:26:15 - 4:17:01.


This was the big surprise to me when I read it. While lobbying for this to be a book of the month pick here I talked about Howey broke one of the rules in writing. What I was referring to was that he doesn't introduce the main protagonist until well into book. Most books you meet the main character early and you know that they will be who you follow. In Wool though you end up realizing that anyone can die at any time.


If you're on the fence about the story so far, keep going. It gets really interesting from Juliette's perspective.

I'd hold it up as a template of the right way to do a "middle book". It comes up with a plausible reason to do large infodumps on the setting--the Mayor's journey deep into parts of the silo she hasn't been to in years. It has a very nice and poignant character arc going through it that adds its own tension and interest. And it ends on an unresolved plot point that demands you follow through with the next book.




The whole time I couldn't stop thinking, why don't they have elevators? Maybe they want to keep the sections of the silo separated from each other, but why not a dumbwaiter?
The most interesting thing that could happen in book 2 was (view spoiler)

It's at this point that we also should start thinking that what's going on is a whole hell of a lot bigger than just ... pulling the wool over everyone's eyes ... with fake images shown to people who go outside.
Also, we're already starting to side with certain factions, and we don't even know what's really going on (does anyone in the silo?).
This shit just got real, and it's gonna get deeper.
Well I just got spoiled lol. I miscalculated and read this thread before the last two chapters, lol.
Even so I had to say I was suspicious when IT gave them water on the way down so I wasn't surprise.
I agree that this book feels more like a bit of a larger book than part oen did. But it's still largely self-contained, even if it has large hooks for the next book.
I really enjoyed the tour of the silo and love the world Howey built here. It had me searching for maps of the silo, of which I found none sadly.
I hope Howey and Whedon never meet. For their characters' sake.
Even so I had to say I was suspicious when IT gave them water on the way down so I wasn't surprise.
I agree that this book feels more like a bit of a larger book than part oen did. But it's still largely self-contained, even if it has large hooks for the next book.
I really enjoyed the tour of the silo and love the world Howey built here. It had me searching for maps of the silo, of which I found none sadly.
I hope Howey and Whedon never meet. For their characters' sake.

This is explained in Shift Omnibus which is the sequel / prequel to Wool. Shift starts out with the creators of the Silo and its explained why things were designed the way they were including why no elevators.
If you go on to Shift it starts hundreds of years before Wool but its not a continuous narrative so there will be time jumps where you follow new characters. The end of Shift finally moves forward past the end of Wool.

Did anyone else get the feeling someone was going to die before we knew anything was wrong? To me, the optimistic tone felt too much like what Holsten expressed outside.
Well, on to Book 3.
Tom wrote: "Well I just got spoiled lol. I miscalculated and read this thread before the last two chapters, lol.
Even so I had to say I was suspicious when IT gave them water on the way down so I wasn't surp..."
Thanks DH although it doesn't need a spoiler tag. It was my own fault for reading this bit before I had actually finished. You did nothing wrong.
IN fact, you might want to remove the tags, because some people may feel it's a spoiler of later books. Spoilers of Book 2 should be OK in here.
Even so I had to say I was suspicious when IT gave them water on the way down so I wasn't surp..."
Thanks DH although it doesn't need a spoiler tag. It was my own fault for reading this bit before I had actually finished. You did nothing wrong.
IN fact, you might want to remove the tags, because some people may feel it's a spoiler of later books. Spoilers of Book 2 should be OK in here.


Speaking of which, they are living in what is effectively a half-mile high column of air (using round numbers of 150 floors at 10ft per floor), and that has to be subject to considerable vertical microclimate variations both of temperature and pressure. Probably a condensation layer (ie clouds), thermal winds, pollution layers & variations in air quality... On the bottom floors, water boils at 102 degrees, standard atmospheric pressure is 1069 HPa, I'm sure this would have an impact on the people living there, just as living in a high altitude city has an impact. Yet despite the world building, I got no real feel for the depth to which they were descending.
We are now 0 for 2 in terms of central characters surviving their sections. This is starting to breed in me a mistrust of Howey, and a reluctance to attach to his characters. If it continues I might not bother with the next book.
As soon as Bernard said "you won't outlive the next sheriff" (paraphrased) followed by "fill up their water canteens" I thought to myself, just hit them over the head with a crowbar, why don't you.
IT seem to have established themselves as the villains. I'm guessing some form of coup is in our near future...
I agree as a standalone this story wouldn't be very good. I enjoyed the character development and world building though. I really like Jules so far and am looking forward to seeing what happens with her as sheriff.
Given the trend so far, I hope she manages to survive the third book.
I'm surprised no one mentioned/is discussing the Mayor's dying thoughts that the poison was meant for the deputy.
Why would IT want to kill him? Because he suggested Jules? Or maybe they wanted him out of the way so he couldn't support the mayor and/or the new sheriff.
Can't wait to see what happens next.
Given the trend so far, I hope she manages to survive the third book.
I'm surprised no one mentioned/is discussing the Mayor's dying thoughts that the poison was meant for the deputy.
Why would IT want to kill him? Because he suggested Jules? Or maybe they wanted him out of the way so he couldn't support the mayor and/or the new sheriff.
Can't wait to see what happens next.
Rob wrote: "I agree as a standalone this story wouldn't be very good. I enjoyed the character development and world building though. I really like Jules so far and am looking forward to seeing what happens wit..."
Yeah that's interesting about the poison being meant for the deputy. Howey makes a point earlier of indicating that Bernard watched the Mayor and the Deputy handling each other's water. So I think he knew which bottle to poison.
Yeah that's interesting about the poison being meant for the deputy. Howey makes a point earlier of indicating that Bernard watched the Mayor and the Deputy handling each other's water. So I think he knew which bottle to poison.
Tom wrote: " Howey makes a point earlier of indicating that Bernard watched the Mayor and the Deputy handling each other's water. So I think he knew which bottle to poison. "
Ah yeah. I missed that. Still it's a risk he kills the wrong person. Then again, maybe he considers there to be no downside.
Ah yeah. I missed that. Still it's a risk he kills the wrong person. Then again, maybe he considers there to be no downside.

But, as I began to think about it I realized that it really doesn't make sense in terms of moving supplies. There are a lot of different floors that have heavy machinery. And as someone who works with heavy machinery, I can't imagine carrying that kind of stuff up and down stairs. It just isn't practical for a person or a group of people to try to carry that type of stuff up/down stairs. They really need a freight elevator :-)

I also picked up on the way down that Howey drew attention to the refilling of the canteens on the way down. I had suspicions then..
IT are certainly furthering their controlling arm. With the deletion of previous uprising in book 1, and now an attempt to influence the top dogs in the Silo.
Jules is a brilliant character too. Reminds me of my wife! haha.

Sharp reading, I didn't pick up on that, will have to re-read that bit. I'd thought they'd only started switching water bottle drinking after they'd left IT on the way back up. I'd read it as IT wanting to kill the Deputy as a sort of warning, or to get their own chap in as the new deputy, but now the ramifications of killing the Mayor instead are much greater, calling much more intention to themselves than they'd wanted. Either way works of course, and sets things up nicely for book 3...
Steve wrote: "Tom wrote: " I'd thought they'd only started switching water bottle drinking after they'd left IT on the way back up."
That was my issue as well. I didn't notice when they left the first time, they were packing each other's water, and Bernard took note of it.
That was my issue as well. I didn't notice when they left the first time, they were packing each other's water, and Bernard took note of it.

What I got from this story was my outlook of a business in general. That the most important people in any organization are those in the lower echelons. It shows just how many people it takes to pay the salaries of those in the top levels. If the lower levels collapse then the functionality and viability of the entire organization is affected.
A quote from The Breakfast Club kept springing to mind. Brian : Did you know without trigonometry, there'd be no engineering? Bender : Without lamps there would be no light.
I agree with others who say the first 2 stories are a bit slow. I, too, feel he hit his stride by story 3.
I do love that this is not a dialogue driven story. It is a rare thing as of late.


I felt the exact opposite when I was reading Dragonflight, the writing really turned me off along with the story.
It has been a good book so far.

Why would IT want to kill him? Because he suggested Jules? Or maybe they wanted him out of the way so he couldn't support the mayor and/or the new sheriff..."
What is a greater punishment? Death or guilt over your lover dying?


I'm not sure I follow. Did he mention somewhere that there were (150 feet)*(12 inches)/(10 inches per step) = 180 steps per level?
I'd think more like 10 feet per level. At 146 levels this would be 1460 feet or just over a quarter of a mile. Is a quarter mile deep for a mine?

Anyway something in between the 6 mile and 1/4 mile estimates sounds right to me.
If it were above ground, it would be the tallest building in the world ... but not several times taller than the tallest!

6 miles is impossibly deep, purely based on temperatures and pressures. 2 miles is very improbable, since that's still considered "extremely deep" by current standards, and none of Howey's description suggests any of the problems associated with that kind of depth.
10ft, while the standard above ground floor spacing is probably too small underground, where you'd want an extra margin to allow for flaws in the bedrock (assuming each floor is just tunnelled out, and they don't build their own floors & ceilings in a big void). So a 3x safety factor seems reasonable (based on ignorance), which would mean a depth to the bottom of 0.83 miles (4380ft). It's about as deep as Meteor Crater is wide. That certainly seems plausible (again, based on ignorance).

I think the story stands alone in that there is a definite thread to follow throughout: the story of the relationship between Jahns and Marnes. I loved the way we first got subtle hints of a connection between them which built until we really wanted to know why these two were not together, and only then discovered the story of Jahns' marriage to Marnes' now deceased best friend. That was wonderfully done.
I'm very interested in finding out more about IT. So far they have definitely been set up as villains, but I feel like their is more to the story than that.
Great pick this month.


I agree that 6 miles would be impossibly deep. The description, however, implies that going down just a few levels takes hours. This is without having to press through traffic. Let's not even get to the point brought up in the 3rd story about distance.
As a side note, taking into consideration the population of the silo shouldn't there be 2 staircases, one up and one down? Am I just being too logical?

I'm pretty sure that you can go either direction since they are foot-powered. ;)

Distance is likely to be a factor of the diameter of the shaft and thus the effective pitch of the spiral, and whether each landing has the the same orientation (e.g. North), or whether they are staggered at 90 or 180 degree intervals or something else entirely (if those factors are mentioned in the book, then I missed them).

I'd give a guess that each level is about 100ft each, the whole silo being 3 miles deep.

I agree! Their relationship was beautifully set up. I was probably more attached to these two characters than I was with anyone else in the book - we took the long journey with them, and watched as they rediscovered old feelings for each other and tried to work out what it meant. The world-building in this section was great, but this brought an emotional center to the trip that I loved.
(And then, as Tom said earlier, we got Joss Whedoned. Hard.)

I read their slow tackling of the stairs as being due to their age, porters were zipping by them all the time... I was on the stair climber machine at the gym yesterday and sure I did 42 floors pretty quickly but I'm young and that was assuming 10ft ish floors most likely. I admit I was pretty dead and wouldn't have wanted to do any more. :p


I have a theory that different floors are probably thicker than others. Apartment floors are probably about 10ft, but Mechanical or the farms? I'd bet anything that they'd need more height. Also, for stability sake, the deeper you go, the more support is needed for everything on top, so "dead space" or unexcavated rock between levels would increase the deeper you went.
I doubt Howey put that much thought into it, but it's my headcanon xD

I felt the water poisoning was very telegraphed. Bernard seems so obviously evil just on their first meeting that I really thought he would poison their canteen water on the trip down.
My love of the first "book" helped carry me through this one. Also, the character, unlike some elements of the silo, are very well built. The relationship between Jahns and Marnes is compelling. And I think the introduction of Juliette is well done.
I'll be interested to see if we get a definitive answer on whether Bernard was trying to kill Jahns, Marnes, or both of them. If he saw they were both drinking from the same canteen, did he think the poison would kill them both? Would he be happy just to have either one of them out of the way?