SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion

This topic is about
Ship of Theseus
What Else Are You Reading?
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"Ship of Theseus" by J.J. Abrams (BR)

I only mention it because if some of you read only Ship of Theseus first and some read SoT and the notes you might inadvertently spoil each other if you are listing only page numbers.

I think I'd be in favor of reading it all at the same time.



Post here when you get the book.
Grant, for discussions, it will probably make more sense if you try to read the whole as we go along.
House of Leaves was another book that required going back and forth in the book but in a different manner than this one. I was only able to read that one to the end because of my friends. We helped each other stay on track. I figure I will enjoy this one more. I hope!

I just wanted to check in with everyone. I plan to take my time reading this one. I want to read the story + notes at the same time.
For talking about the book, I think using chapter or page numbers would work. I'm not trying to make people keep to a schedule for this one.
I plan on reading at a slower rate than normal but I can't say how long that would be for me to read this book. I'm in this Buddy Read to read the story and talk. I think it'll be cool to share ideas, peeves and etc.
ex:
Thoughts on page 42: (view spoiler)




Maybe it's okay on a tablet, since there's color?
edit: Oh, there's an audiobook, too?!

The book title is actually S. by JJ Abrams & Doug Dorst.
The title for the book within the story that we'll read and where the mystery is based is Ship of Theseus by V.M. Straka.
I love the setup for this book. I may love it more than the story we will end up reading. =)
I wouldn't be cool with writing in a library book but I love the idea of two strangers bonding over the love of a book and seeking out the answer to the mystery about the author.

I looked at the preview for the e-book version, but since there was a note in there explaining how the reading experience couldn't quite be replicated in that format, I decided to get the "real" book.

I'm one of the people that read House of Leaves with Soo, last year... I hope this one is more fun than that was... there was some great stuff in House of Leaves, but it also dragged quite a bit... if the formatting is anything like House of Leaves, we just need to leave notes in the comments when we deviate from the page numbers (House of Leaves had a half dozen Appendices, and they became relevant at certain times in the story)...
I actually do 95% of my reading on audio, these days... and thought the Illuminae Files (an epistolary trilogy) turned out pretty great as an audiobook, but I figure a book like this is best experienced in Print, as it was intended, so that's how I'm reading it, as well...

I'm one of the people that read [..."
Hey Iain! Good to meet you!

I'..."
Nice to meet you, too...
My book arrived in the mail, as expected... I know this is an experimental book, but it's not what I expected... I thought it was weird that the book came in a book sleeve, with a sticker/emblem keeping it closed, until I removed the sleeve, opened the book, and saw all the loose-leaf multimedia included inside... it'd be very easy to accidentally empty the book of these items, with no idea where they belong... assuming their location matters...
I see photos, postcards, etc... this should be interesting...
The "Book For Loan" stamp inside the front cover is a nice touch, too... for a second I thought "Wait, what?... I bought this..." LOL
After considering making a list of insert location, I found this helpful website: http://sfiles22.blogspot.com/2013/01/...

Apparently, the audiobook is just Ship of Theseus, none of the marginalia & inserts... so that's out as an option, pretty much... and the ebook/iBook is useful for searching the Ship of Theseus text in conjunction with the story/mystery in the margins... and the EOTVOS found at the back of the book will make more sense once we've read the margins... the EOTVOS is the weird compass that seems to be a decypter-compass, found at the back of the book... I found it after my last comment, and it has me very intrigued...

Yup! I have the audio and it's only Ship of Theseus. I figure it's a nice accompaniment to the actual book. I love the setup and design of the book with all the notes & inserts. It looks like a real library book that two people wrote all over.
I'll start tomorrow as planned.

Yup! I have the audio and it's only Ship of Theseus. I figure it's a nice accompaniment to the actual book. I love the setup and design of the book with all the notes & inserts. It looks like ..."
I'm a "cheater"... it's 2am on December 12th, so I'm technically OK :)
Basically just read the Foreword & Translator's remarks... (view spoiler)
Seems much less morbid/paranoid than the start of House of Leaves did... which had a stolen manuscript from a dead blind writer...

Book Design
I love it! It looks just like a well used library book. If you open the back cover and look inside, there's a Library Return Dates.
(view spoiler)
Dates: October 6, 1957 to October 14, 2000
Title Page: I like the intro of Jen & Arrogant
Notes Colors: Right now, it looks like the initial notes by Jen were written in cursive blue ink and Arrogant responded in print black ink. Later notes are in Red, Purple & Black.
Jen is always in cursive & A writes in print.
I bet everything has a clue in this book. Like the Book list at the beginning of the book by V.M. Straka. I really love all of the geeky details designed into the book and story.["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>

I like the distinct character & styles of the writing in the book. Like Jen and A already have a character & feel by the end of the Translator's Note & Forward.
F.X. Caldiera seems to have a devoted & paranoid bent.
p.10 (view spoiler)
Ch.1 What Begins, What Ends
Ship of Theseus starts off with evocative phrases & cynical scenes.

Book Design
I love it! It looks just like a well used library book. If you open the back cover and look inside, there's a Library Return Dates.
..."
I've only read parts of the Translator's note so far, but I'm enjoying it. I agree that Jen and A's characters are established quickly. Quite a feat.
I'm also assuming that everything is a clue.

I think, for people who haven't read to far, yet, it might be a good idea to go back and take notes on the "real world" characters mentioned in the Translator Notes & the marginalia... because I find myself flipping back already, to remember all the names Jen & A throw around... Summersby (pulp novelist that some believe might be VM Straka)... Desjardins (theorist with definite ideas about VM Straka, mentioned in the margins)... etc...
Speaking of notes, I've started writing little summaries of the content of the Ship of Theseus book, just because it's easy to lose track of the story when you're pausing every other sentence/paragraph to read the margins, which are almost longer than the story...
Anyway... the notes I wrote:
Page 5: (view spoiler)
Page 7: (view spoiler)
Page 10: (view spoiler)
Quick Summary of Story So Far (Pages 1-18... mostly for my own reference): (view spoiler)

Eric writes in Print.
The colors matter because that dictates the potential "when" the notes were written but the type of writing they do is consistent throughout the whole book.
SO MANY CONSPIRACIES! =D
I've owned my book for a few years now. I think I need to write over the pencil notes with pencil because they're hard to read now.
*All Pencil notes are Eric's initial notes before Jen started writing in the book. They are all in Print.

"Real World People"
Jen: (view spoiler)
Eric: (view spoiler)
Mystery Artist: (view spoiler)
Serin: (view spoiler)
Moody: (view spoiler)
Esme Emerson Plum: (view spoiler)
Ilsa Dirks: (view spoiler)
Thomas Lyle Chadwick: (view spoiler)
FX Caldeira: (view spoiler)
VM Straka: (view spoiler)
Mr Grahn: (view spoiler)
Bolton(1957): (view spoiler)
Desjardins(1982): (view spoiler)
Hermes Bouchard: (view spoiler)
Possible VMS Identities:
0) FX Caldeira, himself...
1) Vaclav Straka: (view spoiler)
2) Torsten Ekstrom: (view spoiler)
3) Guthrie MacInnes: (view spoiler)
4) Victor Martin Summersby: (view spoiler)
5) CFJ Wallingford: (view spoiler)
6) Reinhold Feuerbach: (view spoiler)
7) Kajetan Hruby: (view spoiler)
8) Amarante Durand: (view spoiler)
9) Florence Stoneham-Smith // Floris of Bruges: (view spoiler)
10) Grand Duchess Olga: (view spoiler)
11) Apis's Amanuensis: (view spoiler)
12) Juan Blas Covarrubias: (view spoiler)
13) The proverbial million monkeys (???)
Ship of Theseus Characters:
Main Character (S): (view spoiler)
Sala?: (view spoiler)

Eric writes in Print.
The colors matter because that dictates the potential "when" the notes were written but the type of writing they do is consistent throughout the whole..."
Yea... I noted the writing in my first post... including my expected timeline of colors, just from the Foreword margins... been consistently true so far...
And that was my thought on the pencil notes, as well... and I agree they're hard to read, even in a new copy...

I already caught some things I missed the first time (view spoiler)

Book Design
I love it! It looks just like a well used library book. If you open the back cover and look inside, there's a Library Return Dates.
Dates: ..."
I missed this comment before... only saw your second one...

Yup! I have the audio and it's only Ship of Theseus. I figure it's a nice accompaniment to the actual book. I love the setup and design of the book with all the notes & inserts. It looks like ..."
That's what one of my older coworkers said... he saw the Dewey Decimal sticker on the spine... I brought the book to work to read, and show a coworker I showed House of Leaves to...


I actually think that one was more intensive for writing notes & what not. It liked to play with the reader's perception in more ways than I think this one will.
This story will be fun because I'm pretty sure most of the clues are here in the book and maybe a little bit of internet sleuthing.
p. vi - Anyone else grinned at the Ernest Hemingway note? I did.

I actually think that one was more intensive for writing notes & what not. It liked to play with the reader's perce..."
House of Leaves mostly had the family, and the documentary crew, from what I remember... this has the story (light on characters), the university people (Jen, Eric, Moody, Ilsa, etc), and the list of people (possibly) connected to Straka... and the lines already feel like they're starting to blur a bit... got to page 22, with the next insert... (view spoiler)

I have the distinct feeling tat i'll be referring back to your list of characters a lot. So definitely not overwhelmed.
I also have to say part of me is upset at the thought of these two people (academics no less) scribbling all over a library book. How dare they!
I just got to the page where (view spoiler) Delightful and slightly creepy at the same time.


Well, I underline/write things in books I own and that I work with/on. But always with a pencil. I would never write all over a library book, though.

I'll update with the rest of chapter 1 tomorrow... for now, I'll just say that things definitely ramp up by the end of chapter 1... both in the story, and the margins... (view spoiler)
Agree about the writing in the book... they could have passed notes on paper inserted into the book... but that wouldn't have been as convenient to print...
While we're on the topic, these conversations must have been disjointed... we get to read a conversation in the margins of a single page, that required 5-6 passes of the book back and forth, probably over weeks, for Jen/Eric... they must be in the middle of dozens / 112 conversations (Eric does a tally on one of the pages about how many notes Jen has added to the book)

The one important distinction, is that this was taken from a high school library 11-12 years before Jen started writing in it... once they start talking back and forth, I guess you can accept the writing... it's that first time on the title page... why would someone not just write on a piece of paper and say "I found your book"... I mean, all it had, at that point, was the pencil notes you admitted to doing yourself sometimes...

I've been thinking about the disjointedness of their exchanges...it's so inconvenient but also kinda charming? And it's really fascinati g in places where you have early and late additions together. So much foreshadowing.
They're exchanges are both like letters, in a way, where you also have to deal with time-delay, and an interesting spin on the "conversations" that sometimes emerge in research papers by people in the same field. Just even more so because they're writing them into the book they're studying.
I'm really, really intrigued by this whole set-up and wish I had more time for reading tonight.

The foreshadowing, any time purple & orange comments appear, is some of the most exciting, I think, since you generally don't know what's going on, at those parts... makes you want to read more and find out :)
At the same time, reading in chunks, and being able to take breaks for a couple days in between, kinda lets me remove the feeling of this being like homework, as much extra effort as I put into books like this...
I'm gonna wait a bit to move on to chapter 2...


On the other hand, the book is like the ultimate Buddy Read... they have something to say on EVERY page... altho it doesn't always have anything to do with the story on the page...

Did ya'll notice on the book case that there are birds on the top and spine of the case? I think they are sparrows.
Pix of Case & Sticker/Stamp on Case
(view spoiler)
"What begins at the water shall end there."
"And what ends there shall once more begin."["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>

Did ya'll notice on the book case that there are birds on the top a..."
The margin space is huge. But there's really no other way to do it.
I hadn't noticed the birds, but I was thinking earlier that the pattern surrounding the ship on the front cover looks like a maelstorm. Or a rose.
I keep wanting to pick up a pencil and highlight stuff or make notations. *facepalm*

I am going to end up going over the print notes by Eric with something though cause it's really faded now.

Books mentioned in this topic
House of Leaves (other topics)Ship of Theseus (other topics)
Buddy Read Round 2 Starts: April 24th, 2019
Ship of Theseus by J.J. Abrams & Doug Dorst
Hi! I've had this book for a while and happy to have a chance to read it with others. Ship of Theseus is an interactive novel. A story within a story. There's a mystery to solve and you get to be a part of how that unfolds.
The plan is to start the book on December 12th, 2018. Read at your own pace and feel free to post your thoughts here.
Please be thoughtful and put spoilers in a spoiler tag.
I look forward to reading and chatting with everyone. =D
Links to Story Lists Compiled by Buddy Readers
- Chapter Titles
- Character Guide by Iain
- "S" Symbol Sightings