SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion

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To Be Taught, If Fortunate
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"To Be Taught, If Fortunate" by Becky Chambers (BR)
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Re the end (view spoiler)


Avoiding all the stuff about the ending. :-/

I believe it's monthly, but, otherwise, this is also how I took it.
I assumed there had to be time between Aecor and Mirabilis because of (view spoiler)

I feel like the more I think about the ending, the more I like it. (view spoiler)

Right now I gave it a 3-stars, partially for the ending. I think I could've edged into 4-stars otherwise. I really loved the descriptions of the planets and their reactions to everything.
I liked the characters and their interactions and relationships. I liked how well Chambers was able to convey their different personalities and the way they deal with things without sort of dwelling on it overly.
I also liked the diversity and representation of the story, and how it was just part of their characters - a part of the story, but not the point of the story.
As to the ending, I see both sides. I both get how (view spoiler)


I agree with a lot of your comments. This bit especially jumped out at me:
(view spoiler)

Oh, hmm, yeah. (view spoiler)

Yes. Acquiring knowledge just to do so may seem pointless in the moment, but you never know when said knowledge might come in handy.
Real-world case in point: about 25 years ago the US government funded a study about canine saliva. It was widely derided as an example of government waste. Last year scientists announced they have potentially found a way to permanently reverse Type I diabetes... a line of inquiry that started with studying dog spit.
Maybe you won’t find anything, but maybe you might cure a disease affecting a third of a billion people.

Wow. What a great summary. What really resonated with me was (view spoiler)

When someone far away from Earth says something like, “We’ll check it again tomorrow,” what does “tomorrow” (or any reference to time passage like “4 months” for example) mean in an environment where gravity is dilating time? Is this just a general sci-fi convention where we’re supposed to think in terms of Earth time for ease of telling the story? If so, that’s cool with me and I can deal with it, but obviously I’ve been thinking too hard about this and now my brain is stuck.

I maybe misunderstood the bit about "gravity is dilating time", but they are on ship's clock (i.e. Earth days, hours, etc., assume synced to GMT or any other, not that important) and in normal time/space. Time dilation happens during traveling at relativistic speeds (and is not directly related to the gravity). In-system travel most likely done at speeds where dilation is unimportant


Books mentioned in this topic
Record of a Spaceborn Few (other topics)To Be Taught, If Fortunate (other topics)
:) that's why I use /sarcasm or /joke at the end sometimes