Reading the 20th Century discussion

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The Tin Men
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The Tin Men by Michael Frayn (April 2024)
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Ben wrote:
"The Tin Men is "in transit" to my library, so April would work for me as well, if you want to bump Tin Man up a month."
Fine by me but it might not be late April til I read it as I have a lot of books to read that month
I'll attend to it
"The Tin Men is "in transit" to my library, so April would work for me as well, if you want to bump Tin Man up a month."
Fine by me but it might not be late April til I read it as I have a lot of books to read that month
I'll attend to it
Are we bumping it up? I also have a bookish backlog to attend to. I am having some minor surgery soon, so perhaps I will catch up then. Nothing serious but I will be home for a couple of weeks at least I think.
Are we putting the next Dominic Sandbrook as a buddy sometime, later in the year? I think there are two more in the series, one more in the Seventies and one in the Eighties.
Are we putting the next Dominic Sandbrook as a buddy sometime, later in the year? I think there are two more in the series, one more in the Seventies and one in the Eighties.
Yes Susan, I've moved this buddy read to April 2024 so it's convenient for Ben with his library copy.
Just read it as and when you have a chance. I am not sure when I'll get to it yet
Here's to a speedy recovery after your op
Just read it as and when you have a chance. I am not sure when I'll get to it yet
Here's to a speedy recovery after your op
Thanks, Nigeyb. I don't have the date yet but I am going to see the specialist next Thursday and think it will be April or May at the latest.
The copy that I bought off eBay arrived the other day so I am going to read this one next.
I’m looking forward to my second book by Michael Frayn
I’m looking forward to my second book by Michael Frayn
Fingers crossed it arrives quickly, Ben! Anyway, I have a lot of books on the go at the moment, so I won't finish this until the end of the week probably.
I'm enjoying this having read the first five chapters
I am drawn to novels set in the work place and set in academic institutions so this instantly predisposes me to view it favourably
The humour is subtle but as I start to differentiate the disparate characters it is getting more amusing
In short, I've got a good feeling about this one
I am drawn to novels set in the work place and set in academic institutions so this instantly predisposes me to view it favourably
The humour is subtle but as I start to differentiate the disparate characters it is getting more amusing
In short, I've got a good feeling about this one
I finished this yesterday in the reading room at the Wellcome Centre, which was a nice way to spend an hour between appointments. I really enjoyed it too and it is interesting to see how we viewed computers when they first appeared and we were unsure of their use and how they would impact us.
That's good news Susan
I enjoyed your review too
I am about halfway through and finding it amusing in an absurdist way. The section on self generating newspaper headlines had me smiling in recognition
The inter departmental rivalries and insecurities are well executed. It is interesting how much has changed, especially regarding technology, but also how much is still so familiar
I enjoyed your review too
I am about halfway through and finding it amusing in an absurdist way. The section on self generating newspaper headlines had me smiling in recognition
The inter departmental rivalries and insecurities are well executed. It is interesting how much has changed, especially regarding technology, but also how much is still so familiar
Yes, that's very well done especially the various committees and how, ultimately, it's Miss Fram who unilaterally makes all the decisions and gets things done
Yes, the wonderful Miss Fram. There are, I find, a lot of Miss Fram's in the world, being quietly indispensable.
I just read the chapter about the party at the Haugh’s converted church. It had me laughing out loud at the amusing incidents and exchanges. Marvellous comedic writing 👏🏻
Good to hear, Nigeyb. I also loved the party scene. Are there similarities between Chiddingford and the Editor in the End of the Morning?

From authors Introduction to The Tin Men, 2014, when it was republished.
“There’s a picture on Wikipedia of an IBM 704 mainframe dated 1964. It occupies an entire room - four steel cabinets as tall and voluminous as commercial refrigerators, together with a steel desk suite as imposing as the control room of an aircraft-carrier. Amongst it all, easy to overlook surrounded by all that hardware, is a demure young woman in a pencil skirt who is presumably the operator. She seems as overawed as all the rest of us, and as unaware as IBM themselves that in forty or fifty years time the balance of power would have been reversed, and she would be carrying the same capacity and more tucked away unnoticed inside the smartphone in her shirt pocket.”
Perfect description of the workplace at IBM except that the operators were all men and the keypunch operators were all woman.
Perfect description of the workplace at IBM except that the operators were all men and the keypunch operators were all woman.
Of course they were, Susan!
Of course they were, Susan!
Susan wrote:
"Are there similarities between Chiddingford and the Editor in the End of the Morning?"
Well spotted Susan, I hadn't thought about that but both share many of the same characteristics: inscrutability, having an aura of power and omniscience, elusiveness....
"Are there similarities between Chiddingford and the Editor in the End of the Morning?"
Well spotted Susan, I hadn't thought about that but both share many of the same characteristics: inscrutability, having an aura of power and omniscience, elusiveness....

Poor Hugh Rowe. If only he had been born 40 years later he could have spent time changing the font, adjusting the font size and margins and perhaps fiddling with the spacing between paragraphs!
And yes, three cheers for Miss Fram!
So far, the humour is somewhat broader than Towards the End of the Morning and the characters less individual and less complex but it’s still making me smile. I do like the early attempts at AGI with the Samaritan program.

He then continues on to AGI!
Clever man, this Mr Frayn.
Although I still much prefer Towards the End of the Morning.
I think we all preferred Towards the End of the Morning? Still, this was a first novel and shows Frayn perhaps finding his feet?

I loved the computer/randomly generated flash card newspaper headlines (I’m told headlines were an early form of clickbait) and the panics about computers writing pornography, which is finally a sad reality.
The characters were a bit broad. The second novel shows large improvement.
Is anyone up for reading his Spies later this year?
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The Tin Men (other topics)The Tin Men (other topics)
The Tin Men (1965)
by
Michael Frayn
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