Páginas

sábado, 21 de febrero de 2015

Brave New World


I began reading this book for two main reasons:

1. I bought it aeons ago and it turned out to be the typical procastinated reading over the years.
2. I had a very reduced list of books for my reading club and had to select one that would be short and completely different from the rest of the ones I had already chosen (consider that in that list I already had Dracula, The Catcher in the Rye and Mansfield Park). My first option was The Road, but the library didn't have enough copies of the book for all the members of the club,  so I decided on old Huxley's classic distopian novel.

After reading two thirds of the book, I can tell you I was kind of disappointed at it.  I cannot deny Huxley had the merit of writing something so daring and advanced at that time.  But my disappointment was caused more by the fact that the book was quite philosophical and deep,  I caught most of the themes, topics and symbols and understood them, but I fancied reading something else, more in the line of other distopian, futuristic novels such as 1984 or The Time Machine. Brave New World could be the ideal complementary reading for students of Philosophy, but not my cup of tea at these moments in which I really read for pure FUN.

Anyway right at the end the novel gets momentum and leaves a feeling of hopelessness on the reader. Thanks goodness that the reading was worthy in the end!


(Image taken fron the Amazon Kindle edition)