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#stories of your life and others
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*Published in 2016 under the title "Arrival"
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phasingphoenix · 9 months
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I really love reading all of Ted Chiang’s works. He’ll craft these interesting settings and scenarios and wax poetic about some fundamental piece of human existence, and then you go read his notes in the back of the book and it’s always just like, “I heard a man say something in 1998 and thought I’d write a little thing about it :)”
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deuterosapiens · 6 days
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I've started reading through Ted Chiang's collection, Stories of Your Life and Others, as a bit of a palatal reset. I'm familiar with this author's work for exactly one reason, but I thought skipping directly to that one would be a bit disrespectful. I'm of the opinion that the order in which an author chooses to present their work in a collection such as this is an important, and not made lightly. It might be thematic, or cleansing, or their might be an underlying structure that's made more clear if taken as a whole.
Or completely random, as Stephen King admits in the Foreward to (if I remember correctly) Everything's Eventual.
Here are my impressions of the first three stories:
"Tower of Babylon"- A retelling of the Tower of Babel with an odd little twist. The Tower has not be struck down and the tongues of men have not been muddled. A team of miners and quarry-men have been brought to the top to dig into the Vault of Heaven from below. I'm reminded a bit of The Last Battle by CS Lewis, in particular the bit about Narnia being like an onion which is larger and more perfect the more you peel its layers. I found the ending bittersweet, but it's an interesting perspective about the relationship between Heaven and earth as physical, geographical places.
"Understand"- You remember that movie Lucy? The film with the "Ten Percent of Your Brain"-conceit? This is basically that, but assume the Lucy-analog has Bene Gesserit-levels of personal, physiological awareness. The ending brings to mind Jeff VanderMeer's Annihilation, at least in the sense that it's very much what The Psychologist was trying to pull on The Linguist, had Area X not warped her physiology. This one felt a bit longer than it needed to be, though it pleasantly reminds me of a Philip K Dick story.
"Divide by Zero"- A mathematician discovers a proof that proves any two random integers are equal, and is driven to suicide at the greater implications this has to the rationality of Mathematics as a whole. Her husband is trying to be supportive and understanding, but their marriage's failure is inevitable. I'll admit, of the three, this was easily my favorite. I've heard stories of mathematicians and physicists becoming psychologically unstable as they delve deeper into understanding their fields, and the implications of them and this story feels quite plausible as a result. The fact that the husband feels an obligation to see his wife through to her recovery, but admits to no longer loving her and intends to leave is also something I've personally seen (though luckily never first-hand): sometimes the weight of seeing a loved-one suffer is too great, and you simply can't bear to be around it anymore.
Seeing as I admittedly do already know what "The Story of Your Life" is about, I find it humorous which threads from these stories tie into it. The inevitability of divorce after revelation, the unsuitability of existing language to properly describe the universe.
I'm going to be deeply upset, but in my defense, mostly because Arrival upsets me deeply.
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tabgore · 1 year
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'Sounds good.' We walked past the section of kitchen utensils. My gaze wandered over the shelves — pepper mills, garlic presses, salad tongs — and stopped on a wooden salad bowl.
When you are three, you'll pull a dishtowel off the kitchen counter and bring that salad bowl down on top of you. I'll make a grab for it, but I'll miss. The edge of the bowl will leave you with a cut, on the upper edge of your forehead, that will require a single stitch. Your father and I will hold you, sobbing and stained with Caesar dressing, as we wait in the emergency room for hours.
I reached out and took the bowl from the shelf. The motion didn't feel like something I was forced to do. Instead it seemed just as urgent as my rushing to catch the bowl when it falls on you: an instinct that I felt right in following.
Story of Your Life, Ted Chiang
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librofm · 10 months
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Short Story Collections I like: part 3
Friday Black by Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah
Racism in America is the paint, but the images the author creates are so personal and imaginative that I got totally wrapped up in the world. Friday Black turned out to be the perfect appetizer to Chain Gang All Stars (also so good)
Stories of Your Life and Others by Ted Chiang
Excellent scifi-ish mind bender, except there’s a super self absorbed guy in one of the stories that I related to wayyyy too much. Thanks a lot Ted. Also the movie Arrival is based on the titular story.
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thespoot · 1 year
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Reading Challenge Update - #20
Book number 3 goes to spot #20 A short story, one with less than 5,000 words. I read the whole collection of short stories, Stories of Your Life and Others by Ted Chiang, which certainly contained stories under 5000 words lol.
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Why this book: This was part of my sci-fi language wishlist for books that use linguistics/language as a central theme or plot point. When I realized this had the story that the movie Arrival was based on, I was even more excited to read this collection.
Why this category: Last time I did this challenge, I got really hung up on trying to figure out how many words various books had. Kinda not caring as much this time, haha. Are there short stories? Sweet, probably under or about 5000 words I bet.
What did I think: This was an excellent collection of stories. I had two favorites. First, Division by Zero. Short stories are such magic - so few words and I care so much about Renee and her work and Carl and his poor choices lol. Second, Hell is the Absence of God. Good world-building, I easily identified with the main character and his ambivalence towards religion and belief. The ending of this, *chef's kiss*. I always enjoy a good ironic story about how cruel love/devotion can be.
Stories of Your Life was also great. I enjoyed Arrival, but I liked what the short story focused on instead of creating some wild threat to humanity. I also liked that there were more humans who understood the alien writing system - and more humans therefore who were going to experience this new way of seeing the universe with this "simultaneous consciousness."
My least favorite was probably 72 Letters - neat idea with industrializing the golem. But I felt like it got really bogged down in building the world and explaining the minutiae of making golems. It's a short story, you don't need to spend that many words suspending my believe. Let's hear more about the Kabbalist, the cultural impact of the golems, and what the elite British wind up doing when the plan comes to fruition. Overall though, great collection of stories and definitely recommend.
A quote or two:
"What he insists on is that they not love God under a misapprehension, that if they wish to love God, they be prepared to do so no matter what His intentions. God is not just, God is not kind, God is not merciful, and understanding that is essential to true devotion." ~ Hell is the Absence of God
"-'No one could actually experience such a thing; it's like believing six impossible things efore breakfast.' -'How would you know what I can experienced?'" ~ Division by Zero
"Brain damage is never a good idea, no matter what your friends say." ~ Liking What You See: A Documentary
Next books: On my Discworld journey, I finished Jingo and started Last Continent. I'm excited to see how many categories I can shove Discworld into lol. My kiddo recently started The Giver at school, and I finished that during a long night at the hospital. I had never read it before. I also still have Children of Time by Adrian Tchaikovsky in the wings.
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catwingsathena · 2 years
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My mom checked Stories of your Life and Others out from the library (we’d both read and greatly enjoyed Exhalation) and, much as I love Ted Chiang and his writing, I have arrived at the unsurprising conclusion that reading intense, profound, brain-bending speculative fiction when you already have a headache is perhaps not the best idea.
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esevik · 1 year
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Tower of Babylon
This is a story about a miner who is working on the tower of Babylon and trying to break through the wall in the sky to reach heaven. The highlight of this short story is the world building, or how the tower itself functions. It does a good job depicting the massive size of the tower and the differences between the bottom floors and those higher up. It also does a good job at portraying the protagonist's concern about the tower. The twist about the truth of the sky-wall at the end is also pretty good.
I've never read the original tower of Bable myth, though I know the gist of the story (humans build tower, God is pissed off, tower is trashed, humans now speak different languages) but the story introduces enough worldbuilding that even someone who hasn't heard about the myth could still read it without feeling confused.
Rating: A-
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the-times-plague · 2 years
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“Hillalum said nothing. For the first time, he knew night for what it was: the shadow of the earth itself, cast against the sky.”
- Ted Chiang, Stories of Your Life And Others
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pikminenjoyer · 2 months
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At the time of counting, and with the added Book Hater Discord votes, phantom of the opera won and I did not enjoy it. Maybe this isn't the year for classics.
This however, means picking a new book to read!
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theturnofthephrases · 7 months
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Tower of Babylon by Ted Chiang, from Stories of Your Life and Others
Hillalum thought of the story told to him in childhood, the tale following that of the Deluge. It told of how men had once again populated all the corners of the earth, inhabiting more lands than they ever had before. How men had sailed to the edges of the world, and seen the ocean falling away into the mist to join the black waters of the Abyss far below. How men had thus realized the extent of the earth, and felt it to be small, and desired to see what lay beyond its borders, all the rest of Yahweh's Creation. How they looked skyward, and wondered about Yahweh's dwelling place, above the reservoirs that contained the waters of heaven. And how, many centuries ago, there began the construction of the tower, a pillar to heaven, a stair that men might ascend to see the works of Yahweh, and that Yahweh might descend to see the works of men. It had always seemed inspiring to Hillalum, a tale of thousands of men toiling ceaselessly, but with joy, for they worked to know Yahweh better. He had been excited when the Babylonians came to Elam looking for miners. Yet now that he stood at the base of the tower, his senses rebelled, insisting that nothing should stand so high. He didn't feel as if he were on the earth when he looked up along the tower. Should he climb such a thing?
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deuterosapiens · 2 days
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Oh look, it's time for our next batch of Ted Chiang story impressions. I confess, it took me a bit longer with these than I had intended, but that's because I'm lazy, and had too much to do with work over the week-end. I digress!
"Story of Your Life"- So, this one is about the arrival of extraterrestrial lifeforms known as Heptapods. Unlike most First Contact stories, this one delves into the communicative aspect of the experience. It follows a linguist tasked with learning to communicate with them, to learn their purpose on earth. Do they mean us harm, et multa cetera? If you, like our world's governments, want answers to these questions, you, like our world's governments, our out of luck. They leave without an explanation for their presence. It would be highly irresponsible of me to not mention that this story is the basis for the Denis Villeneuve film, Arrival. It would be irresponsible for me to not mention that I'm rather fond of that film (to the point that I have a tattoo taken from that film). The two are completely different affairs, and having a relationship with one does not guarantee that you'll have a good relationship with the other. That said, Ted Chiang's story is fair, and enjoyable from a speculative linguistics perspective; it really spends more time with the actual process of learning Heptapod language than the film does. It's significantly less tragic, in my opinion, which is not necessarily a bad thing.
"Seventy-Two Letters"- I'm at something of a loss deciding how to properly describe this one, genre-wise. I almost what to say it's steampunk, but it's really... not. So, this one is details a society centered around the scientific use of True Names to create Automata. Consider the classic story of the golem, a figure of clay inscribed with the Word of life and given autonomy. Now, humankind is unfortunately winding down, approaching a point where eventually, everyone will become sterile. The solution: discover a Name which can be used to produce offspring which are capable of reproducing without this unfortunate generational wind-down. The story concludes with our lead discovering a method of allowing humans to reproduce without the need of homunculi (oh yeah, there's a lot of homunculi in the spermy sense in this story; kind of a big deal which I had neglected to mention earlier). So this one was quite fun. It's steeped in this sort of pseudo-scientific mythology which ultimately seems to build to the granting of human beings the ability to reproduce sexually. There's also a sub-plot about, basically, corporate espionage. I suspect there could be a seriously weird, but very enjoyable, film in this one.
"The Evolution of Human Science"- The shortest one in the set, so far. This is less a "story" and more a brief article about a hypothetical society where humans don't really engage in scientific discovery anymore due to advancements made by metahumans. I really don't have much to say about this beyond that it feels like a coda to Seventy-Two Letters, where we've progressed beyond simple Nomenclature Experimentation. I honestly can't add much here, though I would be interested in seeing this setting fleshed-out further.
Of the three, "Seventy-Two Letters" is surprisingly my favorite. I would love to see more of this world: the setting is interesting and the rules are very well established and worth exploring more.
Not much left now, just the enticingly titled "Hell is the Absence of God"; and "Liking What You See: A Documentary".
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bookcoversonly · 1 year
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Title: Stories of Your Life and Others | Author: Ted Chiang | Publisher: Picador (2020)
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Currently Reading...
Stories of your Life and Others - Ted Chiang
A couple of weeks ago, this was sitting on my friend's desk at work and, being me, I picked it up and started reading the first story. He immediately offered to pass it on to me once he was finished, which is exceptionally generous, considering we are casual friends, at most.
But honestly, it wasn't my type of book. It was very intelligent, very clever, but there wasn't a lot of emotion in it. It was all head, no heart. It might have been a bit beyond me.
One of the stories was adapted into "Arrival" a few years back, which I didn't enjoy at all. I found it boring, and when I told Jack, he explained why it was brilliant, and all the bits I'd completely missed when watching it. The thing is, if he hadn't explained it to me before I read that short story, it would have gone right over my head again while I was reading it.
So, yeah. These short stories were clearly well written, and the author is obviously very intelligent, but the problem is that I am... not. I'm only moderately intelligent, and these stories weren't for me. I just prefer something with a bit more feeling.
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ryssbelle · 2 months
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Thought of this while at work, sorry it's a bit hard to read I sketched it out really fast before my last shift lmao wanted to get it done so I could work on other stuff hehe
If it's any consultation Floyd is mostly talking about himself
#my art#trolls#dreamworks trolls#brozone#trolls 3#trolls floyd#trolls john dory#trolls branch#trolls poppy#the way i imagine their 20 years in troll village is that one meme where its the two different nothing in life matters pics#but one is super sad and the other is happy looking and radical#thats floyd and jd#but they switch places depending on the day#branch is a secret third option#also idk what id do with the 3rd movies plot#this scene in my head is 3rd movie era but i like havent decided what theyre doing yet#theres a few possibilities on whos in the bottle or if theres a bottle at all#this would take place in a timeline where clay or bruce is in the bottle#but like heres the thing any of the brothers could be bottled and itd make for a good story#i drift more towards clay only for the irony of finding out your brothers alive but its a race against time cuz hes literally dying#so it adds to the urgency but then its not much adventure cuz they just gotta get bruce and go#cuz we have 3/5 brozone here already#same goes for if its bruce#so like for story purposes that means it would be most likely JD or Floyd which is just most aus and canon#cuz after world tour Floyd would travel with JD on their own tour Floyd going solo with JD as his manager#and in this scenario they came back to tell Branch about finding whoever is in the bottle#but the story of these guys could also work without any bottle so idk we'll just have to see what i decide to do later#also im slowly coming up with a name for this#very slowly but it'll happen#i actually have a google doc that has a name so i may just use that
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carica-ficus · 2 years
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Recenzija: Kako Si Došla Na Svijet i Druge Priče
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Originalan naslov: Stories Of Your Life and Others
Autor: Ted Chiang
Datum: 28/07/2022
Ocjena: ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
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Na ovu sam kolekciju kraćih priča naletjela slučajno kad ju je netko preporučio na svom storyu. Znala sam samo da se radi o sci-fiu i da je navodno nešto genijalno.
Na početku sam bila pomalo sumnjičava jer otvara sa pričom o Babilonskom tornju. Nisam je odabrala kako bih čitala religiozne teorije, no kako je radnja odmicala, tako sam počela shvaćati da stvarno moram odbaciti sva očekivanja i u potpunosti se prepustiti ovom jedinstvenom iskustvu.
Što se tiče pisanja, Chiangova vještina je neupitna. Stil je fantastičan, kao stvoren za spekulativnu fikciju, no ono što razlikuje Chiangova djela od ostalih je način na koji iskorištava filozofska, teološka, fizička i lingvistička pitanja unutar svojih priča. Postavlja problem te ga zatim postupno tijekom radnje razdvaja na dijelove i analizira. Radnja nije usporena dijelovima gdje predstavlja svoje razmišljanje, već je njima vođena te su me upravo zato njegove priče toliko brzo osvojile.
Između ostalog valja istaknuti same teme njegovih priča. Teško mi je odlučiti koju bih prozvala svojom najdražom, no "Kako Si Došla Na Svijet" mi se urezala nešto jače nego druge. Neću spominjati što mi se svidjelo kod svake pojedinačne priče, niti ulaziti u njihove radnje. Preporučam da to učinite sami.
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