Also writing this on an Apple product and also 100% concur with this: "...the cult of Steve Jobs and the related permission to be a terrible genius has done great damage to leadership and business." Added to my library queue! Thank you!
I thought Never Let Me Go was a beautiful and thought-provoking and really important contemplation of some big... BIG... ethical questions that we should still be contemplating more than we are, but also felt sort of unfinished. It had echoes of Murakami for me - a shade confusing throughout.
YES! I love the ethical quandaries but felt they were sort of over-shadowed by the teenage / growing up stories (and the what I felt was like a tiresome amount of sex). Like - I was much more interested in - where did these people COME from? How did they never grapple with the concept of parents (who had, who didn't)?
Also writing this on an Apple product and also 100% concur with this: "...the cult of Steve Jobs and the related permission to be a terrible genius has done great damage to leadership and business." Added to my library queue! Thank you!
I thought Never Let Me Go was a beautiful and thought-provoking and really important contemplation of some big... BIG... ethical questions that we should still be contemplating more than we are, but also felt sort of unfinished. It had echoes of Murakami for me - a shade confusing throughout.
YES! I love the ethical quandaries but felt they were sort of over-shadowed by the teenage / growing up stories (and the what I felt was like a tiresome amount of sex). Like - I was much more interested in - where did these people COME from? How did they never grapple with the concept of parents (who had, who didn't)?