The Forever Machine

Frank Riley, Mark Clifton
The Forever Machine Cover

They'd Rather Be Right

jfrantz
3/18/2012
Email

Also called The Forever Machine, TRBR shows us a world in which a machine which has been programmed by the world's most learned men with every scientific fact in our possession, and only those facts. The result is a machine called Bossy which has the power to imbue eternal life...if we'll only let her. After hooking into the body of a patient, Matrix style, Bossy can help the willing to shed their preconceived, false understandings and prejudices which are the only things keeping us from life everlasting.

The Good

Psiman Joe Carter is methodical, even-paced, and straight-forward. He's like a psychic Jason Bourne (and likely as handsome as Damon). Or could be. But it never materializes, because this book is written so horribly at times (most times actually). We never really get to know him. His motivations we understand to be loneliness, but any further and more interesting details are pretty much lost. In nearly every instance Clifton and Riley's ability to gloss over a dense philosophy or the science behind Bossy and especially Mabel's transformation, is really astounding.

As you can see, there is very little good and even the good is kind of bad.

The Bad

Poor poor poor writing. The first thirty pages of this book could literally be ripped out of this book, given to my 2 year old to be lost forever (along with my keys and every other important document in the house) and NOTHING would be missing from the story. Around the middle of the book, I thought it was on the cusp of reading like a pretty good thriller based on the possible tensions they had created but then they failed to run with that excitement and the tension just sort of slips away. Most of the characters are more boring than cardboard cut-outs. In every instance, Clifton and Riley scratch the surface, but never go deeper. They tell without showing and we all know how unspeakable a crime it is to break this fundamental rule.

But I'm not ready to throw it out yet so let's consider this from another angle.

The Ugly

Many reviewers have really trashed this book for its ties to scientology. I don't really know how influenced the authors were by dianetics but let's get over the pseudoscience issues shall we? Whether the science in any given SF work is accurate (if it is even present), is immaterial at best. I'd like it to be plausible sure, but possible doesn't really matter. What matters is to what ends they are using the science as a means. Does it help us slog through some murky social issue? In this case, the means may be a particularly murky set of pseudo-scientific precepts but I find the ends to be somewhat pleasing.

Okay, to get there, you have to...kind of...be willing to accept, for a moment, the basic idea/ls of dianetics, BUT if you're willing to indulge, just look at what the authors are saying in the title - They'd Rather Be Right.

This book is not about the main characters. It's also not optimistic. I guess a few reviewers out there are bothered by the fact that the authors are willing to say dianetics would physically work (in my opinion the worst and most dangerous crime they commit is confusing the goals of philosophy - truth with science - validity), but what struck me was that they also said it would be useless. People would rather be right than to accept inconvenient truths. The human race is so despicable, hateful and inflexible that the possibility of disseminating the technology to the masses is harmless and won't really change life on the planet for the most part. In fact, those select few who are able to achieve immortality and psychic ability are so emotionally shocked and unprepared for how horrendously hateful and ugly society is that they need their own therapy.

When JJ Abrahms made Cloverfield, his goal was to create a Godzilla type American monster. Not only did he fail miserably, but the very idea is somewhat repugnant to me. On top of that, the handheld shakiness was sickening and also repugnant to quite a lot of other people (I didn't mind). Despite a bad idea and poor mechanics in the telling of it, Cloverfield radiated fear and oozed terror.

If Clifton and Riley set out to write a book that would endear the public to dianetics, they too failed miserably at an idea that is scientifically repugnant and topped that off with some pretty puerile writing. Nevertheless I think they do a fantastic job of painting humanity in a pretty ugly/irrational light and you know, I don't think they were that far off in that respect.

I think it's funny that I've seen the same people denouncing TRBR for its dianetics will also look to The Demolished Man as an example of great SF literature while ignoring the fact that Bester's conclusion was exactly the same. Namely, that psychic ability is the next stage in human development which will help us overcome the greatest threat to humanity's continued existence, prejudice.

Recommendation

This book should definitely be read. I know, the literary value is null, but I think this book would be a GREAT conversation piece for a group reads or those of us who like a little trash in their diet every now and then. Yes, many people will struggle with it, but I think there's something there for those willing to dig into the bowels of the genre. Believe it or not, I actually had more trouble getting through F451 and The Mule than this one!

http://hugoenduranceproject.blogspot.com/2012/03/theyd-rather-be-right.html