gfish: (sketch)
gfish ([personal profile] gfish) wrote2014-02-26 02:44 pm

Angelmaker

I'm into his second book, and I'm continuing to be very impressed by Nick Harkaway. I don't mind saying this passage utterly choked me up:

"‘This train is our blood,’ the Keeper says. ‘It is the product of our work. We know every part of it. The designs were perfect, but the materials are not. They cannot be. So we compensated. Does it look sheer? Does it look absolutely true? It’s not. Here we shaved an eighth. There we padded. The rivets are not exactly the same. They are positioned to avoid splitting the wood. They are loosened here and there to allow for expansion. The machine doesn’t know when it is vulnerable. The mechanical drill has no idea when it is destroying the substance it cuts. But we know. We feel and hear. We touch. Touch is a truer sense than sight.’

‘And all this … it makes your machines better?’

The Keeper shrugs. ‘It makes us better,’ he says. ‘Or at least, it means we do not become casual about effort and art. We appreciate the weakness of the world and come to understand the glories and stresses of our selves. But yes. The product is better, by perhaps a single percentage point, than it would be if it were made by machines to perfect tolerances. It doesn’t matter until you stress it. Stress this train, and it will hold. It will hold beyond what the specifications say; beyond what any of us believes. It will hold beyond reason, beyond expectation, beyond hope. Derail it, drive it across sand, twist and heat it. It will do what it can for you. It will hold as if it was alive, and filled with love. And when it fails, it will fail hugely, heroically, and take your enemies with it. Because it has been made that way.’"

[identity profile] randomdreams.livejournal.com 2014-02-27 03:01 am (UTC)(link)
That's a pretty good passage. I'd better hunt that book down.
maribou: (eye)

[personal profile] maribou 2014-02-27 06:11 am (UTC)(link)
That's absolutely lovely. I actually have both of his books, in abeyance for when I've finished school. Now I'm really looking forward to them. THREE MORE MONTHS.

[identity profile] gfish.livejournal.com 2014-02-27 06:13 am (UTC)(link)
They're both an awful lot of fun, with some wonderful, almost subversive bits of political philosophy cleverly worked in. I like how his minds works.

[identity profile] heyokish.livejournal.com 2014-02-27 07:35 pm (UTC)(link)
i LOVE his books. particularly that one.