Ratings51
Average rating3.7
At an exclusive school somewhere outside of Arlington, Virginia, students aren’t taught history, geography, or mathematics—they are taught to persuade. Students learn to use language to manipulate minds, wielding words as weapons. The very best graduate as “poets,” and enter a nameless organization of unknown purpose.
Whip-smart runaway Emily Ruff is making a living from three-card Monte on the streets of San Francisco when she attracts the attention of the organization’s recruiters. Drawn in to their strage world, which is populated by people named Brontë and Eliot, she learns their key rule: That every person can be classified by personality type, his mind segmented and ultimately unlocked by the skilful application of words. For this reason, she must never allow another person to truly know her, lest she herself be coerced. Adapting quickly, Emily becomes the school’s most talented prodigy, until she makes a catastrophic mistake: She falls in love.
Meanwhile, a seemingly innocent man named Wil Parke is brutally ambushed by two men in an airport bathroom. They claim he is the key to a secret war he knows nothing about, that he is an “outlier,” immune to segmentation. Attempting to stay one step ahead of the organization and its mind-bending poets, Wil and his captors seek salvation in the toxically decimated town of Broken Hill, Australia, which, if ancient stories are true, sits above an ancient glyph of frightening power.
Reviews with the most likes.
Linguistics, secret organizations, mayhem... it's like this book was written specifically with me in mind!
While it's nothing new to manipulate people with well chosen language, Max Barry takes this concept one step further. By learning primal words, words that affect people at their very core, and using them to control others, The Organization has created and army of what they call “Poets”.
This is a fascinating and exciting story that I'm happy I took the time to read.
Really well done. I always appreciate a book that sets rules and gives explanations to the fantastic events it imagines and this one did just that. The pacing is well done and although I guessed the ending earlier than I would've liked to, I was still intrigued and dying to find out what happens next.