A Clockwork Orange
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How 2001: A Space Odyssey makes you think about what mysteries lie beyond the world around us is exhilaration because it brings you into the setting and makes you want to learn more about what is happening to the characters. This extraordinary
book was written in a time when it was hard to see us going to any planet much less the moon, but the detail in which is told to the reader is so real that anyone back when the book was made would believe it could happen, even now when it still cant happen it feels very real. The book almost even made you feel what the character felt, emotionally and physically. When the mysterious black monolith is bestowed upon the prehistoric apes in the beginning chapters, you can see it, the way it stands there in the cool desert dawn as the sun hits it with its blinding light. For me this was one of the best books I have ever read.
Millions of years ago, before the inventions of our time, before the very fire in which we use in our homes, were the first glimpse of civilization. Man had not fully developed his posture or his brain, but the very first signs were showing. Two tribes ruled this small area in the heart of what we now call Africa. These two tribes of “man-apes” were constantly fighting with each other, the fight to survive. The story leads you to one of the tribes, with “Moon-Watcher” as one of the lead males, who wakes up one day to find a mysterious “New Rock” (Which was the black monolith.) To Moon-Watcher and his tribe, this New Rock was nothing but a rock, but to their surprise, it started taking over the bodies of the man-apes, but what it made them do was beyond the “dumb” man-apess comprehension. The monolith taught many things to the man-apes, but perhaps the most important was to Moon-Watcher, it showed him how to hit things with other things. Now you might be thinking, why is that important? Well, with this new skill Moon-Watcher defeated