it's nice to know you treat your books with such tenderness, dearest Moon.
not sure if "homo deus" is for me. i say this because it doesn't reconcile with history. there were once gods among us according to greek mythology and the bible. they intermingled with humans and those generations phased out. back in the day people lived longer and then didn't and not, and now slowing rising again for rich populaces say 1% of the population this book alludes to, with the rest not. life expectancy in kenya is dismally low.. in the 30s from my memory. while the super rich are busy with mass culling initiatives, the poorest are selling their bodies for nefarious activities. who would've thought organ harvesting and people left to die in the street is now mainstream.
the book's plot doesn't resonate with me, i am lived and traveled, have witnessed too much. i get the hunch whoever this author is, yearns for a utopia bubble, he's disillusioned, smells like a zionist, and obviously suffers from a messiah complex. i see this sort of beh. a lot particularly among parliamentarians who think they're special, invincible, entitled, gods etc.
i'm quite picky as to whom i share my tenderness with. this book doesn't do me.