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Tell the Machine Goodnight: A Novel

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FINALIST FOR 2018 KIRKUS PRIZE

NAMED ONE OF THE "BEST LITERARY FICTION OF 2018' BY KIRKUS REVIEWS

"Sci-fi in its most perfect expression...Reading it is like having a lucid dream of six years from next week, filled with people you don't know, but will." --NPR

"[Williams's] wit is sharp, but her touch is light, and her novel is a winner." - San Francisco Chronicle

"Between seasons of Black Mirror, look to Katie Williams' debut novel." --Refinery29

Smart and inventive, a page-turner that considers the elusive definition of happiness.

Pearl's job is to make people happy. As a technician for the Apricity Corporation, with its patented happiness machine, she provides customers with personalized recommendations for greater contentment. She's good at her job, her office manager tells her, successful. But how does one measure an emotion?

Meanwhile, there's Pearl's teenage son, Rhett. A sensitive kid who has forged an unconventional path through adolescence, Rhett seems to find greater satisfaction in being unhappy. The very rejection of joy is his own kind of "pursuit of happiness." As his mother, Pearl wants nothing more than to help Rhett--but is it for his sake or for hers? Certainly it would make Pearl happier. Regardless, her son is one person whose emotional life does not fall under the parameters of her job--not as happiness technician, and not as mother, either.

Told from an alternating cast of endearing characters from within Pearl and Rhett's world, Tell the Machine Goodnight delivers a smartly moving and entertaining story about the advance of technology and the ways that it can most surprise and define us. Along the way, Katie Williams playfully illuminates our national obsession with positive psychology, our reliance on quick fixes. What happens when these obsessions begin to overlap? With warmth, humor, and a clever touch, Williams taps into our collective unease about the modern world and allows us see it a little more clearly.

304 pages, Paperback

First published June 19, 2018

406 people are currently reading
12905 people want to read

About the author

Katie Williams

22 books624 followers
Katie Williams was born and raised in mid-Michigan. She earned her BA in English from the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor and her MFA in creative writing from the Michener Center at the University of Texas at Austin.

Katie is the author of The Space Between Trees (2010, Chronicle Books), Absent (2013, Chronicle Books), and Tell the Machine Goodnight (2018, Riverhead Books).

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 1,071 reviews
Profile Image for ReGina.
549 reviews30 followers
December 29, 2020
I felt like this book piqued my interest but had no point. It was a masturbatory exercise that I enjoyed initially and thought was going somewhere but really had no point or purpose. I like my stories to make a statement, not just introduce me to cool words and unexplored concepts. I did give it a three, however, because I did enjoy a good amount of it and it is well written. The ending, however, was unsatisfying and then made me question why I had read it in the first place.
Profile Image for Natalie.
641 reviews3,849 followers
August 10, 2018


It feels so good to have enjoyed a novel so fully that I read it in a day and a half. What had me so keen on the premise of Tell the Machine Goodnight is a) the fact that the synopsis "playfully illuminates our national obsession with positive psychology, our reliance on quick fixes and technology" and b) Gabrielle Zevin, one of my favorite authors who excels with her subtle little quips on our daily lives, blurbed it.

Pearl's job is to make people happy. Every day, she provides customers with personalized recommendations for greater contentment. She's good at her job, her office manager tells her, successful. But how does one measure an emotion?

Meanwhile, there's Pearl's teenage son, Rhett. A sensitive kid who has forged an unconventional path through adolescence, Rhett seems to find greater satisfaction in being unhappy. The very rejection of joy is his own kind of "pursuit of happiness." As his mother, Pearl wants nothing more than to help Rhett--but is it for his sake or for hers? Certainly it would make Pearl happier. Regardless, her son is one person whose emotional life does not fall under the parameters of her job--not as happiness technician, and not as mother, either.

Told from an alternating cast of endearing characters from within Pearl and Rhett's world, Tell the Machine Goodnight delivers a smartly moving and entertaining story about relationships and the ways that they can most surprise and define us. Along the way, Katie Williams playfully illuminates our national obsession with positive psychology, our reliance on quick fixes and technology. What happens when these obsessions begin to overlap? With warmth, humor, and a clever touch, Williams taps into our collective unease about the modern world and allows us see it a little more clearly.


Thankfully for my impatient temper, the introducing story starts off compelling enough, in particular, hits the spot for me upon introducing Pearl's sixteen-year-old son, Rhett, who's recovering from an eating disorder. His unknowable, remote nature makes for a natural pull in getting to know more about him. Incidentally, he's also all the things that make me feel fond of a character: distant, moody, hates school, rarely leaves his home, is close to his mother (or getting to it).

Tell the Machine Goodnight 4

To counter his anguished withdrawal, Pearl's powerless state seeps in, when all she craves is to bring her child back from hovering on the brink, so she channels in her overprotective, overbearing, OVEReverything nature, similar to Joyce Byers in Stranger Things.


The following stories move deftly between alternating characters, such as Pearl's ex-husband, Elliot, Pearl's shifty coworker, Carter, Pearl's high-end secret client for Apricity, who gets name-dropped throughout the book so that when we finally meet her it feels like all else has led up to this exact moment. At the heart of it all, though, stands Pearl with her fierce protectiveness (of herself, of her child, of her machine) at her beck and call.

Tell the Machine Goodnight gets so many things right by going outside the box not only on the platitudes of motherhood but through the whip-smart writing and a tremendous cast that lead to having numerous moments and turns of phrase to remind me of how good this book can be. Leading examples include:

• #1
Tell the Machine Goodnight 15

"unique store-bought personality" is one of the more memorable lines I've read this year.

• #2
Tell the Machine Goodnight 2

Typically, we’d fill in the brackets on our own, but Katie Williams is here to reminds us not to succumb to gender stereotypes.

• Another moment where I felt the author truly shine was with Zihao's introduction (Rhett's college roommate, an international student from China). It takes a special type of writer to succeed at showcasing a character's personality through text messages (and with emoji, no less).

Tell the Machine Goodnight 1-- bookspoils

• But he truly caught my attention when he got randomly along with Rhett's mom.Tell the Machine Goodnight 2-- bookspoils
The subtle ingenuity disposed between Rhett and Zi had me smiling like a fool.
• And I'll leave my review with one last riveting insight on something that I'm running over and over in my mind:

Tell the Machine Goodnight 5

I love how, throughout my reading experience, this novel remains utterly self-aware and keeps up with the whip-sharp and INNOVATIVE remarks on our deepest desires. And I know I said the above was the last passage I wanted to share, but I have one more subtle quip for the road: "Being home from college for the summer is like sleeping over at a friend's house you've only ever visited in the afternoon. The furniture is familiar, but the light has gone funny on you." 

ARC kindly provided by the publisher in exchange for an honest review.

Publication Date: June 19th, 2018

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Profile Image for Barbara .
1,845 reviews1,521 followers
August 29, 2018
“Tell The Machine Goodnight” is a pleasant tale that has the reader meditating over happiness. The protagonist, Pearl is a technician for the Apricity Corporation, and her job is to provide people with what they must do to be happy. This is a part science fiction in that the story takes place in 2035 and what Pearl uses is a small box that takes DNA from the subject and provides the answers in quick succession. Pearl’s job is to collect the sample and talk the subject through the results. And the results are quirky: cease all contact with your brother; eat tangerines; amputate the uppermost section of your right index finger; put a warm blanket on your bed; and so on. I think author Kate Williams enjoyed thinking up crazy ideas to put in her novel.

It’s more than just science fiction, there’s a domestic fiction piece as well in that Pearl is a divorcee with a husband who continues to flirt with her. She has a teenage son who has an eating disorder and is big on self-denial. Pearl thinks she’s generally happy but she questions the happiness of those closest to her: her boss, her ex, and her son.

Williams isn’t too far off in the science fiction piece in that happiness is big on everyone’s mind. Plus, society is relying more on computers and science to find quick fixes for everything. An oracle in a box that takes DNA and provides happiness schemes isn’t too far fetched.

For me, the best part of the novel was Pearl and her ruminations on helping her love ones. Her son, Elliot, also plays strongly in the story. He has his own friends with differing impacts upon him. Elliot also grows up a bit with regard to his relationship with his mother, and his friends.

This is a sweet story. It ends a bit oddly (for me). It’s very much worth a read.
Profile Image for Jessica Sullivan.
568 reviews623 followers
July 7, 2018
I really love speculative fiction, so this was right up my alley. Imagine if there were a machine that could tell you exactly what you needed to do to be happier. Pearl works for the creators of Apricity, a device that does exactly that, and spends her days providing people with this coveted advice.

Tell the Machine Goodnight is about Pearl and the people who are part of her life: her son, Rhett, who suffers from anorexia and stubbornly embraces his melancholy; her boss, Carter, who manipulates the Apricity into delivering advice to attain power; and Calla Pax, a young celebrity who commissions Pearl to deliver daily Apricity readings. There’s also Pearl’s ex-husband and his new wife, who hide mysterious secrets from each other.

The bizarre and fascinating vignettes from each of these characters’ lives make up the narrative of this novel about people trying and failing to find happiness and contentment amid the disconnectedness of modern life.

I was thoroughly engaged in each mini storyline, even the ones that felt more disparate and self-contained. This was close to being a 5-star book for me and likely would’ve been if there had been the tiniest bit more closure and cohesiveness in the end.

Profile Image for Frosty61 .
1,046 reviews21 followers
July 2, 2018
Multiple narrators, pointless detail, unlikeable characters, and a unsatisfying ending all added up to a waste of my time and made me grumpy. :-(
Profile Image for Leo.
4,986 reviews629 followers
August 5, 2022
The blurb sounded very interesting and I was so curious to see how the story would go but unfortunately I'm not the only one feeling rather unsatisfied with the book
Profile Image for Janet | purrfectpages.
1,245 reviews59 followers
July 16, 2018
Eh. I get what this book was trying to do, but it was a little too “avant-garde” for me. Everything about this book had a sort of vibe. It was sort of a futuristic. It was sort of funny. It was sort of sad. It was definitely a commentary on our times. I sort of got it, until I didn’t.
Profile Image for Jessica Woodbury.
1,929 reviews3,143 followers
May 20, 2019
Blew through this in a day, I love a thoughtful, character-focused speculative novel and this was right on target.

The hook of the story is the Apricity machine, and when you write a speculative novel that's set in the near future based on a concept that the reader just has to accept you're walking a fine line. Sometimes the reader still has too many questions about the concept and the world and how it all works. But Williams has thought this all the way through, she presents so many different angles on the machine and the characters in her story that you don't really care all that much about how the machine works, the few questions you may have are usually addressed in some way, but mostly they just move to the back of your brain because What does it matter? There's so much here to sink your teeth into!

Good Sci-Fi is not really about the science, it's about the character and the moral repercussions of the science. This is 100% exactly that, a heavily character-based book. I would say this is light on plot, but so many things happen! It's also a multi-perspective novel that makes very good use of the device.

Would have read 200 more pages. FYI this is the kind of novel people will call "literary" but mostly that just means that it doesn't really have an ending.
Profile Image for Chris.
757 reviews15 followers
August 18, 2018
Half star to one star rating. ☹️

Started out with some possibility of promise and then went downhill quickly from there. Characters unlikeable. The Story was rather boring and not exciting at all. The premise was how much control do we have over our own happiness and what if we could be pushed to achieve it by technology? The concept sounded intriguing but the execution fell flat.

In a future time, people will find happiness through a machine; a system. The main character, Pearl, is a happiness technician using a system at her job, called Apricity. Yet - she has unhappiness in her life. Go figure. Her son has an unhealthy eating habit and so he’s not happy either, evidently. So...Where is the happiness machine when these particular people need it???

If the machine told you to do something adventurous that might be one thing, but it told one person to eat more tangerines. Another to wrap themselves in soft fabric. Don’t listen to your father, arrange fresh flowers. Really? Why am I wasting my time reading this? If that’s all it took to make me happy, one, two or three little things -common sense applications - then why bother with a machine telling me this?

There was one odd happiness thing prescribed to a gentleman to have an amputation if the tip of his finger. Instead of questioning why or saying no, he actually bought into the suggestion for happiness. Now THAT is totally bizarre.

At my age, I know what makes me happy and what doesn’t. I don’t need a machine. But perhaps there are others who need something/someone to tell them what it is they need and take it as gospel. They say that the recommendations made them happy. But is that really true or is it a brainwashing of sorts? Is this what the future holds for mankind?

I read on a little bit more but it continued to be way too painful for me so I did not finish. I don’t know what this would be classified as: futuristic? Fantasy? Technology? Science fiction?

My recommendation? tell this book (not the machine) goodnight!
Profile Image for MissBecka Gee.
2,074 reviews892 followers
October 4, 2018
I have no idea what the plot was.
The changing POV's and the half truths revealed were confusing.
It felt like I was reading modern philosophy rather than a story.
So why did I give it 4 stars?
I still have no idea.
The writing is amazing even if it doesn't make any sense.
521 reviews61 followers
July 19, 2018
Glimpses into interconnected lives touched by the Apricity machine, which can read your DNA from a cheek swab and give you three recommendations that will make you happy.

On a sentence-by-sentence level, this is very nicely written, with a lot of clever turns of phrase and insightful descriptions of characters.

The jacket calls these characters 'endearing,' but Rhett and Val and Calla were the only ones that I wouldn't have happily thrown off a roof. It's deeply unpleasant to spend time in the minds of people who are so suffocatingly self-involved. And there's such a variety of styles of self-involvement! There's Pearl -- when her teenager is mentally ill, that's a thing he's doing to her. There's Carter -- he's trying to build his power in the workplace by never doing anything but negging everyone he meets. There's Elliott -- so charming that everyone and everything functions as his mirror, and he sees nothing but his own reflection.

Of course very little is resolved; generally we come into these people's lives at a random point and exit them at another random point.

I picked up the book because I was hoping for the sociological/philosophical laboratory type of SF. "OK, but suppose you could say, objectively, what would make an individual happy. What would be the consequences of that? What can that tell us about happiness? What can it tell us about us?"

There's none of that here. The happiness machine is never explained, makes a few people extremely rich, is perpetually surrounded by a cloud of marketing hype, and ultimately changes nothing.

And that's not implausible, but when you consider what SF could have done with the concept -- when you imagine what this premise could have yielded in the hands of a LeGuin or a Butler -- it is pretty shallow.
Profile Image for switterbug (Betsey).
936 reviews1,501 followers
July 12, 2018
What if you could turn happiness into a consumer product? What if a machine could tell you simple instructions to achieve it? “Eat tangerines,” “Arrange fresh flowers,” “Write poetry.” What if the pursuit of happiness became a guarantee? This theme is explored in Katie Williams’ debut novel, which takes place in 2035. The response from the public, surprisingly, is not unanimous. Sure, there are many individuals clamoring to buy happiness (if they can afford it), but there are people who are skeptical, others who prefer UNhappiness, and those that would prefer to cultivate it themselves without technological interference. How this plays out, and the effect it has on society, is the substance of this story.

The protagonist, Pearl, makes her living as an “Apricity” technician, swiping people’s DNA, inserting it in the machine and reading the resulting recipe for happiness. Her wealthy ex-husband uses it for performance art, and their anorexic son refuses it, on the grounds that he is perfectly content to be unhappy, but uses it to help a friend in trouble. Other, secondary characters play a part in Apricity’s attributes, which raises intriguing questions as the narrative unfolds.

It’s hard to pigeonhole this book into a genre, but speculative fiction covers the heart of it, and it quietly, and with a sense of disquiet, tells a tale through interlinked and overlapping stories, or chapters. Williams is a scintillating wordsmith; she creates lucid images and also entices us with her word etymology:

“The word for ‘spell,’ as in casting a spell, comes from the same root as the word for ‘narration.’ This is evidence that ancient people believed language to be a sort of magic, the simple act of naming something akin to creating it, controlling it.”

These little brilliant gems are peppered through the narrative, as well as passages that genuinely made my skin tingle. It was worth the read just for the succulent language.

If you are looking for a book that hurtles inexorably toward a conclusion, to unify all the various threads into closure this is not that book. Ambiguity jettisons completion. I do take minor issue, though, that the end has more features in common with the ending of a chapter rather than a book. Then I read that the author is turning this into a series, which may explain a sort of lackadaisical finish, like a disappearance, as if the characters just walked off stage precipitously.

Could the author have been deliberating the series while simultaneously writing the novel? I look forward to viewing the televised version, which may give more decisive action to the characters. However, I feel a certain artifice at work here—i.e. that possibly the outcome had less to do with ambiguity as an intentional novelistic device and more to do with jettisoning it to a different medium—television.
Profile Image for Sasha.
312 reviews29 followers
October 3, 2019
This would’ve worked better as short stories I think. None of the plot lines really moved anywhere and the characters didn’t have much depth. Didn’t get much out of it and wasn’t particularly fun to read even though the premise was interesting enough.
Profile Image for JKT.
54 reviews
August 12, 2018
Intriguing but ultimately disappointing and unsatisfying.
Profile Image for Val.
146 reviews
August 4, 2018
Hard work. The story starts out ok, then branches out and loses focus. Uses that device where you have to work to figure out who is narrating various chapters - hasn't that been done to death? Story about Val seems a completely unnecessary diversion. Deeply unsatisfying read.
Profile Image for Uriel Perez.
120 reviews35 followers
March 15, 2018
Literary sci-fi/speculative fiction intrigues me, especially when it draws comparisons to episodes of Black Mirror and the Twilight Zone. TELL THE MACHINE GOODNIGHT revolves around a device (called an Apricity) fabricated to deliver “contentment plans” for users, ensuring enduring satisfaction and lifelong joy for those who adhere to the plan. At the center of the drama is Pearl, a technician for the company that administers the Apricity tests, and her son Rhett, a misfit teen hellbent on railing against the hollow happiness Apricity delivers. Told by a revolving cast of characters that include Rhett and Pearl’s friends, family and co-workers, a tale of technological obsession and a search for happiness unspools before us as each grapples with their own fears and desires, finding out what the cost of their own happiness really is.

Though the premise grabbed me immediately, too much about this book felt clunky. Williams stretches herself thin by introducing too many characters and having several plot lines and character arcs cut short of fruition. Some chapters even feel like short stories, self-contained and having very little to do with the larger story of the novel. Though we get some kind of closure by the end, this one feels only partially realized.

I wouldn’t go so far as to say I *didn’t* like this book, though. There are intriguing ideas here and I appreciated so much of the humor within. When it comes to debut novels, also, I’ll allow for more flaws than with the work of a seasoned author. This is a solid first book and I’d recommend it to those who’ve read and enjoyed the works of Thomas Pierce and Ramona Ausubel. It’s charming, clever, warm and easily digestible.
Profile Image for Jacob Folkman.
53 reviews10 followers
July 2, 2018
Starts strong with interesting characters and what one would think will become an intriguing plot premise, but then fails to ever properly develop. Meanders to an uneventful end.
Profile Image for Stitching Ghost.
1,496 reviews390 followers
August 2, 2023
Neutral 2.5 rounded up.

There are a couple of chapters which were pretty engaging but overall I didn't really care about anything that was going on and the characters all seemed pretty flat. Major "I don't really want to live but I don't want to die" vibes but not in a very relatable way.
Profile Image for Kelly.
Author 6 books1,221 followers
Read
July 30, 2018
A smart, savvy, and funny novel about our culture's obsession with technology and happiness. Pearl's job is to run the Apricity, which doles out the steps one needs to take in order to become happy. Some of those steps are bizarre -- wear a velvet suit, cut off the tip of your right index finger -- while others are pretty benign -- write poetry. Then there are those who get advice which is so startling, it comes without a real list of steps to take. Pearl's son Rhett falls into this last category, and Pearl is dead set on figuring out how to make her son, who suffers from an eating disorder, to be happy.

Wrapped into this are the stories of other people in Pearl's world, including her boss (who seems to get promotions and demotions left and right, as one does in Silicon Valley), her ex-husband (who she is still somewhat in a relationship with), and her ex-husband's new wife (who harbors a pretty terrible secret she won't tell the husband but we get to become privy to). The revolving voices can at times get a titch confusing, but there's something somewhat logical in that confusion. This is, after all, a tale about how technology can mess with us when we become too dependent upon it.

At heart, it's a book about what it means to be human, good, bad, pretty, and ugly. I devoured it in a single afternoon. It's science fiction with a literary bent to it.
Profile Image for Jen from Quebec :0).
407 reviews112 followers
May 13, 2018
I thought this book was unique and awesome. My ISBN says that this is the hardcover edition, but it is actually an ARC that I won in a giveaway, and it is one of those rare giveaway wins that I will treasure + keep + sing praises about! *I will return to this post to sing the praises at a later date, as I am currently playing an Audiobook atm and simply cannot listen to one story whilst writing about a different story at the same time! Suffice to say for now though, that if you were on the fence about this book, it IS worth it!* ---Jen from Quebec :0)
Profile Image for USOM.
3,360 reviews294 followers
June 6, 2018
(Disclaimer: I received this free book from Edelweiss. This has not impacted my review which is unbiased and honest.)

Tell the Machine Goodnight was like one major thought experiment. I adored the multiple perspectives of this book, not only because we were able to see the story from varying points of view, but also because each of them tell a new story. They add to the world, they add to the themes of family and relationships, and they are wonderful to read.

full review: https://utopia-state-of-mind.com/revi...
Profile Image for Bandit.
4,950 reviews579 followers
July 20, 2019
This was a book I almost loved. And I almost loved it at first sentence too, which is, awesomely enough, a definition of my favorite word in English language. Apricity, a word archaic enough to confuse a Word Document, means the warmth of the sun on a winter day. Lovely, right? Well, here in the story it’s the name given to the machine that determine how to make a person happier. An almost instantaneous DNA analysis spits out three seemingly random suggestions guaranteed to improve one’s life. The machine requires administrators and one of them is the story’s main protagonist, a single mom, who through the years develops a complex relationship with Apricity, quitting just short of wishing the machine goodnight. So when the book starts off with this machine and logistics behind it, which can of course be easily explained by social psychology, because essentially the machine doesn’t confirm to a person, a person confirms to it, driven by an irresistible desire to be happy. We are, after all, a nation obsessed with being happy, it’s in the Constitution and all, such a peculiar preoccupation with such a basically unnatural state of being. Life being what it is, the only sustained happy disposition surely must be a prerogative of someone delusional, dumb or both. But everyone wants some of that, so an Apricity technician is never without work. Gradually the readers get to know the protagonist’s family , associates and clients and the story gets told in alternating, occasionally almost self contained stories from alternating perspectives of different characters. The narrative maintains a linear quality spanning about five years or so. It’s easy to follow, easy to pick and choose your favorites, easy to read. But…the book, much like it’s ending, does leave something to be desired. Mainly because it starts with such a terrific premise and then seems to abandon it in favor of a more traditional family drama. Frankly, I wish it stuck more closely to its science fiction themes, there was so much originality and moral complexity there to play with. Underwhelming, in a way. Which bring us to the Black Mirror comparison. We live in the day and age where any socially relevant, prescient and poignant science fiction is inevitably compared to Black Mirror. So then, inevitably, was this book. Which attracted my attention immediately. But then again, Black Mirror isn’t what it used to be either. So the comparisons have really got to get specific. Are we talking earlier seasons, ending with the absolutely ingenious anthology episode. Cause then, yeah, that’s as good as science fiction gets. Or are we talking about the everyonehasbillstopay later episodes that mostly just make you nostalgic for the earlier ones, especially the tragically underwhelming latest (as of 2019) season. Has there ever been a show that maintained the same writer and featured such a dramatic reduction in quality. But even the most lackluster episode of Black Mirror is still pretty entertaining. You’re just left wanting more, because it should give more, it’s easy to imagine how it would. And that’s kind of how it was for me with this book. It showed so much promise from the start, that you’re inevitably left expecting more. Mind you, it was still a good book. A very well written, smart, emotionally intelligent character driven drama with science fiction elements. It just wasn’t quite what you might have expected after reading the first chapters. It’s like it teases the reader, almost goes to some dark disturbing places, but then never really does. I still very much enjoyed reading it, even if I ended up pondering the sociological ramifications of Apricity and mindless pursuit of the dream it offers more or less on my own instead of following the author’s efforts to. But yeah, having said all that, still really did like the book very much. Very auspicious debut indeed. Smart and original. Recommended.
Profile Image for Alex (ReadingBetweenTheNotes).
572 reviews36 followers
August 5, 2018
This was a well-written and entertaining literary debut. I love a good dystopian future story so I was immediately captured by the premise of this one (it reads in a similar vein to 1984 and Brave New World but also feels more relevant to our current social climate). Drawing upon the current 'trend' in being mindful and taking whatever steps we can to be happy, this book takes a very intelligent concept and builds a compelling story around it. I was genuinely fascinated from start to finish.

I hadn't expected the multiple perspectives but I enjoyed all of them. I was slightly concerned that the threads of the story wouldn't tie up by the end but I can say that I was satisfied with the resolution.

Very grateful to HarperCollins for sending this one my way!
Profile Image for Kim Lockhart.
1,233 reviews194 followers
February 7, 2020
This book took a little while to grab my full attention, but it really took off about halfway through. The author makes some very funny and poignant observations about the messiness of real life.

What I didn't like: careening ping pong use of multiple voice changes: third person omniscient, first person, and third person limited. It was distracting.

What I did like: there was very little emphasis on the speculated future reliance on machine-directed decision making. The major takeaway is that machines can't possibly tackle the complicated arena of human relationships. Happiness isn't a commodity. And we are all better for it.
Profile Image for Emilie Guan.
459 reviews6 followers
July 29, 2022
I completely understand the frustrated one star reviews but also this was experimental speculative fiction with intertwined storylines and clever language and strong character vignettes and a dash of linguistics so basically it was one of my favorite reads this year
Profile Image for Audrey (Warped Shelves).
849 reviews53 followers
July 9, 2018
3.75 stars

This review is based on an ARC of Tell the Machine Goodnight which I received courtesy of NetGalley and the publisher (Penguin -- Riverhead).

It seems to me that the new novel trend is to write a book with seemingly no purpose, no real plot, and no real point. At least this has been the case with the last few new books I've read, and that seems to be the case as well with Tell the Machine Goodnight. Now, saying this does make me hypocritical, since I always think to myself how I would love a realistic story that doesn't have a huge, climaxing finale. So hypocritical I am.

I was thoroughly engrossed in this novel, but then, it seemed, that it just suddenly ended. I don't know what to think of the meaning of the plot, other than that it was a neat peek into the lives of a future generation. Regardless of whether I got the deeper meaning or not, I was really fascinated by this story. I was sucked in from the beginning, rushed along, absorbed in Katie Williams storytelling. I really liked the characters, interactions, and the whole idea of the Apricity Machine. I can see this book being a hot topic this publishing season. I also think I sense a new favorite book club book!

Perhaps I just missed out on understanding fully what was happening here, but this is just me personally. I definitely recommend you give this a read and see how you feel.
Profile Image for Lata.
4,931 reviews254 followers
November 14, 2018
This book was a little hard for me to get into. There are multiple characters, all looking for some sort of happiness, and as long as the focus stayed with Pearl or Rhett, her son, I was focussed on the narrative. As soon as the author took me inside some of the supporting characters' lives, my interest diminished. What was clear throughout the story was everyone was searching for something, a recipe, a process, anything, to give their lives meaning and happiness. The use of a little gadget to provide, like a cookie's fortune, a simple directive or formula for happiness was an interesting story device; I liked how the author gave us both the effect of the directives on people's lives, while also showing us how the backend algorithms were suspect and prone to manipulation by the corporation that had developed the machine.
Profile Image for Mrs C.
1,286 reviews31 followers
March 17, 2022
Lots to ponder on this one. Like previous literary fiction I’ve read, I learn plenty of trivial information or bits that I have been curious about but never pursued. This one involves pop psychology, linguistics, with a dash of pop culture. Pearl is an employee for a company that Invented a machine that can tailor happiness recommendations using a person’s DNA (I picture the device looking like those portable photo printers). This novel has multiple perspectives with an interesting cast of characters with their struggles to find happiness. Ascerbic and thorough. I have yet to dissect the ending.
Profile Image for Aidan D..
7 reviews3 followers
October 22, 2021
“Unhappiness breeds unkindness,” In the story I liked how the author told the perspectives of most of the characters you meet in the story while following the main character Rhett. I like how we get to see the back stories also of many of the more mysterious characters such as Val. I also like how the story doesn't stray away from the main focus of the story 'happiness'. The story also does an amazing job of bringing, us the reader into the minds of the characters. I didn't however like the fact there was a big time skip in the story.
Profile Image for Erin.
874 reviews15 followers
July 4, 2018
Williams' novel is simply put both weird and wonderful. It's set in the near future and is centered around a machine that can give people specific recommendations to make them happier (oh if only this existed!). Although the book is separated into chapters, it actually felt more like linked short stories to me. I loved the odd characters and Williams' writing style is unique and captivating. I'm surprised this one hasn't gotten more love - I'm obsessed with the magical realism tone!
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