The Solace Pill

Giving you the time you'll never have...

Fiction - Dystopia
233 Pages
Reviewed on 11/04/2014
Buy on Amazon

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Author Biography

Jason Werbeloff is a novelist and philosopher. He loves chocolate and his Labrador, Sunny. He's interested in the nature of social groups, personal identity, freedom, and the nature of the mind. His passion is translating philosophical debate around these topics into works of science fiction, while gorging himself on chocolate.

    Book Review

Reviewed by Kristine Hall for Readers' Favorite

In Jason Werbeloff’s The Solace Pill Omnibus Edition, which collects The Solace Pill trilogy into one single volume, readers are taken into a dystopian world where 3D printing has advanced to having the capability of scanning and reprinting humans with whatever modifications they desire. Want to understand quantum physics? Reprint yourself. Want to be perfectly sculpted? Reprint yourself. Want to be fueled and fully rested without wasting time to eat or sleep? Yep, reprint yourself. With so much time freed-up and no limits on life expectancy, the world is overpopulated and overworked, and the solutions provided by 3D imprints are beginning to show their imperfections. Fortunately, the Solace Pill allows users to escape reality for fifteen minutes, but their perception is five hours of relaxation and rejuvenation without the stress of the real world. But, as is often the case with seemingly perfect worlds, there is a dark side where some people and issues are erased with a push of a button, and other people aren’t who they seem and have hidden motives. Civilization collapses when tainted pills have disastrous effects of death, destruction, and mayhem. The few who survive without Solace in their system must find a cure for those stuck in the Solace induced worlds, but time and options are running out.

The premise of The Solace Pill is both fantastic and frighteningly possible. While many of us can barely wrap our minds around the reality of 3D printing in our world today, certainly there are scientists who are already considering how to take 3D printing to organic levels. Much like today, in the future, people are fascinated by that which they have lost – authentic, real, unadulterated items which they call “tiques.” I found it very interesting to read and see how the future society, as is typical today, took something good and perverted it: the loopholes were found, the immoral was done to turn a buck, and the humanity was taken out of the human. And of course, there was economic bias created so that not everyone had equal access to imprinting or the Solace Pills. In this respect, the character of Anders was particularly intriguing as one of the few who worked his way up from nothing, to seemingly having it all, yet craving the old ways. I was disappointed that we didn’t get to know him better.

Jason Werbeloff didn’t hold back any punches in showing the self-serving, ugliness of people when they are encouraged to be egocentric and the sense of community is lost. The loathsome Jordan was probably the best written character because he represented the evil of so-called progress, and he was consistently wicked in all three sections. Overall, The Solace Pill is a disturbing snapshot of a feasible future, and it was worth the time to read it. Readers be warned, though: it will leave more than a few questions unanswered and situations unexplained, leaving readers feeling foggy. The book includes sexual situations, violence, and profanity.

Faridah Nassozi

Imagine a world where man has no need for most of the things that we find so essential to life. Are you hungry? Do you want to lose weight? Do you want to rest? Do you want a degree but have no time for school? Or do you just want to look one hundred years younger? No worries, just reprint yourself and the new you will be the person of your dreams, both physically and mentally. Using super high-tech 3D technology, one could reprint themselves in the blink of an eye and come out with a body that conforms to all their specifications. So man could work for days with no sleep and still feel fresh and strong, or gain a degree by just reprinting, or do just about anything. To make this dynamic world more interesting, someone invented a pill with the ability to 'stretch' time 20 times, thereby slowing down time and allowing people to enjoy life's pleasures. Reprinting and using the Solace pill was the way of life; well, until a top level employee in the Solace company with a grudge decided to mess with the pill, causing chaos and destruction never before seen or even imagined.

The Solace Pill, by Jason Werbeloff, is the true definition of a sci-fi masterpiece. If you think the current technology craze with super sophisticated smart phones and other such gadgets is too much, try imagining such technology a trillion times more advanced and then you have the setting of The Solace Pill. One of the things I really appreciated about this novel is the way Jason Werbeloff managed to pull off such a complex setting while using language that is comprehensible. Save for a few technical terms, the rest of the language in the book remains quite simple and yet it delivers the story amazingly well. The plot is so incredible and out of this world, but the story is believable