Silo (series)

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Silo is a dystopian series of post-apocalyptic science fiction books by American writer Hugh Howey. The series started in 2011 with the short story "Wool", which was later published together with four sequel novellas as a novel with the same name. Along with Wool, the series consists of Shift, Dust, three short stories, and Wool: The Graphic Novel.[1] The series has also been adapted as a comic book and a television series on Apple TV+.

Silo
The cover of the first printed edition of Wool, the first part of the Silo series

AuthorHugh Howey
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
GenreScience fiction, dystopian fiction, apocalyptic fiction
PublisherBooktrack (with soundtrack)
Kindle Direct Publishing
Media typee-book
No. of books3 + 3 short stories

None of the stories are themselves named "Silo"; the stories take place in underground silos, and that is the author's name for the series as a whole.[2]

Background

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Howey began the series in 2011, initially writing Wool as a stand-alone short story. He published the work through Amazon's Kindle Direct Publishing system, choosing to do so due to the freedom of self-publishing. After the series grew in popularity, he began to write more entries for it, later collecting the short story and initial five novellas in the omnibus book Wool.[3] Howey began soliciting international rights in 2012 and has since signed a deal for dramatic rights in Brazil.[4]

By March 2013, Howey had signed a print-only deal for around US$500,000 (equivalent to $0.8 million in 2023) with Simon & Schuster, to distribute print copies of the initial collection, Wool, to book retailers across the US and Canada; he turned down $1,000,000+ offers from publishing houses in order to retain full rights to continue distributing Wool online himself, noting that he had already earned more than seven figures from his online publishing royalties.[5]

Works

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Novels

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Originally published as novellas, the series is commonly packaged as three novels.

1. Wool (2011)
Contains:
  • Holston
  • Proper Gauge
  • Casting Off
  • The Unraveling
  • The Stranded
2. Shift (2013)
Contains:
  • First Shift — Legacy
  • Second Shift — Order
  • Third Shift — Pact
3. Dust (2013)

In addition, Howey began writing another entry to the series in 2021.[6][7]

Short Stories

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Short stories (published in The Apocalypse Triptych and Howey's anthology Machine Learning)[8]

  • "In the Air" (2014)
  • "In the Mountains" (2014)
  • "In the Woods" (2015)

Plot

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The story of Wool takes place on a post-apocalyptic Earth.[9] Humanity clings to survival in the Silo, a self-sustaining subterranean city with 144 floors. No records of the time before the Silo remain. All residents of the Silo are taught that the outside world is toxic and deadly, and the Silo's cardinal rule is that anyone who expresses a desire to go outside must be sent there to clean the external sensors with a wool cloth. Those sent outdoors invariably clean the sensors as instructed, but die within minutes, reaffirming to the Silo residents that the outside is uninhabitable.

Wool

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Wool is the first act of the series, and consists of books 1 through 5: Holston, Proper Gauge, Casting Off, The Unraveling, and The Stranded.

Holston is the sheriff of the Silo. Three years ago, Holston's wife Allison became convinced that the outside world was livable and that the IT department, which runs the external sensors, had deceived the rest of the Silo. She went to clean willingly, but apparently perished. Still grieving the loss of his wife, Holston also asks to go outside. He is given a protective suit and sent outside, but when he exits the Silo, he sees a healthy, vibrant world. Encouraged by this sight, he happily cleans the Silo's external sensors and then explores the environment. However, he is forced to remove his helmet when he runs out of air, and at that point, he discovers that the world is actually toxic and his wife truly is dead. The suit's visor had been masking reality with a computer-generated image. Holston dies near his wife's abandoned body.

Following Holston's death, Mayor Jahns and Deputy Marnes embark on a trip to the Mechanical zone, the Silo's lowest level, to interview Juliette Nichols, their top candidate for sheriff. Along the way, they visit the IT department. Bernard, the head of IT, demands his own preferred candidate for sheriff, but Jahns is dismissive. Later, Jahns is impressed by Juliette, who quickly proves herself to be responsible, stubborn, and independent. Juliette agrees to become sheriff on the condition that she is permitted to perform long-overdue mechanical maintenance, which requires a power blackout, and Jahns assents to the plan. Bernard is incensed by the blackout and Juliette's appointment, and poisons Marnes's canteen on their way back up, resulting in Jahns's death.

Bernard is elevated to mayor and eventually replaces Juliette with his own choice for sheriff, Peter Billings. He also trains a man named Lukas to become his successor, and teaches him the secrets of IT: the IT department is the true power in the Silo, and records of knowledge from the old world have not been lost, but confiscated and sealed in a hidden chamber. However, Peter's honesty and pursuit of justice makes him difficult for Bernard to control, and Lukas has no interest in perpetuating Bernard's agenda. Bernard finally finds a pretext to condemn Juliette to a cleaning, but one of Juliette's friends in Mechanical, Walker, secretly arranges for her protective suit to be made out of quality materials, unlike all previous protective suits which were secretly designed to fail and constructed of intentionally defective materials. When she exits the Silo, Juliette realizes that her suit's visor contains a high-resolution display, and is deceiving her. Instead of cleaning the sensor, she becomes the first cleaner to walk out of the sensor's range of sight.

Juliette finds the entrance to another Silo. Inside, she encounters a middle-aged man called Solo who explains that this is Silo 17 and he is the last survivor of an uprising decades ago. Solo reveals that there are dozens more Silos, and he shows Juliette how to communicate with them, including her own Silo 18. Juliette makes contact with Lukas and they develop a relationship. He also tells her about IT's secrets, and relates that after she left, Silo 18's Mechanical staff launched a rebellion against Bernard. When Bernard decides to send Lukas to clean, Peter has Bernard placed in the airlock instead and demands he defend his actions. While arguing with Juliette via radio, Bernard reveals his driving purpose was to protect Silo 18. Silos are frequently disrupted by rebellions, but most are put down; when a rebellion is successful, the Silos' managing authority in Silo 1 will exterminate that Silo's inhabitants. Bernard only wanted to maintain order in Silo 18 and prevent any rebellions from breaking out. However, Peter judges that in working toward that aim, Bernard committed crimes against the Silo, and sends him out to clean. Juliette thinks Lukas is being sent out and tries to save the person released into the air lock, which is actually Bernard. Bernard refuses to go outside or be saved by Juliette and dies in the airlock during the cleansing fire. Lukas assumes control of IT. Juliette, while recovering from her burns, is elected as Silo 18's next mayor by a grateful populace.

Shift

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Shift is the second arc of the series, and consists of books 6 through 8: Legacy, Order, and Pact. It is a prequel to the Wool arc.

In 2049, freshman Congressman Donald Keene is recruited by Senator Paul Thurman for the CAD-FAC (Containment and Disposal Facility) project, ostensibly an underground repository for the world's nuclear waste to be constructed in Fulton County, Georgia. Donald, who has an education in architecture, is tasked with designing a self-sustaining shelter, a Silo, that will be built near the CAD-FAC for facility workers to use during emergencies.

In 2052, the CAD-FAC is completed and the site above it hosts the Democratic National Convention. Donald and Thurman are present for the opening ceremonies when a nuclear blast destroys Atlanta, and they and other attendees are ushered into the CAD-FAC. Thurman reveals that CAD-FAC was a cover for World Order Operation Fifty (W.O.O.L.[a]), an initiative to preserve humanity in the event the species was threatened with extinction. Nuclear detonations have scourged the Earth's surface, and it will not be safe to resettle it for 500 years.

The shelter consists of 50 total Silos. They are managed by Silo 1, which houses Operation Fifty co-leaders Thurman, Erskine, and Victor, and other key personnel such as Donald. While 49 Silos have generational populations, Silo 1's inhabitants are cycled in and out of cryogenic stasis every few decades to work six-month shifts guiding Operation Fifty through the centuries. The other Silos suffer internal rebellions of varying intensity every couple of decades. Major rebellions are treated with "resetting": the population is reduced, the remaining residents are given amnesia-inducing medication, and the computers are wiped. When a rebellion overtakes a Silo completely, overwhelming its IT department or gaining control of the airlock, Silo 1 terminates it by remotely activating poison gas.

By 2212, Operation Fifty has entered a crisis. A cluster of eleven Silos, led by Silo 40, severed contact with Silo 1 and jammed the termination signal, forcing Silo 1 to resort to demolishing them. On the heels of that, a rebellion begins in Silo 18, and concerns mount that the entire project is doomed to fail. Donald is awakened on Thurman's orders to find a solution after Victor, the mastermind behind Operation Fifty, commits suicide. Thurman and Erskine divulge to Donald that they headed a conspiracy that instigated the nuclear apocalypse, and justify their actions as protecting humanity from annihilation by nanotechnology. At the time Operation Fifty was conceived, self-replicating nanobots had become commonplace in medical science, but Erskine, a nanobot engineer, discovered that hostile countries and terrorist groups had released weaponized versions. While these harmful nanobots were imperfect, they had already spread throughout the world and were evolving, so pandemics of increasing lethality were unavoidable. Victor convinced Thurman and Erskine to implement Operation Fifty: destroy human civilization before weaponized nanobots did so, leaving the occupants of the Silos as the only surviving humans while Earth's surface is thoroughly cleansed by benign nanobots. Donald detests his involvement in Operation Fifty, but he continues cooperating since the fate of humanity depends on the Silos' success. He deduces that the linchpin of Silo 18's rebellion is an elderly teacher named Mrs. Crowe, who has an immunity to the amnesia medication, and Silo 18 is reset instead of terminated.

In 2345, Juliette makes her journey from Silo 18 to Silo 17. The Silo 1 staff go to awaken Thurman per protocol, but mistakenly awake Donald instead due to interference by Thurman's daughter Anna. Using Thurman's authority, Donald uncovers that only one Silo out of all 50 is going to be permitted to resettle the world, since Thurman wants to guarantee that no knowledge of nanotechnology or nuclear weapons persists; on E-Day in 2550, the fortunate Silo will be selected by a computer algorithm evaluating numerous variables, and the others will be terminated. Donald decides to avert this so that all Silos live.

Donald's narrative is interspersed with early events in Silos 17 and 18. In Silo 18, the Great Uprising touches off and is quelled with the removal of its ringleader, Mrs. Crowe. A young revolutionary named Mission has his memory wiped, becomes a compliant citizen, and is permitted to start a family. It is implied that Mission is an ancestor of Allison, Holston's wife. In 2312, a rebellion in Silo 17 results in it being terminated by Silo 1, leaving Jimmy Parker, the son of the Silo's IT head, as one of a scant few survivors. Jimmy renames himself Solo.

Dust

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Dust is the third and final arc of the series, and is contained in a single book of the same name. It concludes the stories begun in Wool and Shift.

Donald maintains regular contact with Juliette in Silo 17 and Lukas in Silo 18, but his health begins deteriorating rapidly. As the residents of Silo 18 undertake the excavation of a tunnel to Silo 17, Thurman is awakened and reasserts control over Silo 1, resulting in Donald being beaten and imprisoned. The tunnel breaks through to 17 just as Thurman notices that 18 has gone rogue and orders its termination, and only about 200 residents make it to safety before 18 is saturated with poison gas.

Donald's sister Charlotte, who Donald illegally woke up, and a sympathetic security officer named Darcy try to free Donald and escape Silo 1 together. Donald is dying and too weak to leave. He persuades Charlotte and Darcy to go without him, while he plans to set off Silo 1's embedded demolition charges so that the other Silos will be liberated from the tyranny of Thurman and Operation Fifty. Darcy sacrifices himself so Charlotte can make it out safely, and Donald destroys Silo 1.

Meanwhile, Juliette discovers that all Silos possess a tunneling machine that, when activated, will connect them to a place designated "Seed". Silo 17's machine requires more fuel than is available, so Juliette and the other survivors try to walk to Seed over the surface. They emerge from a wall of dust and realize the world has already healed itself. The Silos are enshrouded by an artificial veil of toxic dust, but beyond them, there is breathable air, clean water, and a thriving ecosystem. When Juliette and the survivors arrive at Seed, they find it is a sprawling bunker replete with food, materials, and plant seeds, everything needed to rebuild civilization. Charlotte encounters the group, and Juliette invites her to join them to rebuild the human civilization together.

Reception

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A reviewer for Wired praised the initial novellas, and their collective Wool omnibus, while also noting that their publication "clears away the grime of the past and reveals the new truth" about changes in the publishing industry.[10]

Adaptations

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Film and television

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Since its initial publication, attempts have been made to adapt the Wool series into a film or television series. Film rights for the story were sold in May 2012 to 20th Century Fox, and director Ridley Scott and Steve Zaillian were named as producers.[11][12][13] This project never came to fruition due to the acquisition of 21st Century Fox by Disney.[14] In July 2018, AMC announced LaToya Morgan would be adapting Wool for the network as a series.[15] The series was later moved to Apple TV+. In May 2021, press releases were sent out stating that Graham Yost would write the series, Morten Tyldum would serve as director, and Rebecca Ferguson would star and serve as executive producer. Howey, Remi Aubuchon, Nina Jack, and Ingrid Escajeda also serve as executive producers.[16] In August 2021, Tim Robbins joined the cast.[17] Filming took place in Hoddesdon, Hertfordshire during late 2021 until spring 2022.[18] The series was released on Apple TV+ on May 5, 2023.

Comic book adaptation

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In July 2013, Amazon's new comic book imprint Jet City Comics announced it would release a comic book adaptation of the series.[19] Jimmy Palmiotti and Justin Gray adapted the story, and Jimmy Broxton created the artwork.[20] On July 9, 2013, Howey released a preview of the comic book's cover on his blog.[21] The graphic novel was finally published in August 2014.

Kindle Worlds

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The "Silo Saga" was one of the first settings licensed in 2013 for the Kindle Worlds platform for self-publishing fanfiction.[22] By the time Kindle Worlds shuttered in 2018, 122 novels, novellas, and short stories set in the Silo universe had been published via the platform — the third most for any of the licensed series.[23]

Notes

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  1. ^ The "L" in the acronym W.O.O.L. is the Roman numeral for 50.

References

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  1. ^ "Self-published e-book author: 'Most of my months are six-figure months'". CNN. September 7, 2012. Retrieved September 8, 2012.
  2. ^ Hower, Hugh. "Books". Hugh C. Howey - Bestselling Author. Retrieved January 13, 2024.
  3. ^ Wecks, Wecks. "Hugh Howey Interview Part 1: Science Fiction, Indie Writing, and Success". Wired. Archived from the original on October 11, 2012. Retrieved September 30, 2012.
  4. ^ Deahl, Rachel (April 6, 2012). "Self-Made Bestseller Weighs Traditional Deals". Publishers Weekly. Retrieved September 30, 2012.
  5. ^ Alter, Alexandra (March 14, 2013). "Wool: Sci-Fi's Underground Hit". Books. The Wall Street Journal. Archived from the original on December 24, 2014. Retrieved March 8, 2013.
  6. ^ @hughhowey (August 15, 2021). "I wrote the first chapter of the next book in the WOOL series this morning. So that happened" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  7. ^ @hughhowey (August 15, 2021). "@MissNikkiSwan Silo 40" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  8. ^ Nyman, Jana (June 25, 2018). "Machine Learning: Thoughtful and thought-provoking stories". Retrieved January 27, 2022.
  9. ^ O'Connell, Sean (May 14, 2012). "20th Century Fox Interested In Hugh Howey's E-Book Wool?". Cinema Blend. Retrieved September 30, 2012.
  10. ^ Wecks, Erik (March 29, 2012). "GeekDad Book Review: The Wool Omnibus by Hugh Howey". Wired. Archived from the original on December 23, 2023. Retrieved November 11, 2024.
  11. ^ Deahl, Rachel. "Hugh Howey's 'Wool' Nabbed By 20th Century Fox". Publishers Weekly. Retrieved September 30, 2012.
  12. ^ Sutter, John. "E-book author Hugh Howey claims 'six figure months' from Amazon Kindle Direct Publishing". ABC News. Archived from the original on September 16, 2012. Retrieved September 30, 2012.
  13. ^ Boog, Jason. "Hugh Howey's Wool Series Gets Book Trailer Treatment". GalleyCat. Retrieved September 30, 2012.
  14. ^ Geisinger, Gabriella (August 8, 2019). "Fox movies scrapped forever after Disney's big takeover". Digital Spy. Archived from the original on February 12, 2021. Retrieved June 5, 2021.
  15. ^ Otterson, Joe (July 30, 2018). "Hugh Howey's 'Wool' in Development as AMC Series From LaToya Morgan (EXCLUSIVE)". Variety. Retrieved December 17, 2018.
  16. ^ White, Peter (May 20, 2021). "Rebecca Ferguson To Star In Series Adaptation Of Hugh Howey's Dystopian Novels 'Wool' For Apple From Graham Yost & Morten Tyldum". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved May 20, 2021.
  17. ^ Del Rosario, Alexandra (August 18, 2021). "'Wool': Tim Robbins Joins Rebecca Ferguson In Apple TV+ Series". Deadline Hollywood.
  18. ^ Daniels, Nia (August 19, 2021). "Exclusive: AMC films Wool for Apple at temporary UK studio". The Knowledge. Archived from the original on August 31, 2021. Retrieved September 6, 2021.
  19. ^ Dredge, Stuart (July 10, 2013). "Amazon bags Game of Thrones author for its Jet City Comics imprint". London: Guardian. Retrieved July 14, 2013.
  20. ^ "Amazon launches comics imprint, featuring George R.R. Martin". Los Angeles Times. July 9, 2013. Retrieved July 14, 2013.
  21. ^ Howey, Hugh (July 9, 2013). "Jet City Comics!". Hugh Howey. Retrieved July 14, 2013.
  22. ^ Ali, Reyan (June 14, 2017). "Kindle Worlds' Strange New Terrain: How Amazon Is Changing Fan Fiction". Pacific Standard. Retrieved July 6, 2023.
  23. ^ McGuire, John (May 17, 2018). "Kindle Worlds Closing". Téssera Guild. Retrieved July 6, 2023.

See also

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