The core of it for me is the contradiction of making death a human responsibility in a world that’s removed natural mortality. The ethical weight comes from seeing characters like Scythe Curie struggle with compassion versus duty. It forces you to consider if a 'good' death is even possible when it’s mandated and planned. The series argues that taking life, even for the greater good, inevitably damages the taker. That’s a pretty bleak but fascinating take.
Honestly, I thought the exploration was a bit surface-level for a premise that rich. It sets up these huge questions—who deserves to live, the morality of population control—but often resolves them through plot twists and character conflicts rather than deep philosophical digging. The ethical dilemmas sometimes feel like set dressing for a YA thriller. That said, the dynamic between Rowan and Citra, where their morals are literally tested and warped by the system, was compelling enough to keep me reading.
The part that did stick with me was the casual hypocrisy. Scythes aren’t supposed to enjoy gleaning, but so many find loopholes or just revel in it. That felt like a sharp, true-to-life critique of how any unchecked institution corrupts. I just wish the series had lingered more on the societal impact, the everyday people’s perspective, instead of mostly staying within the Scythe world.
I was genuinely taken aback by how bluntly the Scythes' role is presented—they’re not robots or monsters, but ordinary people trained to end lives, and the books spend a lot of time on the psychological toll of that. The first book, 'Scythe', really hooked me with Citra and Rowan’s moral descent during their apprenticeship; it’s less about the act of killing and more about the bureaucratic and emotional rot that sets in when you have absolute power over death in a supposedly perfect world.
Shusterman cleverly uses the gleaning quotas to force ethical math—is taking a life to preserve societal balance a net good? The way different Scythes justify their methods, from Faraday’s compassion to Goddard’s blatant sadism, creates this spectrum that makes you question which is more corrupt: enjoying the job or becoming completely detached from it. The later books, especially 'The Toll', stretch this into political and systemic dilemmas, asking if the entire Scythehood is an ethical failure.
I kept thinking about it for days after finishing. The series doesn’t give easy answers, which is its strongest point.
2026-07-15 03:07:33
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