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Memorium

Chapter 1: Memorium
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About This Book

An elderly man tells a curious child about his marriages and family while describing a society that records and archives every person’s memories. The narrative alternates personal recollections revealed by mandatory memorium tapes with explanation of the system’s development, legal limits on destroying recordings, and its role as a deterrent and instrument of social control. Intimate revelations exposed by the archives reshape relationships, provoke empathy and disillusionment, and force characters to confront uncomfortable truths, prompting reflection on how compulsory memory preservation transforms identity, privacy, and collective history.

Memorium

by Basil Wells

An old man’s memories may be filled with bitterness. But faithfully recorded, they may change the future of mankind.

Did you ever wonder what would happen if the thoughts of every man, woman and child on Earth were set down in black and white for future historians to read? Or even present-day historians—or your next door neighbor? Could you endure having all of your thoughts laid bare, from the cradle to the grave? Wait before you answer. Basil Wells may persuade you to change your mind.