Friday, August 26, 2011

So This Is How The World Ends

Wow!  I haven't read a book this engaging for quite a while.  Robopocalypse, by Daniel H. Wilson, is a very imaginative and well written story.  There are two main schools of thought.  One thinks that the world will end with the birth of the zombie.  The other thinks the same will happen with beings of our own creation: robots and computers.  This book explores the latter of the two. 

The story starts at the end of a war, with one person finding a robot relic that has recorded all the human/robot interactions during the conflict.  The person discovers that all the people recorded on this device are under a category labelled "Heroes."  It seems that the robots, under the leadership of a supercomputer called Archos, weren't trying to eradicate the human race, just weed them down a bit. 

The book is written as a third-person account of the heroes witnessed in the device.  The different "hero stories" follow a linear timeline, and jump around between 5-6 different heroes.  Each person's story line starts out with them noticing something different about the robots that were built to serve man, and progress through their personal battles against the uprising. 

This is a book that was recommended to me by a number of websites.  I have had to wait all summer to read it after reserving it through my local library.  It was definitely worth the wait.  Mr. Wilson has a Ph.D. in Robotics, but doesn't write like you think a scientist would.  He doesn't focus on the technical aspects, but instead paints a very detailed picture of what he wants you to see and get out of the story.  This is a quality that not all writers have, but when they do, it makes the story so much more engrossing. 

I have heard that Stephen Spielberg acquired the movie rights before the book was even published.  I will be very interesting to see what he can do with a story like this.  In the meantime, lets hope that the next book Mr. Wilson puts out will be just as entertaining as this one!

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

I Just Can't Do It

I'm sorry.  Not to you, but to myself.  It isn't very often that I cannot finish reading a book.  In fact, I can't remember the last time I didn't finish one.  My personal rule is that I give the book 100 pages of reading, and if I don't like it, I can stop.  I gave this one 195 pages.  I just can't bring myself to read anymore of it.  I will be honest.  My mind hasn't really been in it, but to me that still isn't an excuse. 

The book I was reading is called The Snowman, by Jo Nesbo.  It was recommended by an article on NPR's website.  I have read other books recommended by writers for NPR, and they have been good.  I am assuming that The Snowman is good also, it is just not good to me.  If you are not familiar with Mr. Nesbo's work, he is a Norwegian author.  The Snowman is a book in the Harry Hole series, with Harry Hole being the protagonist in the series.  I will not go into the story, since obviously I didn't finish it.  One issue I had the whole time reading was with the attempts that Hole made to seem American.  Every American comparison seemed to be caricature.  The one that really stuck with me was when Hole was practicing his speed-cuffing techniques on a table leg.  He wanted to be as good as the American detectives he witnessed during his stint with the FBI (yes, he got to train with the FBI.)  While I have never been arrested, I have seen it happen to others before, and I never once saw a police officer speed-cuff anyone. 

There are other points I could make, but again, I didn't finish the book, so I have a hard time telling others my opinions of it.  I'm sure others think it is a very good read, and I don't want to spoil their enjoyment.

Here are two books that I AM going to finish, that I recently picked up at the library:

Rot & Ruin by Jonathan Maberry

Robopocalypse by Daniel H. Wilson

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

A Brief Intermission...


I am currently reading The Snowman, by Jo Nesbo.  I am about a quarter of the way through it, but I don't think it will take more than a couple more days to finish.  It is pretty good so far.  I should have a complete review up by Friday.

Instead of making both all of you wait for me to finish the current book and post something, I thought I would mention a couple graphic novel series I read earlier this summer.  Both of them are unique in that I saw the movie or television show before reading the novel.  In most cases, when I see a movie or television show that looks interesting, and I know it is based on a book or series, I will try to read the book(s) first.  Not so in these two circumstances. 

The first graphic novel series I read was the Scott Pilgrim series, which was written by Bryan Lee O'Malley.  I believe he also drew the whole series also.  Before getting the books from the local library, I had watched the movie when it was on HBO.  I thought the movie was well done, and very funny, though I may be a little biased towards Edgar Wright.  Others I have spoken with about this movie did not have the same reactions.  Anyways, after seeing the movie, I thought I would read through the graphic novels.  I was pleasantly surprised at how well the movie tried to include all important aspects from the books.  Most movies-from-books try to stay with the book in the beginning, but then start changing things to speed up the plot as the movie goes on.  Obviously, the Scott Pilgrim books had a lot more detail and things going on than the movie.  I think that someone who read the books first would have a very different opinion than mine, but I enjoyed both the movie and the books equally.

The other graphic novel series I read was The Walking Dead series.  Calling it a graphic novel series is a little misleading.  I read the paperback compilations of the comic book series, which is written by Robert Kirkman, and illustrated by Tony Moore.  I have read the first 14 collections that are currently published, but the series is still ongoing through Image Comics.  The television show by the same name debuted on AMC on October 31, 2010.  I was instantly hooked.  The show was excellent, and the characters were well played by the actors.  I cannot wait for the second season to start this coming October.  As good as the show was on tv, the comics are even better.  I love the fact that the zombies (called walkers or biters in the books) are never the main characters.  The series is ultimately about how much peoples' lives would change in the wake of a global disaster such as this.  Each paperback covers six issues of the comic, and the show supposedly covered the first paperback (with a few changes).  With this being said, the show should get very interesting this season.  Hopefully the producers stick with the grittiness of the books and don't try to dumb it down for the audience.  I recommend both of these to people who are fans of this genre.  Each of them can be enjoyed as a stand-alone piece of work, so don't worry about which one you want to get into first.