Showing posts with label Hank Green. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hank Green. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 16, 2020

A Beautifully Foolish Endeavor

 by Hank Green

449 pgs  (The Carls series #2)

Hank Green's A Beautifully Foolish Endeavor picks up about six months after An Absolutely Remarkable Thing left off. April May, the young woman who skyrocketed to unprecedented fame overnight with her documentation of the first of the Carls (10-foot tall alien samurai robots that suddenly appeared scattered all over the world) died at the end of the latter, but her body was never discovered. At the time of her death, all the Carls disappeared as quickly and inexplicably as they had appeared, taking with them the common dreams they had implanted on people all over the world. Six months later, April's friends, along with most everyone else, are still grieving over the loss of both April and the Carls.

Peter Petrawicki, who was indirectly responsible for April's death, has built an offshore research company that uses technology tied to the Carls, and is now worth billions. But with his company's success come changes that threaten to forever change the world, and not for the better. His company, an amalgamation of Facebook, Second Life, and a Bitcoin-type data-mining company, has the potential to destroy the economies of the world and usher in a form of dystopia never contemplated before.

This book took me longer to get into than its predecessor, and for the first half of it I wasn't sure whether it would end up representing a sophomore slump for Hang Green. Thankfully, by the end, I remain a big fan of Green and his storytelling.

★ ★ ★ ★ ☆

Tuesday, December 18, 2018

An Absolutely Remarkable Thing

by Hank Green
341 pgs  (The Carls series #1)

When April May, a recent art school graduate, stumbles across a 10-foot tall metal statue in the middle of the sidewalk late at night, a statue that wasn't there the night before, she decides, on a whim, to call her friend Andy to meet her there and record a video of her "interviewing" it that they can post on YouTube for laughs.

"Carl," as she names the statue, is something of a cross between a Transformer and a samurai, and while she doesn't think much about it at the time, there's something not quite right with it. Not only has it appeared without any explanation or ceremony in the middle of a New York sidewalk, it also doesn't feel right when she touches it. It's not cold, like it should be on a cold evening in new York. After they film her tongue-in-cheek interview with Carl, she goes home to bed, leaving Andy to edit the video and post it. When she wakes up the next morning, the whole world has changed.

It turns out Carl is one of 64 "Carls" that seem to have appeared simultaneously all over the world. No one knows what they are, who made them, or how they came to be in any of their locations. The Internet is dominated with people speculating about them, and since the first online account of any of them is April and Andy's video, April has become famous all around the world overnight.

In a matter of days, April's life changes from being a recent college graduate with more than $100,000 in student debt, to that of an A-list celebrity with an agent, a book deal, who commands thousands of dollars for each news interview and TV appearance she does.

An Absolutely Remarkable Thing is the first book published by Hank Green, adn it itself is a remarkable thing. It's a fun and engaging science fiction story, but it's also a very timely reflection on the culture of celebrity, social media, and many people's obsession for collecting clicks, likes, and followers that has become so prevalent today.

★ ★ ★ ★ ☆