Tuesday, March 10, 2015

Half a King

by Joe Abercrombie
333 pgs  (Shattered Sea trilogy #1)

Half a King is the first book in The Shattered Sea trilogy Joe Abercrombie is currently writing for a slightly younger audience. Book two, Half the World was just published, and book three, Half a War will be out later this year.

Yarvi is the second son of the King and Queen of Gettland. He's young, highly intelligent, and because he was born with one severely deformed hand, he's despised and considered to be half a man by his father and older brother. No one considers him a worthy successor to the thrown, and he's the target of ridicule on the training field because of his inability to use a sword, axe, or shield. On the day he is to take the final exam to become a minister, renouncing his birthright forever, he receives word from his uncle that both his father and older brother have been murdered. He is now King of Gettland. While reluctantly leading his army to avenge the deaths of his father and brother, Yarvi is betrayed by his uncle and barely escapes with his life.

Yarvi becomes a slave, chained to an oar on a ship in the Shattered Sea where he thinks of nothing else but seeking revenge against those who killed his family and betrayed him.

Half a King is a promising first edition to the series. It's reminiscent of one of my favorite books of all time, The Count of Monte Cristo. It's also hard to miss the similarities between it and The Game of Thrones. It's the first book by Abercrombie that I've read and from what I've heard, it's not as good as his books for adults. That bodes well for how much I should enjoy his other books. I'll be trying to get my hands on those as soon as I can.

★ ★ ★ ★ ☆

Friday, March 6, 2015

Scat

by Carl Hiaasen
371 pgs

Nick and Marta are not crazy about their teacher, Mrs. Starch. She's strict and mean, and makes one of her students write a 500-word essay on zits when he bites off (and eats) a pencil she was pointing at his face. But when a wildfire breaks out while the class is on a field trip to the Black Vine Swamp and Mrs. Starch is separated from the group and then doesn't show up to school the next day, Nick and Marta believe that there's more going on than what they're being told by the school's Headmaster. 

Their investigation take them back into the swamp where they stumble across two things: an illegal drilling operation being conducted by a shady oil company, and evidence (see book title) of a highly endangered panther in the area. They eventually learn that the panther abandoned her cub during the wildfire and their mission evolves into reuniting the cub with its mother. 

Scat is one of a few books that Carl Hiaasen has written for a younger audience (10 and up). His others are Hoot, Chomp, Flush, and Skink--No Surrender. Each of them has an environmental backstory and will appeal to both younger and older audiences alike. They're the type of books that parents can read to elementary-age children and will enjoy just as much as their children will.

★ ★ ★ ☆ ☆

Tuesday, March 3, 2015

Gone Girl

by Gillian Flynn
419 pgs

When Gone Girl came out a couple of years ago, a lot of people that I know wanted to talk about it. Then last year, when the movie was released, those same people wanted to talk about it all over again. Not having read it myself, I had to impose my will over the conversations each time and make sure they didn't say anything that would spoil the book for me, until I could get around to reading it myself. Well, feel free to talk away now.

I don't know that it makes a lot of sense to summarize the story, since I think most people have a general idea of what it's about. But just in case...man and woman meet and fall in love, honeymoon period ends and times get rough, woman disappears under suspicious circumstances, all believe it was the husband that killed her. The rest is what made this book so popular for so long.

This was the first of Gillian Flynn's books that I've read, but it won't be the last. I thought the story was exceptionally well thought out, and her main characters were fascinating. But what I thought was the most successful aspect of the book was her method of telling the story through an unreliable first-person narrator. That was brilliant. It was the perfect method for telling the story Flynn wanted to tell, and in the way that it needed to be told. 

★ ★ ★ ★ ☆

Thursday, February 19, 2015

The Universe Versus Alex Woods

by Gavin Extence
409 pgs

Gavin Extence's first book The Universe Versus Alex Woods was an unexpected and very rewarding surprise. It's a funny and heartwarming story told by Alex Woods himself, the second known person to ever be injured by a meteorite.

The book begins with 17 year-old Alex driving off the ferry in Dover, England. He's stopped by the authorities, who discover an urn containing human remains in the passenger seat and a large bag of marijuana in the glove box. From there the story goes back in time and Alex recounts the peculiar set of circumstances that led up to that point in his life.

Alex gained widespread notoriety at the age of ten when a small meteorite crashed through the roof of his and his mother's home and hit him in the head. Already possessed of a less-than-normal childhood--his mother, a tarot-card-reading spiritualist conceived Alex with a stranger near Stonehenge--the additional notoriety and brain injury that resulted from said meteorite led to what he describes as less-than-ideal interactions and relationships with his peers growing up. It was while being chased by bullies from his school that Alex first meets Isaac Peterson, an old man who would leave an indelible impact on the rest of Alex's life.

The story becomes more and more gratifying as Alex eventually wins over Mr. Peterson and forms a relationship with him. It's a relationship that demonstrates mankind's most vulnerable and humane qualities.

I highly recommend this book. It reminded me of Mark Haddon's The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time and Reif Larsen's The Selected Works of T.S. Spivet. All three books are told from the perspective of a young narrator who doesn't fit the traditional mold, and who gives you an insight into what most of us should aspire to be more like.

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Tuesday, February 17, 2015

The Skin Collector

by Jeffery Deaver
434 pgs  (Lincoln Rhyme series #11)

Jeffery Deaver's latest installment in the Lincoln Rhyme series, The Skin Collector brings the series back full circle to the book that got it all started, The Bone Collector. Once again a serial killer threatens New York City. This killer uses poison to kill his victims, and administers the poison using a tattoo gun. As the number of victims increases, Rhyme and his team become aware of similarities between this case and the case involving the Bone Collector. This killer is fascinated with skin just as the Bone Collector was fascinated by bones. And it becomes apparent that the new killer has studied the articles Rhyme wrote on the original case and is using them to ensure that he eliminates all possible trace of himself from his crime scenes.

While Rhyme, Sachs, and the team are busy trying to anticipate their latest killer's next move, an old nemesis, the Watchmaker, dies while in prison. Lincoln's concentration is divided between capturing the tattooist and finally putting to rest the crimes of the Watchmaker, the only man Lincoln ever went up against whom he considered his intellectual equal, if not superior.

Some of the more recent books in this series have spent a lot of time and energy on advancing the relationship between Rhyme and Sachs and on Rhyme's struggle over whether to undergo risky surgery in order to restore some of the mobility he lost when he became a quadriplegic. No time is spent on either of those in The Skin Collector, this one is all about the killings. For that reason, I think I enjoyed this one a little more than I have the more recent onesThe Skin Collector is a great example of what makes this series so enjoyable.

★ ★ ★ ★ ☆

Thursday, February 12, 2015

Red Rising

by Pierce Brown
381 pgs  (Red Rising series #1)

Red Rising is the first book in a science fiction trilogy currently being written by Pierce Brown. The setting is the planet Mars, at a point in the future in which mankind has extended its reach to the edge of the solar system and is terraforming the non-gaseous planets, like Mars, so that they can eventually become habitable. Society is ruled by a color-coded caste system, consisting of Golds, Pinks, Reds, and several others that people are born into, which determine their station for the rest of their lives.

Darrow was born a Red, the lowest of the castes. He has spent his entire life below the surface of Mars, drilling and mining for the substance that he and the other Reds in his mining colony have been told will one day make it possible for mankind to live on the surface. He believes that his life has a purpose and he's content with it--until he learns that everything he's been told has been a lie.

Unbeknownst to Darrow and the rest of the mining colony, the surface of Mars has been habitable for generations now. In fact, there's an entire civilization that exists there, and able to exist because of the Reds below the surface. Darrow and the other Reds have had no idea that their entire existence has been that of a slave. When Darrow eventually learns the truth, he becomes part of a resistance group that has been trying to bring down the Golds--the ruling class--and destroy the entire caste system.

Darrow undergoes extensive training and an entire physical and genetic makeover in order to be able to infiltrate the Golds on the surface. He becomes the key piece in the resistance group's plans to destroy the Golds from within.

Red Rising is a fantastic beginning to a very promising trilogy. It's been compared to Ender's Game, and Hunger Games, two apt comparisons, although this one is not for younger readers.

★ ★ ★ ★ ☆

Monday, February 2, 2015

All the Light We Cannot See

by Anthony Doer
530 pgs

All the Light We Cannot See is one of the best books I've read in a long time. It's been on the NYT bestseller list for the past five months now and it was voted one of the top 10 books of 2014 by Amazon. Its popularity and critical acclaim are both well deserved. I know it's a little cliché to say, but I really didn't want this one to end. Doerr uses two very different main characters to tell his story: a French girl and a German boy, both young children as World War II begins in Europe.

Marie-Laure LeBlanc's father is the locksmith at the Museum of Natural History in Paris. He has a gift for carving model buildings and building intricate lock boxes that he uses to hide his young daughter's birthday treats in every year. When Marie-Laure goes blind at the age of six, her father carves an amazing replica of the city they live in, enabling her to  memorize the streets and buildings in it until she's eventually able to navigate around the real city independently and with confidence. 

Werner Pfinnig didn't have the same parental support that Marie-Laure did. Werner grew up an orphan in Germany, but Werner was a young boy with an inquisitive mind and an innate understanding of electrical circuits and radio waves. At a very young age Werner demonstrated his gift by building a shortwave radio and using it to stay up late at night listening to a man give lectures on various scientific topics. His talents eventually garnered the attention of the Third Reich and led to a job in the Nazi party of locating unauthorized radio transmissions in Nazi-occupied France.

Doerr repeatedly alternates between the stories of his two main characters as their paths slowly and inevitably cross. I can't compliment the writing, the story, and the characters Doerr creates in this book highly enough. It's a must read and the type of book that will stick in your mind long after it's over.

★ ★ ★ ★ ★