Showing posts with label book review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label book review. Show all posts

Sunday, September 10, 2017

An Excess Male by Maggie Shen King



An Excess Male by Maggie Shen King
Published by: Harper Voyager on September 12, 2017
Pages: 416
Source: Advanced Reader’s Copy provided by my job (for free, not a paid sponsorship)
Genre: Science Fiction, Dystopia, Asia


”Under the One Child Policy, everyone plotted to have a son. Now 40 million of them can't find wives. China’s One Child Policy and its cultural preference for male heirs have created a society overrun by 40 million unmarriageable men. By the year 2030, more than twenty-five percent of men in their late thirties will not have a family of their own. An Excess Male is one such leftover man’s quest for love and family under a State that seeks to glorify its past mistakes and impose order through authoritarian measures, reinvigorated Communist ideals, and social engineering.

Wei-guo holds fast to the belief that as long as he continues to improve himself, his small business, and in turn, his country, his chance at love will come. He finally saves up the dowry required to enter matchmaking talks at the lowest rung as a third husband—the maximum allowed by law. Only a single family—one harboring an illegal spouse—shows interest, yet with May-ling and her two husbands, Wei-guo feels seen, heard, and connected to like never before. But everyone and
everything—walls, streetlights, garbage cans—are listening, and men, excess or not, are dispensable to the State. Wei-guo must reach a new understanding of patriotism and test the limits of his love and his resolve in order to save himself and this family he has come to hold dear.”

My Thoughts: This book is dangerous, controversial, and extremely hard to put down.

When reading the synopsis, I was initially intrigued by the fact that this book is a dystopia based on actual events in our history. The One-Child Policy in China was introduced in 1979 as a way to help reduce population overgrowth, as well as to curb overconsumption of natural resources. The policy dictated that the majority of families in China have only once child. As of 2016, China has adopted a Two-Child Policy, allowing each family to have two children.

In An Excess Male, we see the potential future of the One-Child Policy if it had been allowed to continue to 2030. In this world, women marry two men in order to increase the chance of producing more children. In addition, a newer policy allowing women to take on a third husband has recently become in trend so that there is a higher possibility of producing heirs. I say that this book is dangerous and controversial because, despite women taking on polygamous roles, a woman’s husbands are still ultimately in control of the household, finances, etc. I think that this can be explained by the fact that there are simply so many men in China in this novel that feminism is all but stamped out

This book is told from the 4 perspectives: May-ling, young wife to 2 husbands and mother to a young child; Hann, Husband One in a triad marriage; Xiong-xin (or XX), Husband Two; and Wei-guo, the hopeful suitor to the triad marriage. The characters of Hann and XX are the most controversial because they represent two extremely fearful ‘defects’ that the world of An Excess Male is trying to eradicate: the Willfully Sterile, aka homosexuals, and Lost Boys, aka people with mental disabilities or illnesses. With both husbands on the cusp of being discovered and potentially torn from their marriage, Wei-guo is the understanding, appreciative, and helpful suitor that hopes to join their odd ranks, and even potentially ease some of the tension that these monikers have on the family.

This book is not for the easily offended because it encroaches on some very sensitive topics concerning living in hiding as a gay man and avoiding public scrutiny for mental illness. I found these topics to be extremely interesting because they are often shunned or avoided by authors in hopes of potentially selling more books by not offending anyone. I’m interested to see what other opinions surface of this dystopic book.

My Rating: ★★★

Saturday, August 5, 2017

Crazy Rich Asians by Kevin Kwan


Crazy Rich Asians by Kevin Kwan
Series: Crazy Rich Asians #1
Published by: Doubleday in June 2013
Pages: 527
Source: Purchased by Me
Genres: Contemporary, Social Conflict, Domestic Fiction, Asia

"When New Yorker Rachel Chu agrees to spend the summer in Singapore with her boyfriend, Nicholas Young, she envisions a humble family home and quality time with the man she hopes to marry. But Nick failed to give his girlfriend a few key details. One, that his childhood home looks like a palace; two, that he grew up riding in more private planes than cars; and three, that he just happens to be the country's most eligible bachelor.

On Nick's arm, Rachel may as well have a target on her back the second she steps off the plane, and soon, her relaxed vacation turns into an obstacle course of old money, new money, nosy relatives, and scheming social climbers. (Source: Goodreads)

My ThoughtsI’ll start off with a warning: DO NOT be intimidated by the scope of this novel. Before it even begins, there is an extensive family tree (you will only become extremely familiar with about 1/8 of them, so do not cry!) which is more than a little intimidating.

The Family Tree:

I originally started reading this book in January 2016 shortly after purchasing it and was almost immediately crushed by anxiety. I read less than 100 pages and had about 50 sticky notes on the pages in an attempt to track all of the introduced characters and their characterization. This scared me away from this book and I kept putting off reading it every time I would come back to my TBR shelf.

The proof: 

HOWEVER, I am happy to announce that upon picking it up again this month, I was able to complete it in less than a week. Not only that, but when I was not reading it, I found myself itching to read it. I would often stop what I was doing and find my way back to the pages in order to get another taste, to see what drama was going to happen next, and to see if anyone would end up happy by the conclusion!

I want to mention that this novel portrays only a small scope of what the crazy rich must act like, especially in Singapore. We all like to imagine how ridiculous people in tabloids act and spend their ‘well-earned’ money, but Crazy Rich Asians puts American billionaires to shame. Although I wasn’t personally familiar with 99% of the locations or food dishes that were introduced in this novel (and honestly didn’t have time to look them all up), Kwan did an amazing job at describing and building these extravagant scenes with words. I feel it was extremely easy to relate to our main character, Rachel, who has grown up with a single mom who struggled to make it in America. Most readers’ jaws will drop (like mine) when they realize how fantastical and mythical these characters live.

There was also such a sense of drama and social combativeness in this novel. Women against women, families trying to ‘preserve’ their good names, and throwing gossip around like a Real Housewife would throw a cocktail in someone’s face. I would categorize this book as a contemporary romance-ish because it deals with super-wealthy people and their relationships (ups, downs, and all over the place), and that’s honestly not generally a genre I dip my toes into. It’s not heavily bogged down with romance though, and honestly it’s more about world-building and allowing the reader to understand the complex relationships that these people have with money.

I think the quickness with which I completed this novel really solidifies how much I loved it. It wasn’t too light and airy that it was a throwaway novel, but something about the frivolous spending of money and the carelessness of some of the wealthy people’s actions sweeps you up into their lifestyle. I started to think ‘Yeah, so what if she spends another $250,000 on a dress? That’s less than she makes in a few weeks!’ I was wrapped up in this world and I’m excited to read the next two novels.. And to also check out the movie that will hopefully be coming out by 2018!

My Rating: 

Monday, July 31, 2017

Extropia: Mind Game by Robin Bootle



Extropia: Mind Game by Robin Bootle
Series: Extropia #1
Published by: Troubador Publishing Ltd on March 2, 2017
Pages: 320
Source: Advanced Reader’s Copy from NetGalley
Genre: Virtual Reality, Science Fiction, Teen


”An act of sabotage leaves Edward’s father trapped inside a virtual reality game, Extropia. In a desperate bid to save him, Edward follows, entering a world he knows he might never leave. A world of artificially intelligent beings, subjected to a life of misery and fear in the name of entertainment. Now one of them has learned of the real world, and is determined to have his revenge…” (Source: Goodreads)

My Thoughts: Outside of reading, one of my favorite hobbies is playing video games, especially open-world adventures like Skyrim and Fallout. In addition, virtual reality play such as the Sword Art Online series are extremely interesting to me. If you’re at all interested in these things, you will fall in love with Extropia: Mind Game.

This novel doesn’t stay in one place for very long as our main character, Edward, traverses the unbelievably realistic world of Extropia, a science fiction virtual reality video game created by his missing father and brother. Why is he so emotionally invested in the characters presented to him? Why does the world affect him as if it’s real? I found that Robin Bootle’s experience with role-playing video games helped portray the main character as a gamer, someone experienced in how leveling and game progression worked. There were no questions on my end that were not answered throughout the story.

Even if you’re not a fan of video games, this story has a lot to offer. The world of Extropia is full of political strife and feuding powers. Edward must decide if the very real possibility of death and dismemberment is worth risking for virtual reality characters. Can he really make a difference in the trek he makes through this danger-ridden world, or is he just following pre-determined steps in a quest that was meant for every other player of the game? Can you really grow to have emotional bonds with synthetic characters in a video game? And if so, how far will you go for those that you bond with?

My Rating: ★★★★

Thursday, July 27, 2017

Practical Magic by Alice Hoffman



Practical Magic by Alice Hoffman
Published by: Penguin Putnam Adult on June 13, 1995
Series: Practical Magic #1
Pages: 286
Source: Purchased by me
Genre: Magical Realism, Multi-Generational, Witches


”For more than two hundred years, the Owens women have been blamed for everything that has gone wrong in their Massachusetts town. Gillian and Sally have endured that fate as well: as children, the sisters were forever outsiders, taunted, talked about, pointed at. Their elderly aunts almost seemed to encourage the whispers of witchery, with their musty house and their exotic concoctions and their crowd of black cats. But all Gillian and Sally wanted was to escape. One will do so by marrying, the other by running away. But the bonds they share will bring them back—almost as if by magic...” (Source: Goodreads)

My Thoughts: I found this novel to be a pleasant surprise, especially because I’d never heard very much information about it before reading. I vaguely remember watching the 1998 film by the same name starring Sandra Bullock and Nicole Kidman, but it wasn’t vivid enough in my memory to influence my experience too heavily.

This is probably one of my only foray s into the magical realism genre and I’m not really sure how that makes me feel. The title might suggest it, but the ‘magic’ that is presented in this novel is presented in a more realistic way than outright witchcraft. To break it down, there are characters in this book that portray the stereotypical image of witches, but there are also characters that don’t really believe in the craft. In addition, whenever magic is mentioned, it is never by the moniker (i.e. ‘magic’), but more like a heavy influence. As I read, I felt myself thinking words like hex, curse, and spell, but these words are never actually used. Hoffman uses our personal experiences outside of what is directly written on the page in order to push us toward certain assumptions about the characters, especially when it comes to what magic is or who might be a witch

This novel bridges 3 different generations, giving you the opportunity to see how different women in the Owens family view magic, especially whether they believe in it or not. Due to the fiery nature of the women in their past, some characters seem to have pre-determined fates, while others run off the rails in order to create new paths that ultimately come back to the same point. I absolutely loved how Hoffman created such powerful women in this novel, sometimes powerful for their ability to withstand certain pain, and other times for their outright attitudes.

My Rating: ★★★

Wednesday, July 19, 2017

Brain on Fire: My Month of Madness by Susannah Cahalan



Brain on Fire: My Month of Madness by Susannah Cahalan
Published by: Simon & Schuster on November 13, 2012
Pages: 268
Source: Purchased by me
Genre: Non-fiction, Memoir, Medicine, Psychology


"When twenty-four-year-old Susannah Cahalan woke up alone in a hospital room, strapped to her bed and unable to move or speak, she had no memory of how she’d gotten there. Days earlier, she had been on the threshold of a new, adult life: at the beginning of her first serious relationship and a promising career at a major New York newspaper. Now she was labeled violent, psychotic, a flight risk. What happened?" (Source: Goodreads description)

My Thoughts: I’ll be honest; it took me about 50 pages to really believe what was going on in this psychology memoir. My initial reaction to reading about Cahalan’s slow descent into ‘madness’ was doubt. She’s a journalist, so of course she has the ability to persuade someone into thinking what she wants you to think, but the openness of her journey is what really had me reeling. She approaches her dark experiences in an extremely researched and open way that leaves literally nothing to be imagined. As you crawl deeper into the rabbit hole that was her spiraling life, you come to realize that it’s not a story anyone would create for attention. This memoir relates real psychological and physical pain unlike anything most people will ever experience

I found this book extremely fascinating because it brought together many parts of Cahalan’s life into a bound up piece of work (of course, those pieces she has divulged, not necessarily her as a full person.. You get my point). As a journalist, she went to all of the people she was in contact with during her illness to get the point of views that others had when she was blind to reality. Having the context of her story from others makes it more accurate and ultimately polished.

Even if you aren’t interested in psychology and brain health, this is an extremely beautiful novel. It shows the strength of hope in a situation that can seem otherwise hopeless. It also shows how impossibly difficult it can be when yourself of self is lost and you have to build ‘you’ back up from rubble. Obviously, this isn’t your average memoir.

My Rating: ★★★

Sunday, July 16, 2017

Review: Turok, Dinosaur Hunter Vol. #1: Conquest



Turok: Dinosaur Hunter Vol. #1: Conquest by Greg Pak, Mirko Colak, and Cory Smith
Series: Turok: Dinosaur Hunter vol. #1
Published by: Dynamite on September 9, 2014
Pages: 128
Source: Purchased by me
Genre: Graphic Novel, Alternate History, Fantasy, Dinosaurs


"Shunned from his tribe, a young Native American named Turok fights to survive, making a lonely life for himself in the unforgiving forest. But his hard-won cunning and survival skills face the ultimate test when man-eating Thunder Lizards attack his people! Why are dinosaurs here? How have they survived? And will Turok use his abilities to save a society that's taken everything away from him?" (Source: Goodreads description)

My Thoughts: My personal experience with the Turok franchise has only been through brief moments playing the 2008 XBOX360 video game (click here for more information on this VERY different game).. Suffice to say, I was not at all prepared for the amazing journey ahead of me. I generally pick up anything that has a dinosaur on it, is about a dinosaur, or somehow involves treating dinosaurs nicely, so when I saw the horrific display of 'manhood' on the cover of Conquest, I was intrigued, but worried. Ultimately, I should have only been worried about whoever was against Turok and his soon-to-be-friend dinosaur companions.

I have always been fascinated with Disney's Pocahontas and Mel Gibson's Apocalypto for the same reason. (SPOILER WARNING FOR APOCALYPTO, KIND OF?) Both films/concepts introduce an interpretation of native, less technologically advanced human life in a region before European settlers came into the fray. Conquest depicts an even more alternate history version in which not only are Europeans coming to take over the land and displace natives, but they have brought along DINOSAURS to help do their bidding. It's not all as bad for the dinosaurs as the cover leads you to believe, and I really enjoyed the use of dinosaurs in a way that isn't simply scientific experimentation or time warping. I also really enjoyed the use of somewhat diluted and washed out colors in this graphic novel as a way of emoting exactly how dark and hopeless most of the storyline is. The content in the images was on full display, versus using bright, flashy colors to simply display the actual artwork itself (although the artwork itself was also very impressive).

My Rating: ★★★★

Saturday, July 15, 2017

Review: Resist by Sarah Crossan


Resist by Sarah Crossan
Series: Breathe #2
Published by Greenwillow Books on October 8, 2013
Pages: 368
Source: Purchased by Me
Genres: Young Adult/Teen Dystopia, Action, Post-Apocalyptic

This summary and review does not have spoilers for Breathe.

"Three teen outlaws must survive on their own in a world without air, exiled from the glass dome that protects what's left of human civilization. Bea, Alina, and Quinn are on the run. They started a rebellion and were thrown out of the pod, the only place where there's enough oxygen to breathe. Bea has lost her family. Alina has lost her home. And Quinn has lost his privileged life. Can they survive in the perilous Outlands? Can they finish the revolution they began? Especially when a young operative from the pod's Special Forces is sent after them. Their only chance is to stand together, even when terrible circumstances force them apart. When the future of human society is in danger, these four teens must decide where their allegiances lie." (source: Goodreads)

My Thoughts:
Honestly, it was a bit of a struggle to remember all of the characters from Breathe that rolled over into this sequel. So many people were introduced in the first book and it was about 2 years since I read that one, so when I picked this up and started hearing names, it was a lot to handle. Thanks to this article by Epic Reads (THIS ARTICLE DOES CONTAIN SPOILERS FOR BREATHE), I was able to sort out a few, but there are so many more that weren't mentioned that I would highly recommend reading this book less than a year after reading the first... Unless you have some sort of note-taking system that is much more efficient than me! ;)

After my initial confusion, I was dropped back into the exciting world of the Breathe du0logy that had made me absolutely love the first book. Told through multiple points of view, Sarah Crossan makes it an art to quickly and succinctly give the perfect amount of information in 3-4 pages of a scene and then move onto the next, sometimes leaving cliff-hangers, but more often than not introducing extremely interesting information that moves the plot along smoothly. This book gave me heavy vibes of The Walking Dead at times, leading you to believe that at times, something sinister and corrupt is happening and you just have to wait until the right door opens before you can see the full extent of the crimes committed.

I would recommend this duology to people interested in dystopian YA novels, especially those fascinated with somewhat more realistic possibilities. Of course, a glass dome filled with the last humans seems unrealistic, but if humanity ever came down to using its final resources to save itself, would preservation in one place seem all that far from impossible?

My Rating

Sunday, July 9, 2017

Review: Mort(e) by Robert Repino


Mort(e) by Robert Repino
Published: January 2015
Series: War with No Name #1

Tagline: Mort(e), an anthropomorphized house cat, treks through a world-ending war between humans and car-sized ants in order to rescue his platonic (?) best friend, a dog named Sheba.

Plot Overview (because it's pretty weird!): Let's start from the beginning. Ants have evolved in such a way that they are super-intelligent, some even growing to be larger than vehicles. At the same time, the ants have evolved most animals so they have hands instead of paws, they stand on their hind legs, and they can think and talk. Yes, ants have made animals sentient and aware. Animals change overnight, not having to slowly learn how to understand or read, but simply knowing. As one can imagine, this causes many animals to rebel against humans (specifically their 'masters') and the War with No Name rages. Meanwhile, Mort(e) fights the War with No Name only as a way to pass time until he can somehow find an orange and white dog he knew from before he was aware. Her name is Sheba and she means the world to Mort(e).

My review: This book is AMAZING. Repino creates these extremely original characters that grow over time and create lasting relationships with each other and the reader. I found it particularly interesting to find out some of the dark pasts of the characters introduced. They are presented as stories of slaves being freed from masters, because in reality all of the pets that become sentient realize that they have been enslaved within their homes and made to live their lives a certain way.

I found that a lot of times, you can take yourself out of this book being about cats standing on their back legs and talking to ants with weird headsets. It's strange, yes, but Repino makes the animals very humanoid because they are supposed to take the place of humans on Earth, so they adjust to speaking, standing, living in 'normal' ways.

I would recommend this book to anyone interested in a different sort of war book. It's violent at times, also reminding me of an apocalyptic novel. The animals that survive the humans must make do with the remnants of their humans' abodes, scrounging for food when their predecessors were omnivores and some animals are obligate carnivores. This novel was an extremely original take on a revolution that may never come to pass, but I would definitely consider it for an alternate history.

Rating: 5/5 stars

Saturday, July 8, 2017

Review: The Martian by Andy Weir


The Martian by Andy Weir
Published: February 2014
Pages: 369

Quickie: A man is accidentally abandoned on Mars. Using his expertise as a botanist and general NASA engineer, he turns Mars into his (dangerous) playground!

Real Talk: I put off reading The Martian for a few years when I realized it would become a movie, and then even longer when the movie did really good. I was afraid there was too much hype behind this title and that it would never be able to live up to my expectations. I finished 3 years of college in a science major, so I had high hopes for tearing down whatever science was put before me in this novel. I thought that there would be some weird NASA zombie situation going on and I would throw the book away (i.e. donate it angrily).

...But here we are, and I have to say this book was amazing.

NASA botanist Mark Watney has been abandoned on Mars after a sand storm has severed all contact with his crew mates. Documented in data logs, Watney calculates the best ways to grow crops, create oxygen and water, and how to navigate Mars to not only survive, but to potentially return to Earth.

Watney is incredibly witty and undoubtedly one of my favorite characters in any novel I've ever read. Weir has written him to be a highly intelligent NASA crew member, but also as a person that really would stand a chance at surviving ALONE in a situation where there seems to be literally no hope. Not only has Watney been trained to use every single opportunity as a means to survive, he cracks jokes to himself in the darkness that is being on an alien planet without contact with any other humans.

What could have easily been a book dry with too much scientific explanation and self-deprecating dives into depression is brought to a happy medium by Watney's snarky quips and ability to laugh at his tremendous failures. I am always extremely fond of books in and about space, but this one uses the environment of a nearly desolate planet to spark humorous and adventuresome vibes that pull you along on a whirlwind of emotion.

5/5 stars

Tuesday, June 7, 2016

Review: The Many Selves of Katherine North by Emma Geen

Disclaimer: I received a digital copy of this book from NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.

The Many Selves of Katherine North by Emma Geen
Published June 7, 2016

Plot Overview

We follow Kit, a nineteen-year-old phenomenaut for ShenCorp, a company that specializes in projecting a person's consciousness into that of a lab-grown animal. This technology proves crucial to understanding different species' environments, experiences, and general biology. Kit has been 'jumping' as a phenomenaut for ShenCorp for seven years, fulfilled by the idea that she is helping the company understand animals' motives and needs so that humans and animals can coexist peacefully. ShenCorp has the ability to project Kit, and other phenomenauts, into many different species including but not limited to birds, fish, and large mammals. Despite her seemingly successful, and abnormally long, experience with ShenCorp, Kit starts experiencing strange and unexplained anomalies during her jumps. No longer sure if her employer has the same goals as her, Kit has to decide if she will pursue her suspicions or continue to play along with ShenCorp's new business model.

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My Review
This book has a slightly confusing, slow start, but man does it really catch you. Personally, the free copy I received was a little strange when it came to format, but considering the general science-y vibe that comes along with this story, I wasn't entirely sure if it was intentional or not.

Thriller. I wasn't expecting this book to move at such a fast pace once I got into it, but considering the mysteries and company secrets that Kit comes to uncover, it can only be expected that she must be on her toes in order to not be discovered. I felt that as the reader, I was successfully made to side with Kit in her discoveries of suspicious information via her phenomenaut jumps.

Science!! Almost constantly, I felt as if the author must have truly done a great deal of scientific research in the writing of this novel, or possibly even had some sort of Biology degree. The science of phenomenautism is extremely well thought-out and detailed. Not only that, but the different species that are encountered are so greatly varied and described at such length that I immediately took Kit's experiences in their bodies as truth and fact. I'm not 100% sure if all of the things that she experiences were truly how different species exists, but I guarantee that you will agree: Emma Geen really has an eye for describing the environment from unexpected perspective.

I truly enjoyed my experience with this novel and I'm excited that it will be in print very shortly! I would definitely recommend this to readers who enjoy the more science-centric science fiction, not only the existence of something artificial or theoretical, but the true, very convincing descriptions of how something could exist. This novel was written with a critical reader in mind who is no stranger to the scifi genre.

My Rating: 4/5 stars

Friday, June 3, 2016

#FridayReads: Boxers & Saints by Gene Luen Yang

Oh, weekend. You creep up on me and surprise me with a beautiful Friday off to enjoy some light graphic novel reading. Well, let me rephrase that.. Maybe I didn't choose the lightest graphic novel duology that I could think of, but it's been actually rather educational, to say the least.

"Boxers & Saints" volumes 1 & 2 by Gene Luen Yang
Published September 2013

This graphic novel duo tells a fantastical version of China's Boxer Rebellion, the "violent anti-foreign and anti-Christian uprising which took place in China ... between 1899-1901" (source: Wikipedia). To be totally honest with you guys, I honestly don't remember much about the Boxer Rebellion from school except the name, so I was actually pretty shocked that I decided to rent these from my local library. But I felt as if they were receiving a lot of good reviews and hype as of late, so I decided, what the heck?

Boxers follows a boy named Little Bao who has grown up in a small Chinese village. One day, a Christian man comes into Little Bao's town and causes absolute chaos. As a result, Little Bao and other member of his village decide that they will not put up with Christians destroying their culture, both in essence and in actual physical objects, and Little Bao begins to grow an army trained in Kung Fu to combat Christians, both foreign and Chinese alike.

Saints is the story of an unwanted fourth daughter who finds comfort and support in Christianity. Before her realization of faith, she is simply called Four-Girl, but she later comes to be known as Vibiana. As the Rebellion that Little Bao is fighting creeps farther throughout China, Vibiana must choose if her faith in Christianity or her country will win her support.

I'm not at all a history buff, but something about Yang's writing style and imagery really has me hooked in the first volume. He really mixes the historical event of the Boxer Rebellion with the fantastical idea of beautifully portrayed Chinese gods and goddesses to pull in the reader. I'm excited to see how these turn out and bring you guys a thorough review later down the line!

Tuesday, May 31, 2016

Review: In Real Life by Cory Doctorow & Jen Wang

In Real Life by Cory Doctorow & Jen Wang (illustrator)
Graphic Novel, Published October 2014

Plot Overview
Teenage girl gamer, Anda, is offered the opportunity for a free trial membership to a guild in the MMORPG Coarsegold Online. IRL, Anda is a slightly chubby girl, but in-game she can be the warrior princess she wants to be. Almost immediately, Anda discovers that users are illegally harvesting in-game currency to sell to n00bs for real-life money. She gets quickly swept up into the market of eliminating this players, also for real-life money. It's not long before she comes across a player that tells her the truth of 'gold mining.'

My Review
To be completely honest, this book seems a bit more suited to the sociology section of a book store. Before the novel even begins, Doctorow introduces it as a demonstration of economic and social organization. As I came to understand this idea, 'organization' is the ability humans evolved in order to either organize or participate in organized events or jobs. This book was pitched to me as a girl-gamer-friendly look into the MMORPG world, with a bit of realism thrown in with the darker side of gold-minding (or farming in-game items for real-life currency), so I have to admit I was a bit bogged down with this introduction. While I do agree that this is an interesting topic to research, I wish it hadn't been attached to seemed to be to be a teen-friendly graphic novel.

But for the actual content and illustrations, this book is beautiful and well-crafted. I loved the style of the illustrations and the playful, soft edges to everything. It seemed like the kind of image that was at times imperfect but still easy to identify, making it a lot easier to relate to the characters. I liked that Anda, a slightly chubby high school student, was not featured as being the chubby gamer girl but instead the focus was more on the game and her enjoyment of it. At the same time, I also felt connected to her experience in trying to have a safe time on the internet (i.e. her Mom is overprotective about her not talking to strange, older men online).

I think this is a great story, but not necessarily suited for teens. It dives into the more corrupt aspects of online gaming where people break the rules and lie about it to get more people to help them out. In addition, Anda comes to know a boy who is basically working in a modern day gaming sweatshop... Which, personally, I found really out of place for what this graphic novel was set up to be. Maybe it's just my own personal expectations for this one, but again, Doctorow's introduction really threw me for a loop and made me experience this book a lot differently than if I'd just read it bare without the socio-economic influences.

My Rating: 3/5 stars

Tuesday, March 8, 2016

Review: The House of the Scorpion by Nancy Farmer


13376
The House of the Scorpion by Nancy Farmer
Originally Published: September 2002


Plot Overview

The World: In a time when illegal drug production is the most structurally sound economic system, the country of Opium is prosperous. Opium is a strip of land that covers the border between the United States of America and what was once Mexico, now called Aztlán. The king of this drug empire: El Patrón, an ancient man who craves for the way of life he knew as a child, over 100 years ago. Opium is thriving because of its product: poppy plants. The expansive fields of poppy are farmed by eejits, almost literally mindless workers that must be commanded to remember their most basic of functions such as rest, drink water, work.

The Boy: Our main character is Matt, or Matteo Alacrán, a pre-adolescent clone of El Patrón. Matt has been kept a secret from El Patrón's descendants who currently reside on the poppy farm. Matt does not know what it means to be a clone or why everyone thinks he is no better than an animal, a beast, a mistake. Matt is extremely intelligent and precocious. He seeks out answers, he is willful and outspoken; he is much more like the powerful El Patrón than any of the family would like to admit.

The ProblemEl Patrón is creeping on 150 years old. Through medical procedures that Matt cannot begin to fathom, El Patrón has plateaued into a state of mental decay, while his physical health appears to wax and wane. El Patrón may favor and care for Matt's studies and well-being, but the weaker the old man becomes, the closer Matt realizes he is to danger of being dismissed, killed, or worse by the Alacrán estate. They loathe him for being a 'filthy' clone whose very existence is unnatural, so if his benefactor, the very man whose DNA he shares, passes away... what will become of the filthy beast?


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My Review

Wow. Just... wow. Do you ever have a book on your shelf that you bought years ago, but you really can't remember what it is supposed to be about or why you originally wanted to read it? The House of the Scorpion is that book for me on so many levels. I asked for this book several years ago as a Christmas present, but something about the semi-lackluster cover just threw me off. I knew very little about the plot and even less about the author, but as part of my 2016 bookish goals to read more from my old TBR lists, I picked up this book about a week ago and never looked back.

I had no idea to expect a science fiction novel from what the excerpt led me to believe was a relatively realistic book. Without spoiling too much of the midway-point plot, cloning is almost one of the least scientifically advanced projects that is present in this novel. Nancy Farmer has created a very scary world within a more old-school Mexico story. Because El Patrón is so stuck in his old childhood, it is not surprising that he limits the residence of his family to such a technology deprived way of life. Some of the undertones of the overall plot included: clone rights, classism, socialism, and even basic human rights.

The reason I loved this book? It was not at all what I expected. I'm a huge fan of dystopian novels and general science fiction, but mixed in with family drama and a morally suspicious drug farm: incalculably entertaining. At times, I felt like I was watching a telenovela (or for those of you out there not into your daytime television, a Spanish soap opera) with no short of disapproving father figures and outbursts of rage or excitement. Don't let that description fool you, for although this is a book about Matt's family 'drama,' it is also an infuriating mash up of the ways in which a 'subhuman' clone can be disrespected and shoved around. It really made me think about what it means to be a person, or more specifically an individual. Matt is quite literally not an individual, and struggles with the fact that he is a clone of a feared drug lord daily. He is afraid for his life, for the lives of the few individuals in the estate that actually care for him as a human being, and Nancy Farmer has created an easy to bond with character in this book. This is by far the most connected I've felt with a main character in a while, not to mention it was a boy almost half my age!

This was an exciting book I will be holding onto for a long time to come. I'm not 100% sure if I will read the sequel (that came out over a decade after the original), but you guys will be the first to know if I do!


My Rating: 4.5/5 stars