Saturday, December 7, 2013

Oryx and Crake

This was a lot different than what I originally thought it would be like. Usually when I think about a post apocalyptic setting I'm thinking about destroyed cities, people living in bunkers, and a hero coming to reestablish their civilization. In oryx and crake however the hero is a man named snowman by the local people. Children of this new world are oblivious to the old world and it's technologies and Snowman knows everything about the old world which fascinates them. The book begins with a story about Snowman's past and the world he came from, our world but a bit farther in the future. It goes though his last and then tells about how it was all lost. The book is about him and how he has lost everything. It made me incredibly sad and wonder what it would be like if I were in his position. What would I do? Where would I go? How would I keep going? It's definitely an interesting read and I'd suggest it to anyone. 

Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy

Simply put I love british humor. This book/radio show is no exception. I always enjoy how bizarre they always turnout to be. In Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy the main characters home planet, Earth, is destroyed by aliens in order to make an intergalactic freeway. Like in most british comedy the main character show a bit of mild surprise that his home planet is being destroyed but very quickly gets used to it. He is then beamed up to a space ship with his friend, who is also an alien but looks like a human, and begin their joinery though the galaxy meeting strange aliens and intergalactic super stars. Its a strange book thats for sure. Not my favorite but it did get a few laughs from me. After reading all of these types of scifi I came to like space opera the most but that is probably mostly due to the fact that it is the sub genre we are most familiar with. However if there was any book filled with witty, slapstick, british comedy that I'd definitely suggest this one.

Babel 17

I always like when there is a new direction taken by a genre. Most of the time when people think scifi they think laser guns, space ships, and super soldier. They'd be right in guessing that this book has that sort of thing because it does have the intergalactic space sips that have these epic wars in space BUT the most important aspect of the book is about cunning and an interesting language that holds the key to victory. It gets very dull after a while with the kick in the door style games and books out there but I always love when there is a big of a mix up. In this book the main character stumbles across a frequency that was actually a special language that, if understood, could lend the speaker the knowledge/power to understand and wind the war that was before her. I also loved how the main character was a girl. Though in Shards of Honor the main character was a woman I realized the gender difference in this book a lot more, its hard to place a finger on why.

Friday, December 6, 2013

Snow Crash

This book was, for me, very strange and I just could not get into it whatsoever. I am generally very uninterested in this genre and am more of a high fantasy or space opera/ high scifi person. It didn't help that I found it hard to understand the world. The way this book began with its odd prelude did nothing but confuse me.  It made sense in that it helped to fill the characters back story but it was just so strange and bizarre. The strong personality the serious demeanor, Hiro, was a bit of an odd individual. Not exactly the kind of person i would choose to be the protagonist of a novel. The event at the beginning of the book was a little weird for me. If Hiro did not deliver the pizza within the exact amount of time he would be in serious trouble with the mafia? The fact that in this story that the government has given up some of its power to large companies or powerful individuals is actually a pretty cool idea for the books universe but the way it was implemented in the story with a pizza guy and the mafia pizza service was so strange to me that it kept me from getting into the book at all and made the read very hard.

Space Opera: Shards of Honor by Lois McMaster Bujold

This week I had read Shard of Honor by Lois McMaster Bujord.  I actually really enjoyed this novel quite a bit! When i started reading the story seemed a little bland with the the science team setting up camp and having been attacked by some unknown space race but after the main character is knocked unconscious, meets her love interest, and begins a journey with this supposedly brutal space commander I begin to get more and more interested. As the story develops this dangerous soldier turns out to be less of a danger and more of a kind hearted man trapped by his culture and history. 
To me I felt it was pretty predictable but that isn't necessarily a bad thing. I liked the way the story flowed and how it sort of felt familiar. To me it seemed like much of the science fiction that I have read or have played games of have hint of this type of sub-genre in them. Who wouldn't want to go galavanting through space with the person you are romantic with. But seriously the feeling i got from this novel and how there was so much to the books universe reminded me of Star Wars and the game Mass Effect. 

Dawn

Now this was a truly good book and I am wanting to go on to read the rest of the novels in this trilogy, Ive actually gone ahead and bought the first two. I have always been interested in the idea of aliens watching over us and guarding us, I even think the ancient alien theories are fun. I loved how the books start with and alien abduction. Most of the stories we hear about abductions are these horrifying and traumatic experiences of alien experimentation. I really enjoyed how the alien was so different yet strangely similar to human kind and I loved how they survived by taking the most advantageous genetic traits from other species and combining that strand of DNA with their own. It was a really interesting twist. Also I loved how the ship itself was a kind of creature that acted as a vehicle, a food source, and living quarters.

Sunday, October 6, 2013

Spiritual Education: The Golden Compass & Harry Potter

I was one of the kids that grew up reading the Harry Potter books. I learned a lot from those books including vocabulary, morals, about friendship, etc. So for this assignment I wanted to read a different book so I read the Golden Compass. I had seen the movie before and wanted to read the actual book to know more about it since they only produced the first movie and stopped.
I can definitely see the difference in the Golden Compass and a book like Lord of the Rings though it might be hard to put into words. The books take place in an alternate reality where peoples spirits or souls manifest themselves as animal companions. This I thought was a great concept in and of itself. Often when I am talking to someone or see a person on the street I make a comparison between them and an animal. Not just because of their appearance but mostly for their personality. So it was interesting to read about the different characters with different animals and seeing how their personality fit with their animal.
The book follows the story of this little girl that goes on an adventure to discover more about this 'dust' or 'space dust' against the wishes of the Gobblers. The Gobblers have attempted to silence and erase the knowledge of the existence of this dust, for unknown reasons at the beginning of the book but I believe is a way for them to keep control.  She goes on the adventure with a golden compass which was told to tell her the truth and was given to her by the head of the college.
It is fun to make a comparison between The Golden Compass and the Harry Potter novels. Both tell stories of children, the age of the reading audience, and of a great evil they have to overcome but are told to stay away from. Both are told to stay away from this danger but are encouraged by a wise elder to take on the challenge but to be weary. They both go through a series of trials and make many close friends along the way. I could go on about the similarities but I now see how these  types of 'spiritual education' books teach kids to take on challenges with a brave face and to value friendship above all else.