Sunday, March 19, 2023

Last Days

Last Days
by Adam Nevill


Blurb:
When guerrilla documentary maker, Kyle Freeman, is asked to shoot a film on the notorious cult known as the Temple of the Last Days, it appears his prayers have been answered. The cult became a worldwide phenomenon in 1975 when there was a massacre including the death of its infamous leader, Sister Katherine. Kyle's brief is to explore the paranormal myths surrounding an organization that became a testament to paranoia, murderous rage, and occult rituals. The shoot's locations take him to the cult's first temple in London, an abandoned farm in France, and a derelict copper mine in the Arizonan desert where The Temple of the Last Days met its bloody end. But when he interviews those involved in the case, those who haven't broken silence in decades, a series of uncanny events plague the shoots. Troubling out-of-body experiences, nocturnal visitations, the sudden demise of their interviewees and the discovery of ghastly artifacts in their room make Kyle question what exactly it is the cult managed to awaken – and what is its interest in him?

My Reaction:
I listened to the audiobook version of this novel while piecing quilts.  At the start, it made a nice alternative to talk radio and podcasts, but at some point my interest began to wane... 

Early in the book, the story was pleasantly creepy, and I was interested in seeing where it was going.  (I even had a little theory, early on, about how the story would develop, which I'll return to in a moment.)  

Unfortunately, aspects of the novel began to feel repetitive, and after Kyle returns from the USA, it felt like it landed in a quagmire and just sort of stalled out.  Then we get the loooooong info-dump / exposition / history lesson with one character, followed by another history lesson from a different character...  This type of writing just doesn't hold my interest.  It starts to feel bloated and in need of the editor's pen.  

A few nitpicks:
—I didn't like the way the American characters' dialect was written.  Maybe it was worse to listen to than it would've been to read on the page, because of the nasal interpretation of the American accent.  However, the persistently poor grammar also annoyed me, as an American who doesn't use "ain't" in every other sentence.  It's especially jarring when the character with the over-the-top dialect refers to a flashlight as a "torch".  Somehow, I begin to wonder if the author has ever known or met an actual American person...  

—I felt like we never really get to understand Sister Katherine at all, beyond the summary of "evil cult-leader".  Maybe that's intentional, to maintain an air of mystery, but it felt disappointing.  

—This book does that annoying thing where a character who has encountered paranormal entities still can't bring himself to accept that another, different paranormal occurrence could be possible.  (Something like, "Yeah, okay, so vampires are real.  I acknowledge that.  But werewolves?!  C'mon, man!  Do I look crazy to you?")  That might be how people would tend to react in reality—simply unable to absorb any more blows to their concept of how the world works, in such a short space of time—but it always irritates me!

—It also does that other annoying thing where a totally new character is just dumped on you in the last quarter or less of the book, with no satisfactory explanation for why you're just hearing about him when another character has clearly been working with him for months, if not longer.  The new guy is an irritating, painfully clichéd character, too, which makes the whole situation even worse.  At this point in the book, we're just waiting to see how it all wraps up, though, so... whatever.

—If you dislike open endings, you might be disappointed here.  I'm choosing to just believe that it ended the way I want it to have ended, but I would have appreciated a little more indication of what happens next.  

As for my theory, it involves spoilers, so... 


SPOILER


WARNING



Ok, if you're still reading now, prepare to be spoiled!


I wondered if one of the children who survived (and then specifically the "Clean Child", once he was mentioned) would turn out to be Kyle.  I thought perhaps Max knew or had discovered Kyle's origin, while Kyle himself had no memory of this early trauma.  That would have explained why Max insisted on involving Kyle, because he was already involved in the cult's history—and was perhaps crucial to its future, in one way or another, either for its destruction or revival.  The documentary would've been just a ruse to get Kyle on-board to visit the locations and slowly remember or realize his connection to the case.  

Of course, as it turns out, none of that was true!  Instead, it's basically a more convoluted version of the move titled The Skeleton Key.  (I liked my idea better!)



END

OF

SPOILERS


On the whole, it was fine.  I didn't lose any sleep from the creep factor, but it was entertaining, apart from the times when too much exposition slowed the pace.  I was glad for it to be over when it was, though, which is a bit sad.  The beginning was much stronger than the end, and the supposedly scary stuff gets less and less frightening, the more it's described.  

This was my first experience with this author, incidentally, and I'm not sure whether to go back for more... What was good was good, but it didn't land quite right for me.  


Edison's Conquest of Mars

Edison's Conquest of Mars
by Garrett P. Serviss


My Blurb:
One edition falsely describes this as "an absolutely wonderful SF masterpiece", but then says it was written in 1947, so that shows how much they know!  It's actually a newspaper serial first published in the late 1800s.  Anyway... the same blurb that got the year wrong goes on to say the following:
"Edison's Conquest of Mars is a science fiction novel by American astronomer and writer Garrett P. Serviss. It was written as a sequel to Fighters from Mars, an unauthorized and heavily altered version of H. G. Wells' The War of the Worlds. It has a place in the history of science fiction for its early employment of themes and motifs that later became staples of the genre."
Following the events of The War of the Worlds, in which Martians attack and lay waste to huge areas of Earth, humans across the globe must rally an effort to defend their planet from a repeat attack.  Fortunately for them, they are led by that amazing inventor and heroic warrior... Thomas Edison!  Will their efforts succeed (as is heavily implied by the title of this book)?  You'll have to read to find out! (Or not.  The title kind of gives it away, really.)


My Reaction:
Donald and I read this together for the 372 Pages We Won't Get Back podcast/book club.  

I haven't read much (any?) "space-themed" science fiction, though I've watched my share of TV shows and movies set in space.  Serviss apparently was the first or one of the first authors to write about... space suits, I think it was.  He also has a few other ideas that will be familiar to anyone who reads, views, or otherwise consumes space-y sci-fi.  

I give him credit for his creativity, but sadly, he wasn't much of a fiction-writer.  He had terrible pacing, practically no attempt at characterization, only the most barebone plot, and zero flair for storytelling.  Just awful, really.  Maybe a child without any expectations or experience of quality writing might enjoy this.  For everyone else, it's a curiosity, at best.  The occasional moments of unintended humor are the best thing this has going for it.  


One thing that particularly annoyed me about this book:

On the one hand, Serviss' version of Edison is an unapparelled genius, in this tale.  He reverse engineers alien technology (only his version is even better, don'tchaknow), conceptualizes and whips up new inventions and improvements on the fly (all behind the scenes, of course), and basically has the most amazing brain God has ever given a man.  

On the other hand, he continually makes idiotic strategic mistakes, at the cost of the other men's lives!  

"Hey!  There are some Martians coming!  Mr. Edison, should we use our powerful weapons to safely destroy them before they get too close, seeing as how they tried to annihilate us all on Earth just a while ago?"  

Edison says no.  Let's just wait and see what happens, first.  

Shocking surprise:  The Martians attack.  Many men are killed.

Edison:  "Oopsie!  Well, okay... Yeah, let's use our death ray... I guess..."  

And he never learns!  Some variation on this happens at least a few different times.  When you're on a mission to Mars to avenge Earth and protect it from further harm, you don't dilly-dally and pussyfoot, man!  You kill-kill-kill until every last Martian is dead.  (Or at least that's what I'd do, probably.  Hey, they started it with an unprovoked attack, and for all Edison's genius, it was only by a stroke of fortune that Earth's heroes were able to achieve the "conquest".  The Martians would be very lucky if I left any of them alive.)


Conclusion:  Glad to leave this one behind!
 

Friday, March 10, 2023

Upgrade

Upgrade
by Blake Crouch


(Edited) Blurb:
The unwilling recipient of a DNA "upgrade", Logan Ramsay is about to get the brain he always dreamed of, along with a host of other gene-level enhancements.  A holy grail of genetic engineering—one that could change our very definitions of humanity—has just been unearthed.  And now it's up to him to stop it from falling into the wrong hands.  But will he be transformed into something more than human… or something less?  

My Reaction:
Eh...

Well, to start with, unlike many of the readers whose reviews I've skimmed, I was unfamiliar with this author's work until I started reading Upgrade, so I came in with no expectations or preconceptions of what this novel might be.  (Though after starting it, I did see that Wayward Pines was based on his work, and I watched the first season of that...)  While reading reviews for The It Girl, I saw someone suggest that people would be better off reading this, if they wanted a real page-turner of a thriller.  (I'm not sure I agree.  Maybe this is the better of the two books in some ways, but I probably enjoyed reading the other one more, despite that.  And honestly, they're just such completely different books!  Comparing them feels pointless, really.)

So, I went in not knowing what to expect.  Aspects of the initial world-building phase of the book gave me the feeling I probably wouldn't like everything about it, but I hoped the story might move in a different direction.  In some ways, it did, but I probably should have trusted my gut reaction, because it was correct:  I didn't like this book.  

My chief complaints?  

  • These are flat characters who elicit mostly flat emotions (with one or two notable exceptions toward the end).  
  • The combination of dry science textbook infodump and descriptions of action sequences is boring.  Some reviewers have speculated that this was written "for the screen" (or at least with that as a fond wish), and it certainly feels like a possibility.  This author has had other works adapted for TV/movie, which bumps it up to a likelihood!
  • Characters who are supposed to be geniuses display distinctly sub-genius intelligence.
  • We're supposed to believe that humanity is a century away from extinction, and yet... most things seem pretty okay in the parts of the world we visit during this book.  Certainly not on the brink of extinction, barring something like a "planet killer" asteroid.  Yes, certain areas have flooded.  Yes, non-synthetic meat seems to be an expensive treat rather than part of a daily diet.  Yes, we're told that people are starving (somewhere).  But the major population centers are still there, around the globe.  There have been major advancements in transportation, as well as other engineering feats, and things don't seem to be too bad in middle-class America.  Again, not on the verge of collapse.
  • A colossally irritating ending.  I guess it's not worth going into spoiler territory to expand on it, but I really don't buy Logan's theory for how to save the world.  I found it obnoxious, to be brutally honest, and it completely negated the previous however-many pages I'd read.  UGH.
I skimmed large chunks of the info-dump pseudoscience babbling after briefly considering just skipping straight to the end.  

A couple of quotes, since I bothered to take notes...

—"...Drive to the Gulf Coast of Mississippi, which had been hit by two cat 7 hurricanes in the last decade and left with no economy to speak of, and wonder how people found the will to go on."

First of all, allow me to guffaw my ever-lovin' head off at the ridiculous little "let me slip this in here all casual-like" factoid that they've added two more levels to the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale.  I live on the Gulf Coast and have lived through multiple hurricanes.  This little cutesy "cat 7" stuff...?  No.  Also, if things were that bad in coastal Mississippi, I think most people would find a way to leave, even if it meant leaving everything behind but what they could carry on their backs.  Why does this author think the people of MS are so powerless (or stupid?) that they would stay in a hellscape "with no economy to speak of" and no hope for improvement when there's a normal life still to be had in much of the rest of the country?  How insulting!

—"What if you create a bunch of people who are just drastically better at what they already were.  Soldiers.  Criminals.  Politicians.  Capitalists."  

Oh, here we go.  Ok, I'll grant you the politicians, because I'm fed up with them all, at this point and have trouble trusting a word any of them say, but saying that "capitalists" and "soldiers" (just any soldier, I guess, not narrowing it down to some type of scary, evil mercenaries, but including people who simply want to serve and protect their country) are on the same level as criminals?  Good grief.  Well, at least we know where he stands!

Was it worth the read?  For me, probably not.  I didn't love it.