Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/connerh
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2.5 stars
1.5 stars
3.5 stars
I had never heard of the Chappaquiddick Incident or Joyce Carol Oates before this book, and since the subject didn't really interest me it probably wasn't the best choice for me to read out of this author's sprawling literary bibliography. But while I was never enamored with the story being told, (a fictionalization of a real-life incident in the vein of "In Cold Blood), I was floored by this author's mastery of her art form. Ms. Oates writes beautifully and her stream-of-consciousness imagery is absolutely gorgeous. I want to read something else by Oates, and now being aware of the sheer number of books this woman has written, next time I will be more selective in finding one with a subject I will enjoy more.
Ever since I first heard whispers from my college friends a few years ago about what was allegedly "the most fucked up book you will ever read," I envisioned this book as some sort of shadowy and sub-cultured masterpiece like something that would be created if Anne Rice and Marquis de Sade teamed up to write about vampires. As it turns out, I was expecting way too much from Let The Right One In.
This is a collection of essays from outside sources with a bunch of really pretty full-color artwork. If I'm going to be honest, the illustrations were my favorite part; the essays were very numerous and even though none ran over the length of 3 pages, a lot of them were very boring. However there were a few excerpts by some fabulous authors such as Franz Kafka, George Orwell, Haruki Murakami, Herman Hesse, Leo Tolstoy, and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. Stumbling upon these were pleasant surprises, as I wasn't expecting then to be featured.
3.5 stars
4.5 stars
2.5 stars
Sometimes after wasting my time with a truly horrible book, I enjoy reading 1 star reviews for it on goodreads. So I was going over the reviews for this book and all I saw were positive ratings. In this situation I feel like you guys are wrong and so I needed to put up a review to set the record straight. It's probably the fault of all these 4 and 5 star reviews that I suffered through reading this book in the first place.
This book reminded me of Ender's Game. I did not like Ender's Game. I could spend a ton of review space pointing out all the parallels but I'd rather not think about it anymore. The main character is basically Ender, although his name has been changed to Thomas. He's a special little snowflake who is smarter and faster and better than everyone else without trying to be, and utterly one-dimensional. We get told often the specific emotions that he is "consumed" with on each page: how he wants to ask questions so badly he will go insane, how he has never wanted to punch someone in the face so badly than at this very moment, and we get treated to lots of images of Tom rolling his eyes at so-and-so because he's "so tired of his attitude." The other characters are just there for contrast and are given no personality, unless you count the grating slang that they speak in, with several English words thrown in for good measure. Most of the writing is just dreadful. This is far from a literary novel. Dashner uses so many extra words that don't need to be in there, just onslaughts of adverbs that pad out the length, and he repeats himself endlessly. Who was the target audience for this? Alzheimer's patients? That reminds me; one of my BIGGEST pet peeves are when people use mental disorders as adjectives. I have never seen an actual author do this so much until now. Not only is that insensitive, it's just plain shitty writing.
About halfway through Broken City, I realized I was reading it in a Max Payne voice. That's because Batman's running monologue is very typical noir, seemingly copy/pasted from a Max Payne game script. Testosterone-infused Batman isn't my favorite take on the character, he's mostly just getting angry at everyone and beating the crap out of them in between rambling about how God doesn't care about Gotham. Aside from appearances by Penguin, Scarface, and Joker, the story's not too exciting or groundbreaking. The art here far outshines the writing.
If I were any more cynical, I wouldn't have been able to enjoy this book. The borderline utopia presented in the setting isn't realistic; the world we live in is a cruel, insensitive, and prejudiced place, very unlike this town where everyone is accepted and kids are free to live their lives free of any anxieties deeply ingrained in their psyches since birth by a society run by hate and condemnation. Since reality is so far removed from the setting, while I believe this book was meant to be reassuring pat on the shoulder from the author to all of the lgbt teens burying themselves under layers of self-loathing in their efforts to become somewhat accepted by society, it could on occasion have an opposite effect, making them feel worse, since reading about how good it could be really drives home the point of how bad it is. For example, it's a little jarring when characters get called "gay" and "fag" and the first few times you don't realize it's not being used as an insult. But the reason all this is done is so the author can clear away all the pre-existing expectations of what a gay teenager has to go through in high school, so he is free to write a simple story about what a high school romance would theoretically be like if our world was like this one.
As a fan of Leonard Cohen's music, I would like to be able to rate his poetry higher. I am of the opinion that he is one of the best songwriters of his generation, however (keep in mind that this is the first book of poems by him I have read) I found this to be an overall weak and bloated collection. As one reviewer before me noted, most of these poems do in fact read like song lyrics, and some of the best song lyrics of all time just wouldn't make great poems. It's a different sort of style that requires the singer's voice to complete; I can't help but feel that I would have enjoyed this collection more if Leonard was reading it aloud. There were a few standouts, especially the ones written in free-verse, but you really had to look to find them. There were quite a few couplets, of which I enjoyed none, others were just boring and half finished, and most of the poems felt like filler to me, which is something that I'm not used to seeing in books of poetry. I could have also done without the same repeated caricature drawings of nude women on nearly every page, which no matter unrelated to the poems, gave them some weird overtones, since you constantly see these drawings in your peripherals as you read. That could have been the intention though.
Not sure what happened here, there was a huge drop in quality between this and the first book in the series. I was excited to see this series doing new and innovative things but this second volume relied on tedious shounen tropes. In fact, it draws a bunch of similarities to Bleach, a much older and longer running series, but it's nowhere near as well executed and ends up feeling like it's trying to copy the success of that instead of blazing it's own trail. It also, like Bleach, subjects the reader to a long diatribe about the particular powers these protagonists have, which is only ok if the reader has any reason to have an investment in the characters or plot in the first place, which here is utterly mundane.
I took away a star solely because of the edition. This edition changed some of the poems, including Wishbone, which was the first Richard Siken poem I read, so i noticed right away. The changes made were for the worse, it didn't have that initial sense of desperation that made it flow so well before. Also the introduction should have been left out entirely; it's just a person making these broad statements about what they want the poems to all be about and quoting a bunch of lines from the poems we are about to read anyway. It's just wholly unnecessary, especially since there aren't a lot of poems in here in the first place, and just kind of messes up the mood.