Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Monster Island: Re-edit


I will start off this post by saying that I loved everything about this novel. The way that it was formatted as a blog post per chapter so that it was open to the public, the chapters short and easy to read with good basic story writing and interesting characters was brilliant. I say this because this is the first time and only time I've ever heard of anything like that and it had the talented writing to back it up. That was the first step David Wellington did right when tackling such a project as a zombie based novel. I'm implying that a zombie novel is difficult because there isn't much one can do that has not been done already. We have almost seen every angle that can be taken of zombies including to inside of the zombie itself. However, David cleverly found a loophole by writing from the point of view of a kind of hybrid between undead and human. This way not only are we getting the suspense of trying to live through the zombie apocalypse as a human in an infested world but also trying to "live" in an infested world with humans trying to kill you. We also get the opportunity to theorize what exactly it would feel like to be zombified with dying tissue, organs, and muscle matter since we live through the experience as the character does. The very fact that Gary medically kept his brain in tact during the transformation so that he kept some of his humanity because the hope of surviving completely human was slim to none, was a genius piece of plot that, in my opinion, made this novel.

The blog posts themselves are interesting because, as I said, they aren't significantly long. A reader can easily get through 10-11 chapters within an hour if they're hooked and I'm sure the majority will be. We're in the day and age where we have seen almost anything and crave for the new. In fact, this might be one of the few novels that the majority of our class actually read instead of skimming it.  Now there are many novels coming out with the "bad guy" point of view, skewing the original stories to make a completely new one with different moral and value sets. This is another such work however it's extra appeal is that it reads like a comic book. At the end of each page is yet another twist that keeps the reader hooked until the next "issue". The characters have very distinct characterizations that make it easy for the audience to picture in their heads and follow their actions even though there aren't any physical pictures of them anywhere. It's hard to help after the first few pages not to have a favorite character that you hope will make it to the end but sometimes die within the blink of an eye. My only wish is that this DOESN'T become a comic. As it is, this novel is extremely interesting because it's the first I've read that reads like a sequential piece and doesn't become one. In fact, to make it one would ruin some of the original texts charm.

Later:  Looking back on all of the works we had read and movies we have watched and things we have discussed in class, I still think that this particular "novel" was one of my favorites.  First off, it's a zombie story which instantly makes it awesome but it is done in such a way that the creatures seem that much more believable.  I absolutely LOVE the online format and I really REALLY wish that more authors did something like that.  It really does make the novel easier to read and easier for us younger generations to get in to.  Is is especially helpful for those kids that struggle with reading just by seeing the amount of pages they have to go through.  In the case of this "book" being in a blog format is that we don't quite realize just how much we are reading.  Also, each post is a new surprise and keeps the audience hooked and sitting on the edge of their seats.  Overall, this is plain and simply well written which is extraordinarily commendable in this day and age where books like Twilight exist.  The revamped monster story done right.  I'm glad to have taken this class JUST because I got to know of this novel's existence, that's how much I appreciate it.  

Monday, April 23, 2012

The Aquatic Uncle

This is by far the WEIRDEST thing I have ever read but then again it is also one of the most interesting.  I would say that I'm not into "fine arts" thinking where everything is so abstract that you feel as if you're floating through an acid dream but I wouldn't necessarily say that this story is like that.  Sure, the names are extremely weird and the creatures are on that border of "real" and "alien" but the over concept behind them is in direct correlation to our beliefs in evolution.  Who knows, maybe it was and it just seemed alien to us because the story took place from the prospective of creatures in the midst of change.  The only logic going against that theory is the fact that it was evolution sped up by thousands of years.

You could tell this story was a satire on our own society much in the same way that Animal Farm is quite obviously a satire.  The themes and morals of peer pressure and society making you want to think that the newest is the best.  What captivates me the most in the story is the fact that there is an obvious favoritism for every species to think this way.  Wanting to go backwards through evolutionary process just seems dumb and no one thinks that way.  In fact, Qfwfq automatically assumes that Lll would want to stay a land creature and is very confused when she actively pursues the old uncle to learn the ways of the water. There are so many old morals that could be contributed to this story which makes this odd setting run parallel to that of a fairy tale.  For instance, "you always want what you can't have" and "you never know what you have until you've lost it".  "Listen to your elders" seems just a tad too obvious but it's there none the less.

In the end, I enjoyed how simple the message was among the weird names and creatures.  In a way it brought the most basic ideas out into the open without us being tripped up by the notion of "well they are human characters so this is all must be more complex because that's how humans are".  There are so many times when we are having discussions analyzing literature that I just want to scream out STOP just because people read way too far in to things.  That is especially true if the story revolves around a human character.  Sometimes just taking the human factor out of the story makes the design of it simpler, easier to follow and therefore more enjoyable to read.  I guess, all in all, I am just saying that I appreciate this story exists and I have read it.  Will I read it again?  Most likely not but at least I have.

American Gods

First and foremost, Neil Gaiman has been one of my favorite authors since I first picked up Good Omens back when I was a wee little sophomore in high school.  There was this really old book store in Savannah that had some really interesting titles and for some reason that was the book that called out to me.  Then I started reading it and I couldn't put it down.  I was laughing after almost every other page, attempting to also explain to the rest of my family at dinner just what made it funny.  Granted, Terry Pratchett put his fair share of his humor in that particular work but that doesn't take away from the brilliance that was the concept behind the story.  When you read more of Neil Gaiman's work it is much easier to see what he had contributed to Good Omens that made it the brilliant novel that it is.  Most, of course, is his extraordinary knowledge of mythology from all over the world.  However, there is knowledge and then there is what you do with that knowledge which leads to what I believe puts Gaiman above most authors.

You see, it is easy enough to use old stories of mythology and especially when those stories are often told and popular.  We could all retell some variation of the Hercules story or the Merlin story or the Pandora's box story because they have been circulated so much in our childhood via movies or the American education system.  Now, we see books like the Lightning Thief where the author assumes that we haven't had these stories already shoved down our throats and retells it as if it's their own.  This includes a few twists like "oh it's the Greek gods' children" but it's still the same basis.  It's a retelling of a classic story passed down through ages.  What Neil Gaiman does with mythological tales is that repurposes them.  A fine line exists between the two but they are different all the same.

Retelling the story is just as it sounds, nothing really changes other than maybe the location and a variation of the initial tasks that main characters were once given.  The same characters are there and they interact with the same people and basically stay within their own story.  Repurposing a story is taking the guts of it (such as the morals and the character development) and mixing it in with a completely new situation that normally would have never happened.  Most of Neil Gaiman's characters aren't just from one culture which in the end influences a specific character's design. The most amazing aspect of that happens when the different character's interact since it brings out their character flaws which is result of the myth's culture.  American Gods which is in relation to Anansi Boys is one of the best examples of this since you have everything from African to Irish lore figures that exist in the same plane because of America being the "melting pot".  In this world, it's plausible to have a leprechaun and Anubis to breathe the same air.  That is genius and to that sir I commend you.

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

His Dark Materials: The Golden Compass

In brief replacement of The Magicians by Lev Grossman which I will post about in the very near future, I decided that I'll read one of the other novels within the same category that I really enjoyed and highly recommend for everyone to read once for it's really interesting concepts and characters. I will also later update on The Black Magician trilogy by Trudi Canavan because even though it was listed under "heroic journey" I still believe that it fits very well within "spiritual education". I think it's a little obvious that I really enjoy these kind of books. With that being said, Phillip Pullman's novel really impressed me for I was going into reading this with a little bit of skepticism. I tend to do that when regarding extremely popular books and yes, that also includes the Harry Potter series (yet another novel fitting within this particular category). I was pleasantly surprised, however, when I found that his writing and theories tickled the philosophical section of my mind. This is especially true since it was recommended by classmates who, in my opinion, did not uphold the same intellectual standards as I did at the time I first read it (eighth grade). One has to wonder if they really "got it" or just wanted to seem smart when the students with higher aptitudes began raving about the book but I digress.

The first concept that quickly intrigued me was the idea of deamons. Auto-correct is telling me it's spelled wrong but it was spelled that way for a reason. Playing off the idea of animal familiars the accompany witches or those of magically spiritual faith, deamons are beings that oft times take the form of an animal or creature that are attached to their human. The deamons form upon maturity will be that of an animal that bests represents their human's core personality. This closely related to Harry Potter's concept of a patronus that will shield the person from harm portraying the creatures that is most identifiable to their personality. Before maturity, the deamon has the ability to change into a form that is most handy at the time. The part I most liked about this is the fact that the deamon can't be more than a certain distance away from their human for they share a kind of bond, almost like an invisible string, that keeps them physically together as well. Children, in this sense, "wear their hearts on their sleeves". However, once that tie is severed the child loses a piece of themselves and inevitably loses their creativity and soul.

I find this to be of a driving factor for learning about one's spirit than the actual golden compass itself that is SUPPOSED to be the catalyst for the plot to move forward. True that with great power comes great responsibility and knowing when to use her special gift is a huge step in Maturity for Lyra but being aware of the big bad world seems to me to be a more important message. Bring aware of the fact that keeping your soul and child-like wonder in tact is more important than abiding by popular society's rules appears to be a better message than "know when to tell people that you can read the special compass of all knowledge". That and the message of is it really safe to be messing with higher beings other than yourself? Is it worth it to break children's innocent souls to find the matter in which to literally kill God? Exactly what forces are we dealing with here? All of these questions that the novel invokes into the minds of the audience is the reason I too began raving about this book to others. I was just disappointed when the two following novels really didn't uphold to the same level the first one did.




The Hobbit

I am a huge fan of J.R.R. Tolkien primarily because his books are what got me to love reading. Before sixth grade, I detested having to sit down and sift through inane things like genre, theme and plot because there wasn't anything particularly exciting about doing that. Also I didn't much get it at the time. However, for some reason The Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit changed all of that for me and I fully believe what helped with that is it's complete submersion of fantasy. Everything about the world of Middle Earth is well plotted out and interlinked which enables the reader to fully submerse themselves into a reality that is not their own and that was something that I sorely needed at that time. I got so hooked in fact that I was able to finish the trilogy AND the prequel story in one month exactly, still retaining most of the information to this day. I have been an avid reader (especially for fantasy) ever since.

I do admit that I read the trilogy first and if there is one thing I could say about Tolkien's writing it would be that it's surprisingly inconsistent. I'm a little surprised that I didn't notice that much of a change throughout the separate books of the trilogy but that most likely is because they were originally written as one super-novel. Even though they pertain to the same universe and include some of the same exact characters and settings, The Hobbit, The Lord of the Rings and even The Silmarillion each have a very distinct way that they were written. The first is read very much like a fairy tale or as if we are listening to Bilbo Baggins recounting his adventures to us himself around a campfire munching on our suppers. The second is an epic journey that has many twists and turns and narrators with much more ground to cover than the first. The third is sadly very much akin to a dry text book of the worlds history down to what star was located where and when. Although the second work is highly entertaining and drags the audience to the edge of their seat, the first is probably the most liked among agile fantasy readers. Yes, the story still takes you on an emotional roller coaster ride but you are aware of the safety net of it just being a story. However, this blanket of comfort might be a personal feeling since I had read the trilogy first therefore knowing that Bilbo had to have lived.

The reading of The Hobbit is almost like reading a good lore tale. I think the best comparison I can put it to is like reading Daughter of the Forest by Juliet Marillier which is completely immersed in Irish myth and folk stories. Even though the book follows a main protagonist with a clear plot, antagonist, climax and resolution it still had the distinct aura of being a legend. If you replaced the figures with that of Ancient Roman mythology it would still have the same feeling about it when reading the novel. That is how I felt personally when reading The Hobbit. It caused me to reminisce on the times my dad would read to me in bed and I had the time to picture the action as if I were watching a movie. It was the same only this time I could read at my own pace with my own voice and still picture it with my own sequential images. In a sense, learning to read this particular novel helped my to learn the fundamentals of good reading techniques in general leading me to always hold a special place for J.R.R. Tolkien's work in my heart. I even own The Silmarillion even though I can guarantee that I will never EVER be able to get past the first twenty pages.

A Wild Sheep Chase

The writing of this novel was a little different than what I'm used to and that could easily be accredited to it being written originally in japanese and then translated to english. With that being said, I really forgot where this was taking place until the text mentioned different locations within Japan. I don't know if this is because I watch and read a lot of stuff from Japan and am interested in their culture therefore didn't find some cultural things out of place but it still stands that I felt like I could submerse into the story fully without the distraction of not knowing foreign contexts. Although, I do not know what the significance of sheep is. Anyways, it marks the beginning of a good novel that can attribute to an array of different people while still conveying the same basic messages.

Within the story itself we find some really interesting characters that are never given full names. I don't know if I like this because it's easier to project our own life ideals and images onto the objects presented to us or if I find it creepy that I'm not given a name to a face. I guess that it helps with the pacing of the book since foreign audiences won't get hung up on Japanese names with too many syllables. Did Haruki Murakami even know that this novel was going to be taken to other countries? I'm sure there was a more psychological reason for excluding real life names. Maybe it has to do with that fact that we will be dealing with forces outside of the realm of reality. When I was researching more about this book I came across the listing of it as a "surreal" novel and in many ways I feel like that title fits the work better rather than horror. I tend to forget it's even supposed to be horror other than some underlying themes that would we call "creepy". For instance, the reappearance of a peculiar sheep in pictures and the distinct feeling that it'll be more important in the end events but we aren't quite sure why would be very unsettling.

What I enjoyed most about this novel, though, is the extreme attention to detail and the author's choice of twisting said detail to become very poetic. His style of writing really does hook the reader by the gills and draw them in to this world where everything that is mundane is also beautiful and mysterious in a way. You can feel the protagonists love and obsession for his new girlfriend's distinctly gorgeous ears or awkwardness of being in a room that he did not feel he belonged in. I began to wish I could see things the narrator did just so that the world was more palpable and easy to touch much like how I feel after watching a Hayao Miyazaki film. What is it about the japanese? Are they born to be that observant?

The Lost Boys

This movie was...interesting...to say the least. It definitely wasn't what I was expecting. The title The Lost Boys makes me think of the characters in the classic novel Peter Pan which gives me the impression that this movie will have a sense of wonder and fantasy to it. That's true, in a way, since we are once again brought into the world of the vampires. Is this some way of subliminally telling us what is extremely popular in our culture when it comes to the fantasy genre? The fact that this is the third blog post I'm making dedicated to a vampire story makes me both happy and a little wary of what we have come to. Especially since the close second are zombies but I digress.

Anyways, the film wasn't as fantastical as I was kind of hoping it would be. In fact, that went right out the window during the opening scene when it showed this normal run down town that had a lot of biker gang influence and very obvious 1980's imagery. Let's face it....not much was very whimsical or naturally mysterious about the 80's. I could have done without a vampire with a mullet. It brought up some new views upon the vampire world, though. Before we were challenged with the ideas of what was morally wrong or right about sustaining one's existence on another being's life force. Now we are also confronted with the overall effects on a society with a group of vampire creatures within it. You can see this just by the overall stand-offish attitude that most of the townspeople exude by their body language or facial expressions. The environment itself has this rough and tumble look about it that you feel like is attributed to the gangs since the camera then pans to the numerous bikers that don't give a damn about what they're doing in retrospect to anyone else.

Later, you then find out that this particular gang also happens to be vampires. What is interesting about this particular group is that they take a complete laissez-faire approach to their status as members of the undead. Having their abilities and lifestyle is a form of power that is used to influence others to do what they want. They don't have to worry about the implications of their actions because that's what they are meant to do. For once we see vampires enjoying themselves for the heck of it...unfortunately for us humans that means using us as their playthings as the character Michael finds out. You know that he knows that they know they are stringing him along even though he semi-willingly goes along with it. On some account, Lestat would have fit right in with these characters but I don't think he would have liked it very much. Even though Lestat in Interview with a Vampire had embraced his sense of being and the implications that came along with it, he still approached situations with a certain sense of decorum. Yes, he played with his meals (that lovely scene with the prostitutes) and showed no remorse for completely dead corpses (waltzing with Claudia's mother) however he always upheld an air of class. The miscreant in The Lost Boys would sooner piss on Lestat's boots.