Thursday, February 25, 2010

The Hunger Games - Catching Fire by Suzanne Collins (3 stars)


After the amazing first Hunger Games book, I was looking forward to this one. Unfortunately it is nowhere near as good.

The book begins by tidying up the aftermath of the Hunger Games: life as a 'victor', the victory tour, and Katniss' re-uniting with Gale. All are given fairly boring treatment, with much of it in narrative summary, and missing the sense of urgency for revolution I was expecting from the ending of the first book. Katniss faffs around and Gale, supposedly the rebel, spends the whole novel working in the coal mines being a good little oppressed peon. It wasn't long before I was thinking the only way this book was going to be any good was if they got back into the arena.

Obviously Collins or her editor thought the same thing, and so we end up with basically the same novel but written worse this time. The new arena is reasonably interesting, but not enough to make it a great book. The ending is not bad, but we could have arrived at the same point if Katniss had decided to throw her lot in with Bonnie and Twill, saving us the mediocre plot re-hash.

Despite all that criticism I still quite enjoyed the book, and I hope the third one is a return to form.

3 stars.

Monday, February 22, 2010

The Name of the Wind by Patrick Rothfuss (4.5 stars)


I'm told it's the 'best book ever written' by a friend - better read it then. It is a pretty amazing debut for Rothfuss, I just hope he doesn't leave us hanging for years for the sequel.

The story and characters have some very strong Potter overtones - the whole section of the book at the University where Kvothe, the improverished student, struggles to learn as much as possible despite the interference from his enemies Ambrose (Malfoy) and Master Hemme (Snape), is vintage Rowling.

Kvothe is also a just a tad too awesome for my liking: not only is he a faster learner than everyone else at University and an artificing genius, he is also a musical prodigy, has a photographic memory, is an accomplished actor, is fluent in most languages, and attracts the most beautiful women in the city. The only things that save his character are his arrogance (how could someone like that not be arrogant!), his occasional bad decisions and child-like pettiness, and his complete lack of a clue when it comes to women.

I think Elodin is the coolest character in the book, and I loved it when he gets Kvothe to jump off a roof and watches him splat on the ground.

The explanation of magic (sympathy) is a particularly cool idea, much better than the vague latin bastardisation for spells dreamt up by Rowling.

Not the best book ever written, but pretty good.

4.5 stars.

Sunday, February 14, 2010

Generation Kill by Evan Wright (4 stars)


A friend lent me this after I raved about the HBO miniseries of the same name created by the brains trust behind The Wire (my favourite TV show of all time) - Ed Burns and David Simon. The HBO series is brilliant and, like The Wire, struck me as a brilliant warts-and-all exposé.

I usually don't like reading the book after watching 'the movie', because I find myself inserting scenes from the movie in my head instead of using my own imagination. I felt the same in this case, although I think this is one of the very rare situations where the TV show is as good as, or better than, the book. As an aside: Sgt. Rudy Reyes plays himself in the HBO series!

The full title of the book is Generation Kill: Living dangerously on the road to Baghdad with the ultraviolent Marines of Bravo Company. It was written by a Rolling Stone reporter who travelled with the elite of the American Marines: the Recon Marines that were at 'tippity-tip' of the pointy end of the initial invasion of Iraq.

The marines are all complex characters. Many of them are conflicted and disillusioned, some extremely well educated, while others occasionally fit the mold of stupid killing machines that love war. The latter produced some of the most horrible and memorable quotes:
[Trombley:]"I was just thinking one thing when we drove into that ambush," he enthuses. "Grand Theft Auto: Vice City. I felt like I was living it when I seen the flames coming out of windows, the blown-up car in the street, guys crawling around shooting at us. It was fucking cool."

Tonight he entertains his fellow troops by pacing the tent, reading letters aloud sent by schoolchildren to boost morale. He opens one from a girl who writes that she is praying for world peace. He throws it down. "Hey, little tyke", Person shouts. "What does this say on my shirt? 'U.S. Marine!' I wasn't born on some hippie-faggot commune. I'm a death-dealing killer. In my free time I do push-ups until my knuckles bleed. Then I sharpen my knife."

"They kill hundreds of people, those pilots. I would have loved to have flown the plane that dropped the bomb on Japan. A couple of dudes killed hundreds of thousands. That fucking rules! Yeah!"

[Person:]"I just read that all these pussy pop stars like Justin Timberlake and Britney Spears were going to make an antiwar song. When I become a pop star, I'm just going to make pro-war songs."


In the TV series, the Marine senior leadership appears totally incompetent, they constantly endanger the lives of First Recon in ways that seem astounding. They frequently send the marines into known ambushes and against suspected tank battalions in open-top un-armoured humvees without air or artillery support. In the book the strategy actually gets explained, and the author has a grudging respect for it:
The rationale makes sense when it's explained to me by [General] Mattis after the invasion: The small force [First Recon] races up back roads ahead of the big force rolling behind on the main road. The enemy orients their troops and weapons on the small force (not realizing it's the small one), and the big force hits them where they're not looking for it. It's a trick that works best when you're going up against an army like Iraq's, which has no air assets and bad communications and will have a tough time figuring out that the small force is just a decoy. I admire the plan when Mattis and others explain it to me. And in a way, I'm glad I didn't know about it in advance, because it would have been scarier to remain with Second Platoon. Perhaps this is why they didn't tell the Marines in the platoon about this plan either.


The most depressing part of the book is reading about the continued tolerated incompetence of key officers that constantly endangers everyone's lives, and results in civilian and Marine casualties. 'Captain America' abusing a prisoner and 'Encino Man' calling in a 'danger-close' artillery strike that would almost certainly have killed the platoon come to mind. Thankfully most of the time the other officers and enlisted men can negate the stupidity and incompetence.

Very interesting book and miniseries.

4 stars.

Monday, February 8, 2010

Life of Pi by Yann Martel (4.5 stars)


Life of Pi won the booker prize in 2002, which, sadly, made me nervous about picking it up lest it turn out to be another brilliantly written ramble in need of a plot. When I read this passage I got a sinking feeling the book was going turn into one long boring theological lecture:
The truth of life is that Brahman is no different from atman, the spiritual force within us, what you might call the soul. The individual soul touches upon the world soul like a well reaches for the water table. That which sustains the universe beyond thought and language, and that which is at the core of us and struggles for expression, is the same thing. The finite within the infinite, the infinite within the finite. If you ask me how Brahman and atman relate precisely, I would...

*yawn*. Thankfully the story takes a very sudden and unexpected turn, and is a great read. Pi's interest and connection with the zoo and animals is interesting, makes for great tales, and is a continuing theme through the whole book. I loved the animal psychology and how Pi reasons out his strategy for living in a lifeboat with 'Richard Parker' the Bengal tiger. I also have to admit to being fascinated by the survival equipment in the lifeboat and how Pi puts it to use.

The ending is quite a shock, and very thought provoking. What is the real story? Does it matter? I liked Pi's conversation with the Japanese investigators, and his belligerent defence of the 'better story'. The implication that we should make a leap of faith (even into atheism) rather than have the 'dry, yeast-less factuality' of the agnostic is an interesting message.

4.5 stars