Posts Tagged Books

The Time Traveler’s Wife

timetraveler

The movie The Time Traveler’s Wife has been heavily promoted on television these last couple of weeks, featuring frequent commercials with the sweeping cliche music and generic romantic drama scenes. I can’t say that the trailers appealed to me. I thought it was too reminiscent of a bad Nicholas Sparks adaptation with a touch of fantasy added. However, I recalled that the book which it is based upon was heavily praised, and that Brad Pitt and Jennifer Aniston quickly snapped up the rights to it. I decided why not read it before it comes out to see if it will be any good? I mean, the movie has Rachel McAdams and Eric Bana, even if the book totally blows, I’ll still see the movie.

What happened is that I quickly demolished the book, reading it in a span of a few days, even though I was extremely busy. Should have been studying for my summer session finals in microeconomics and business management, but it was not time wasted. The Time Traveler’s Wife is a modern day classic. It has instantly rocketed to the top of my all-time favorite novels. This is the perfect summer read. It has its comic moments, and certainly its fair share of steamy romance. However, this lighthearted and sizzling frivolity is weighted by the underlying tragic nature of the novel, the overall literature-like quality, and the well-written and well-researched text from the first-time author.

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The Gunslinger: The Dark Tower I

Roland and his hawk, David, along with his fellow young gunslingers.

An image from "Gunslinger Born," a graphic novel based on the Dark Tower series. From rollingstone.com.

The Gunslinger is not an easy book to read. Of course, I knew this after reading the pages before the actual story. The introduction by Stephen King offers an interesting look at how he developed the idea of his Dark Tower fantasy epic and how he revised it. He admits that the first couple of books had inconsistencies, and that the action doesn’t pick up until later in the series. I think it’s quite perceptive of him to realize his errors.

The opening of the book has no dialogue; it is just pages of a gunslinger’s observation of his desert environment. I must say that I casually glanced over that part until the fun started. However, it didn’t get interesting until the gunslinger title character, Roland, began revealing his past. His childhood stories, and as well as his experiences in the Western-like town of Tull, are the most fascinating parts of The Gunslinger. His journey across the endless desert in pursuit of the mysterious man in black is by contrast tiring and slow.

The Gunslinger gives out less answers as to what’s going on than “Lost” does. I was left scratching my head as to who the man in black is, why he is important, why is Roland searching for some Dark Tower, what is the Dark Tower, and why does Roland think the man in black knows anything. Only a few of these questions get answered, and it left me feeling uncommitted to the series because I didn’t know what was going on, and I didn’t really connect with the characters.

Roland is not very likable. He is a cold-hearted and detached gunslinger who murders anyone who presents a challenge, even innocent children. Roland also sacrifices something that becomes very dear to him, and without giving it away, it certainly did not make me appreciate Roland. I did fall for the character of Jake though. He is a young boy who was killed in our world, but ended up in Roland’s bizarre world. Jake is brave and quiet, despite all of the trauma and mind-bending experiences he has had to endure. He is much like a boy version of Roland, and they become travel companions after Roland befriends the lonely and confused kid.

The Gunslinger is hard to describe to someone who isn’t familiar with it: it’s a Western, fantasy, horror, science-fiction adventure. The plot is difficult to articulate as well. Overall, the book is hard to trudge through; I can imagine fantasy diehards and Stephen King fans becoming tired of the sluggish progression and confusing environment. It is, however, the first book in the series, so the books can only go up from there. Who knows what lies further in the series? C+

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The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time

Photo from Amazon.com.

     Ashamedly, I had been storing this book along with Life of Pi on the floor of my closet, wrapped in paper for a friend’s birthday. However, I never got around to giving her that present because I forgot the actual date of her birthday, and I didn’t want to look like an idiot, so I kept them. It’s been 3 years, and I’ve fallen out of touch with that friend. I figured it was time to unwrap them and enjoy them for myself.

     So that’s how I finally picked up The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time. I read it in a span of 24 hours, staying up late at night reading it in bed instead of reading my film book. I even read it while I was treading water in the pool. To be honest, the book was rather short and not much of a challenge in regards to difficulty. That doesn’t matter. The story was engrossing and emotional, despite the fact that the protagonist can’t really comprehend what emotion is. Christopher is a seemingly autistic 15 year-old with a knack for math. He takes on the mysterious case of who killed his neighbor’s dog and acts as an investigator, writing down his detective story with help from a teacher.

     Christoper breaks the rules  and pushes his own emotional boundaries so that he can solve the puzzle. In the process, he learns a lot more than what he bargained for as he unearths family secrets and finally discovers who killed Wellington the dog.

     You will feel pangs in your heart as you read Christoper’s story. You can’t really define who the villain is or who you’re supposed to be rooting for other than Christopher, and that’s what makes it wonderful. It gives an intriguing look into the mind of a high-functioning autistic teen while offering up family drama and a mystery. Even though the protagonist is a far cry from the average reader, I found myself relating to him.

      The only disappointing part was the indefinite ending, but even that was sweet. Overall though, the book is a brief read full of twists and heart. It’s the best I’ve read in a long, long time.

Grade: A+

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Is “Twilight” that Brilliant? (Summer Reading List)

Examples of the many pieces of flair surrounding Edward Cullen of Stephanie Meyer’s “Twilight” series.

This week I was on Facebook, searching for buttons to give to my friends as part of the new and improved Bumper Sticker successor, Pieces of Flair. I found a couple of good ones that referenced “Lost” or featured some sort of quirky catchphrase that only I would find hilarious. To my confusion, there were practically a trillion pieces of flair that mentioned the book “Twilight” or just the overall dreaminess of some supposed vampire boy named Edward Cullen. I haven’t been under a pop culture rock for the past couple of years, so when did Stephanie Meyer’s young adult vampire saga explode into mainstream teenage culture? I’ve seen the trailers for the upcoming movie that premieres December 12, 2008, and it looks genuinely intriguing. So far all of the signs are pointing out that I should read the books. After all, I’m constantly on the lookout for a new Harry Potter series. However, I can’t help but wonder at almost 19 years old, have I outgrown such things?

The last Harry Potter book severely disappointed me because of the rambling and over-extended camping trip that Harry and the gang went on in the middle of the book. J.K. Rowling is assuredly a good writer, perhaps the best children’s fantasy writer ever. How can Stephanie Meyer compare? I read the synopsis for “Twilight” on Wikipedia, and it sounds very melodramatic and juvenile, but more mature than the Harry Potter series. I guess I will have to read them to be in the loop, but I’m going to feel very conformist and silly in doing so.

Ashamedly, the book I’m looking forward to the most this summer is Garth Nix’s sixth installment of the Keys to the Kingdom, “Superior Saturday.” It happens to be a children’s fantasy series, and the language is fairly simple. However, the story is so complex and the fantasy world so intricate that I was easily absorbed into the series, even though I started reading it when I was 14. Honestly, the themes and some plot points are a bit on the mature side for the recommended middle schoolers, but overall I’ve found the books to be more engaging, surprising, and intelligent than even the Harry Potter books. I even re-read them today, and they still hold my attention.

Or maybe I should just pick up Ayn Rand’s “The Fountainhead” and “Atlas Shrugged,” two heavy tomes of classic literature that I was inspired to purchase after playing “BioShock” on the Xbox 360, a game surrounding an underwater utopia formed on objectivism. The two are coated in a thick coat of dust on my bookshelf, carelessly stacked along with “Crime And Punishment” and “Jane Eyre,” two other books I’ve never picked up. In my first year of college, I’ve had very little time to read- in fact, the only free reading books I completed were Kurt Vonnegut’s “Slaughterhouse-Five” (excellent- especially since I read it before the book-centered, “Lost” Desmond episode, “The Constant”), Jasper Fforde’s “First Among Sequels,”(I absolutely adore the wacky and intelligent Thursday Next literary detective series) and Stephen King’s “Duma Key” (okay).

However, I think the books that will probably define my summer are the Dark Tower books from Stephen King. Debated by many to be considered his defining works of art, along with “The Stand,” it surely will be amazing. I’m not the biggest horror fan, but I like some of his recent work. Admittedly, “The Stand” happens to be my favorite book- I read it in less than a week last summer. But perhaps the greatest indicator that the books will have an impact on me was when I picked up the first book, “The Gunslinger,” at Borders the other day. I had asked for the series for my birthday, which is in a few days, but I just wanted to read a bit of it in the store. I curiously flipped to the first page, and I was shocked to discover that the first chapter was entitled “On Being Nineteen.” And indeed, in just a short while, I will be 19. The odd coincidence still mystifies me.

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