Wednesday, June 9, 2010

Speaker for the Dead by Orson Scott Card

Speaker for the Dead
by Orson Scott Card

So, I've read two of Orson Scott Card's books now, and I must say, they are simply amazing! Speaker for the Dead picks up 3000 years after Ender's Game. How is this possible? Well, with some near-light-speed space travel and a penchant for planet hopping, Ender, our hero, has been able to survive thus far. (If this sort of thing interests you, I'd suggest The Forever War, another lovely science fiction novel).

This time, there's trouble with aliens again. Another sentient species has been discovered on one of the colony worlds, and when deaths occur again, all the worlds are thrown into an uproar. Ender is pulled into this from his new role as a "Speaker for the Dead," one who tells the story of a deceased's life, telling the triumphs and downfalls of a person without judging, revealing the full truth of a person's life upon request.

Again, the issue with human nature and the ability to communicate is raised in this book. When is violence the appropriate response? Is it ever the appropriate response? With these new aliens and their strange customs, humans are quick to jump to violence when these other beings do something foreign and frightening. Apparently they haven't learned in the 3000 years after the war with the Buggers. I really love Orson Scott Card's books because they really appeal to the reader intellectually about different ethical issues that just might be applicable to our lives today.

My rating: 10/10

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Ender's Game by Orson Scott Card

Ender's Game
by Orson Scott Card

"'Tell me why you kept on kicking him. You had already won.' 'Knocking him down won the first fight. I wanted to win all the next ones, too. So they'd leave me alone.'" (14).

With these words, Ender Wiggen explains a main fallacy of humans that binds the events of the whole book together. It's really quite understandable, the circumstances for this conversation. Ender has just beaten a bully, one that had him cornered with his gang to possibly beat up Ender. But the bully ends up in such a terrible condition after Ender is done that he has put him in the hospital. Ender couldn't reason with the other, and he felt endangered by the situation, so he resorted to viciously decimating his opponent's will to ever fight him again.

The plot of the story revolves around an Earth united under one government to support the International Fleet to combat the threat of aliens with whom the humans have had two wars with already. In one of these, the "Buggers," as the humans call the aliens, invaded Earth and inflicted much damage on the whole world. The humans decide that a third war is needed, where a fleet will be created to invade the Buggers' own home world to destroy the alien threat. Not once is it considered whether or not there should be greater efforts in attempting to communicate with these Buggers, and the humans have just decided that the best thing to do would be to completely destroy another form of life. Ender's reasoning for beating up the bully is clearly echoed in the adult's thinking, and this line of thought seems perfectly reasonable to us. However, this is exactly the downfall of the human race. This jump to brutality in the face of a perceived threat. True, Ender is a young child when this happens and he proves the purity of his character in the entirety of the book, but does this make the world any less responsible if it succeeds in fulfilling this line of thought and decimating the alien population? It's an interesting moral issue that is brought up in this novel.

Well, the book isn't all about the issue that I mentioned above. I absolutely loved it because it recounts Ender's experiences in Battle School which trains children in combat in ways that we probably have not thought of before. The students at the school are organized into armies upon promotion from being fresh "Launchies" just sent up to the school which is in orbit around the Earth. These armies have commanders and they fight each other in active combat to test the tactical skills of the commanders as well as train the students in how to fight in null gravity. Ender turns out to be a genius, the best tactical mind that the School, and world has ever seen before. His story as he rises up in the School and is trained further is extremely interesting. The world that Card creates and the characters introduced become very real to the reader.

This is clearly a science fiction novel, and I'm clearly a bit biased in judging this book in that science fiction and fantasy are my two favorite genres. However, I believe that many people would enjoy this book, whether or not they read science fiction normally or not. Ender is a character who is easy to relate to and the issues on human nature and moral accountability are very interesting. This was, I think, the best science fiction/fantasy book that I have read all year and the best that I have read in a long time.

My rating of the book: a definite 10/10

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

The Wind Singer by William Nicholson

The Wind Singer
by William Nicholson

341 pages

"The tussle was short but intense. During it, much of the mud on Kestrel's legs was wiped on to the Chief Examiner's clothing. When at last he got a grip on her and tore her off, she let go, and he threw her farther than he intended. At once she sprang to her feet and ran. he made no attempt to chase her. he was too shocked at the sight of his muddy clothes. 'My whites!'' he said. 'The little witch!'" (59).

I absolutely love this book. The characters are wonderfully colorful and have so much personality. The main characters, Bowman and Kestrel Hath and Mumpo all have very well developed characterizations. The book is very clearly fantasy, but the fantastical elements are woven in so naturally, and the world is introduced so well that the reader slips right in to the story comfortably from the very beginning.

The plot follows three children as they oppose the system in the city of Aramanth. In Aramanth, everybody's status is determined by a battery of tests, starting when a child is still in its diapers. Everything depends on the tests, and the color of one's clothing reflects the level of society one is at. White robes signify the highest level possible to be attained. The children run away to try to find the key to bringing back the life of the city, to free the people from the oppressive control of the tests. To do this, they go in search for the voice of the Wind Singer, a mysterious structure at the center of Aramanth which nobody really knows the purpose of.

Although it seems to be a simple book, a smooth read, it leaves much to be thought about. The different aspects of the world created in The Wind Singer prompt the reader to think about how our own world works and gently points out the fallacies of our current mindsets. In the quote above, the Chief Examiner demonstrates that his highest priority is his status, which is symbolically dirtied by Kestrel. She shows a complete disregard for the very thing that the Chief Examiner holds dear, which on further thought is more twisted than it seems. Knowledge and the journey of finding it (learning) has been twisted until it is a mere rat race, a perverse mockery of what it really should be. And we see this in our own lives, the constant preoccupation with grades, people sacrificing their whole lives to try to attain what really isn't that important on further examination.

I would definitely give The Wind Singer a 10/10!

Thursday, April 8, 2010

Quarter 3 Final Blog

The genre that remains for fourth quarter: Nonfiction/Memoir

I've read quite a few genres this year. I even read a mystery (And Then There Were None), something I haven't done in a very long time. Honestly though, my preferences haven't changed. I still really like Fantasy and Sci-Fi. I mean I read The Silmarillion which stifled the overwhelming need to read fantasy for a while, and I read some other books (The Purgatorio and The Paradiso). The Paradiso was really a bore, though. I felt like the entire time, Dante was just giving a lecture on Church beliefs and being righteous and ho hum blahblahblah. I think I tuned out more times while reading that book than any other book I've read before.
Well, after that, I read The Three Musketeers which was really good fun, but I felt like I hadn't read fantasy in AGES. I actually read The Prophecy of the Sisters when I was on vacation, which was slightly milder fantasy. When I got back, I found Silver Phoenix as a new book while I was shelving in the library. I was dying to feed my fantasy fix, so I read through it relatively quickly. I mean Silver Phoenix was really just a normal, iffy quality debut fantasy novel by an author. Wasn't so great, but it did the job.

So, favorite book of the quarter. I think The Three Musketeers wins this title. Apart from fantasy/sci-fi, I think next in line in my favorite genres is Classics. I just love the language and the style they're written in. Just the way the story unfolds is different too. I love it, and unlike The Count of Monte Cristo which I enjoyed very much too, The Three Musketeers is, like I said before, a much lighter story. I really enjoy Dumas' style, and reading The Three Musketeers was a wonderful experience.

Thursday, March 25, 2010

And Then There Were None by Agatha Christie (End!)

So yeah, I finished my first mystery in a very long time! Alright, so that wasn't so bad, I guess. I think that this book was quite suspenseful because of the Little Indian Boy nursery rhyme. I thought Agatha Christie did a pretty good job of keeping it interesting with the twists on how each verse was fulfilled. But, no spoilers right now!

The ending, I thought, was quite good, and ironic. I thought that there was something fishy with the suspects, and I knew it wasn't the last few people left on the island. I just didn't know that it turned out to actually b-oh yeah, no spoilers. ;) I'm not exactly sure if I really like the explanation though. It seemed a little out there, but I didn't think it was terrible out there. It did make some morbid kind of sense, I guess.

Well, then. Here's my final rating of the book then: 9/10 (Yes, I'm still not exactly in love with mysteries. Stubborn ole me)

Thursday, March 11, 2010

And Then There Were None by Agatha Christie (#1)

Pages: 1-108

Wow! I'm actually enjoying a mystery. It's a mystery to me (haha, ok that was a bad joke, I get it) how I've been reading for so long without ever picking up an Agatha Christie novel. I think that this one is very interesting, and I like the style of writing.

So, first off, I really like how it's switching between the different characters' perspectives. With 10 characters, it is a little confusing at first, but a little bit into the book, I had already caught on. With so many different perspectives, the plot really unfolds beautifully. We get a little bit of information revealed at a time, and it's a lot of fun to read.

Next, I do enjoy her writing style. It's easy to read, and a bit of a departure from the kind of language I encountered in The Paradiso and The Three Musketeers. It's much cleaner, and although I hesitate to say that it's modern, it is a bit more up to our time's way of speaking and writing. It's refreshing to read this type of style again, since Silver Phoenix seemed to be just a bit of a stand-in filler between the books I really wanted to read. Silver Phoenix was a bit of a train wreck from the beginning, so I didn't pay too much attention to the author's writing style. I admit that I kind of wanted it to just be over and read it for the story. I'm finding that this isn't the case for And Then There Were None at all. I'm really into the story, and although I do usually bow to the strain of the suspense, I'm doing alright so far!

I'm enjoying this novel, and can't wait to read more!

My rating of the book so far: 9.5/10 (I don't know, but I'm not sure if it's a perfect 10?)


And Then There Were None by Agatha Christie (Begin!)

And Then There Were None
by Agatha Christie

So, one of my goals this quarter is to to read a bit more mystery. If it isn't apparent already, I'm really into fantasy/sci-fi (so much that I was half-contemplating picking up this Star Wars novel I had before I remembered my goal). I honestly can't remember the last time I read a mystery novel. Well, that might be because I always cave in and take a peek (alright, maybe not just a peek) at the end. My willpower can't stand up to the suspense! Anyway, I decided the time for me to read a mystery is long overdue, and I've picked up And Then There Were None. I'm thinking it's a little hard to go wrong with such a famous mystery author (Agatha Christie!) and such a famous work of hers. Well then, let's see how it goes!

Silver Phoenix by Cindy Pon

Silver Phoenix
by Cindy Pon

I'd been on some pretty classical material for a bit (The Three Musketeers), and I was hankering for some fantasy again. So, of course I picked up one of those...wait for it...yes one of those generic "Young Adult Fantasy" books. They tend to be about an inch thick, same size, hardcover, colorful cover, and the same "rebellious heroine" plot lines. Alright, I know, I was desperate, and I took it on an impulse. However, when I started reading, I discovered that this was no ordinary generic fantasy book. In fact, it was a bit of a not-up-to par generic fantasy book. The author failed to develop the plot and characters at consistent rates. So, one section would have a bit of a dull length of character development, and in a mad rush to catch up with the characters, the plot would come roaring back and ended up half-baked and introduced in the wrong place. It was an...interesting experience. Maybe not in a good way. The ending wasn't exactly up to par either, with loose ends that I had been expecting to be tied up, as they usually are in others of this generic fantasy variety. Oh well, it did stave away the blind hunger for some fantasy, though and I'm moving on to something new! So...that's how it went.

The Three Musketeers by Alexandre Dumas (Begin! ...Middle...and the End?)

The Three Musketeers
by Alexandre Dumas

I read The Count of Monte Cristo last year and really loved it, so I thought that reading more Dumas would be enjoyable. I picked up a copy of The Three Musketeers that I had around and started reading it. It didn't disappoint! I actually enjoyed The Three Musketeers even more than The Count of Monte Cristo. It was a bit lighter fare and didn't have such a somber, dark tone that The Count had. I really enjoyed The Three Musketeers, so...that's how it went!

Thursday, February 4, 2010

The Paradiso (#1)

Cantos: (the whole book, but this week): XV-XXXIII

So, Divine Comedy: Finished. Whoohoo! It feels satisfying, I admit. But...I also have to say The Paradiso is just really boring. There's no other way to say it. I'm glad that the Cantos are pretty short, but maybe not even short enough! In The Inferno, there was a lot of Christian morality and ideology being imposed on the reader, but it was actually interesting. The divine retribution made you stop and think and say "Oh! I get it! You're pretty clever, aren't you Dante?" In The Purgatorio, it seemed like there was more Christian ideals being impressed on the reader, but the plot wasn't as enjoyable. Everyone knew that they were going to go to Heaven eventually. But, it's still a pretty good read. However, then next up in the Divine Comedy is The Paradiso. Here, we're hit with full on Christian preaching. I'm Christian myself, but even I admit that this is a bit much...especially since I don't agree with everything that Dante believes in. Every Canto pretty much contains descriptions of the next circle, how wonderful it is, and someone who speaks to Dante about morals. Yeah, Bo-Ring. There's just something about evil and darker topics that makes them just so much more riveting. It's a little strange actually, but that's just how it is, and why The Paradiso really wasn't the greatest book choice. I'm ready to move onto something more exciting.

http://web.njit.edu/~as423/SunRise.jpg

The Paradiso by Dante Alighieri (Begin!) Kind of

The Paradiso
by Dante Alighieri

So, I've made it through The Inferno, The Purgatorio, and The Paradiso, hence the "Kind of" after the Begin! in the title of this post. I always like putting in a picture of the book...so I decided to make this post. Anyway, I thought The Purgatorio wasn't too bad, and since I've read and finished The Inferno, I thought it might be nice to just round off the Divine Comedy and go ahead with The Paradiso.






Thursday, January 14, 2010

The Purgatorio (#1)

Cantos: I-XIV

I'm actually enjoying this quite a bit. But, I like The Inferno a bit more because The Purgatorio just seems to take longer to get to the point. Also, the various ordeals of the sinners striving to reach Paradise are quite creative, but there was just something about the punishments in The Inferno that made it more interesting. I think it's because The Inferno was more extreme, and it was more interesting because we like to read about things that are more brutal, delving into the darker side of things. The Purgatorio is kind of like a normality. The people in Purgatory have to go through ordeals too, but they're eventually going to get to Heaven. They aren't really being punished, but, rather, taught. The prideful must carry heavy stones pressing them down and look at carvings on the floor as they walk to learn how pride is a burden on their souls. It's like divine retribution, but softer. Ehh, I think I like The Inferno better.

I'm also reading a different translation of the work. I borrowed it form the school library, and it is ANCIENT. Well, 40 years old, but the translation is by Henry F. Cary. I think I like the Ciardi translation more. This one doesn't really rhyme and sometimes, the attempt to keep with iambic pentameter seems forced. His word choice isn't quite as striking as Ciardi's. Additionally, the book is set up so that the lines are not broken up into groups of three. I think this is both good and bad. It is good in that the Cantos seem to possess more continuity and don't feel too broken up. However, with all of the line stuck together, I think that it's just a lot for the eye to look through. It's just a block of lines in the middle of the page, and it's a little harder to read.

Overall, though, I'm enjoying The Purgatorio somewhat.


The Purgatorio by Dante Alighieri (Begin!)

The Purgatorio
by Dante Alighieri

First Thoughts: I thought that The Inferno was rather interesting, so I decided that reading the rest of the Diving Comedy would be nice. Well, at least maybe The Purgatorio might be interesting at least. Let's see how it goes!

Thursday, January 7, 2010

The Inferno (#1)

Cantos: VI, X, XI, XIV, XV, XVI, XVII, XX, XXI, XXII, XXIII, XXV

Wow. Some of these Cantos were actually really interesting. Although some of the ones in the Bolgias are quite creative, like the divine retribution of the fortune tellers, I really thought that the punishments for the Violent against God, Nature, and Art were the most painful sounding. Raining fire and burning sands? That's some really strong violence. They literally feel the burn for their crimes.

However, I don't necessarily agree that some groups should be punished. Usurers and moneylenders don't seem to me like a group that deserves their punishment, but Dante's principles are slightly different from our own, so it's understandable.

The Inferno by Dante Alighieri (Begin!--well, kind of)

The Inferno
by Dante Alighieri

First-ish Thoughts: We've read bits and pieces of The Inferno in class, and I thought it was pretty interesting. Dante's logic is quite intriguing, and I thought I'd go back and read the Cantos we skipped. Let's see how it goes! :)