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Book Review: Feed by Mira Grant (Series, #1)

January 25, 2011 3 comments

Bloody RSS feed.Summary:
Adopted brother and sister Shaun and Georgia Mason are part of the first generation to not remember a world without zombies.  The Rising occurred when a cure for the common cold combined with a cure for cancer to create the Kellis-Amberlee virus.  Now everyone has dormant KA cells in their body that can be activated anytime they come into contact with the live virus.  But that’s not all that’s changed.  The Rising led to bloggers becoming the more trusted news source, and Shaun and Georgia are part of the newly important news group of bloggers.  Their big break comes when they’re asked to be part of the media team for one of the presidential candidates, and their new job opens a whole world of intrigue.

Review:
I wanted to love this book.  I wanted it to be a 5 star read.  The world Grant creates is incredibly interesting.  Urban and rural structures designed specifically with zombies in mind.  Taking blood tests just to enter a town or a hotel as a routine part of your day.  The KA virus being in non-zombies as well as zombies.  The whole concept of bloggers rocking the media world.  (I mean, hello, I’m a blogger.  This is a fun idea).  Even though I usually find politics dull in books, the politics in this one were actually interesting since so much of the campaigns revolve around the zombie wars.

So why didn’t I love it?  The characters.  I have serious issues with the two main characters–Shaun and Georgia.  There is a creepy, incestuous vibe rampant around the both of them throughout the book that I don’t feel Grant ever sufficiently addresses.  They are nearly completely inseparable.  Georgia is in her young 20s, Shaun is 19ish, and they still sleep in the same bed together whenever they get the chance to.  In their underwear.  Neither of them has ever dated anyone, in spite of the fact that the presence of zombies doesn’t keep anyone else their age from dating.  The scenes between Shaun and Georgia read like scenese between lovers.  He even puts his hand on the small of her back at one point, something that I’ve only ever had men I’m dating seriously do to me.  Don’t get me wrong.  I can handle incest in a book, but a) Grant skims over it and doesn’t address it and b) it doesn’t seem to serve the storyline here at all.  It’s decidedly odd that in a zombie novel, the part that creeped me out had nothing to do with the zombies.  See what I’m saying?

Overall, the world-building is excellent, but the characterization takes away from it.  If you like reading books purely for the aura of zombie, you’ll enjoy it.  Those more interested in the characters should check out The Forest of Hands and Teeth.

3.5 out of 5 stars

Source: PaperBackSwap

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Book Review: Song of Susannah by Stephen King (Series, #6)

August 10, 2010 5 comments

A bench in a bunch of blue fog.Summary:
The ka-tet faces three challenges: keep the chap from the Crimson King, save Susannah, and get Tower to sell them the rose.  With the help of the Manni, they get the door to open two final times, and it sends Eddie and Roland to Maine to see Tower and Jake, Pere, and Oy to NYC in a final desperate attempt to save Susannah and the chap.  Meanwhile, Susannah must face not only the foreign woman inside her, Mia, but also the figurative demons of her past and her personality in her mind.

Review:
There are elements of this book that are beautiful and quite literary, primarily everything to do with the title.  There are of course two songs about Susannah.  One is immediately evident.  Each chapter ends with a stanza of a song, remarkably like the commala songs sung in the previous book, but of course the content of the stanza references what happened in that chapter.  There’s also a song from Susannah’s past that winds up showing more about who she is and what her life has been than anything else in the books has done.  What makes that beautiful is that it’s just a traditional folk song and wasn’t written by King for her at all.

Of course I’d consider this book a failure if all it did was develop Susannah’s character.  The Dark Tower is about characters and the quest equally.  Thankfully, this entry in the series addresses both.  Various mysteries are addressed such as what the Low Men are, who Mia is, how Pere wound up in a book from another one of the worlds, and more.  Plus a few new mysteries are added.  But in the end the main questions remain: will the ka-tet make it to the Dark Tower and will the Dark Tower fall?

In spite of the well-written action sequences and character development, there is one aspect of this book that rubbed me the wrong way.  King writes himself in as a character, but not just any character.  He is the Crimson King’s opposite.  In other words, he’s the essential good guy.  For some reason when he writes his stories they have an impact on the worlds, so he must stay alive and keep writing the Dark Tower series if the ka-tet is to have any hope.  The whole thing just reads as egotistical.  Plus it forced me out of the story.  I can suspend my disbelief for other worlds, but to suspend it enough to believe that the author is not only vaguely aware of these worlds but also his writing impacts them, well, it leaves you going “huh?” and kind of takes the escapism out of it.  So I skimmed over the parts featuring King and tried to just focus on the ka-tet.  It wasn’t that hard to do, so the King bits definitely didn’t ruin my experience; they just dulled it a bit.

Overall, this is a very good entry into the series.  The characters and the plot move forward, and there are some wonderfully memorable scenes that will stick with you for a long time.  If you’ve stuck with the series and enjoyed it this far, you’ll definitely enjoy this book.

4 out of 5 stars

Source: Borrowed

Previous Books in Series:
The Gunslinger, review
The Drawing of the Three, review
The Waste Lands, review
Wizard and Glass, review
Wolves of the Calla, review

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