Sunday, 2 May 2010

The Kraken Wakes - John Wyndham

Taking refuge in their old holiday home in Cornwall, Mark Watson decides to write a book detailing exactly how human kind has been defeated not by aliens fighting from the sky but from aliens fighting from the deep.

This is the second book this year I have read that has kept me awake at night with an uneasy dread. The way that Wyndham builds up tension is incredible, starting with unexplained fireballs and building up to the almost destruction of the world. By having a journalist tell the story you get enough information to keep you hooked but it isn't bogged down unnecessary exposition (sorry Basil!) There are some genuinely scary moments, especially with the sea tanks and the way that governments ponder and delay while The Kraken Wakes.



"Running, or at least hurrying, figures were still scattering over the Square in all directions, but no more were emerging from the street. Those who had reached the far side turned back to look, hovering close to doorways or alleys into which they could jump swiftly if necessary. Half a dozen men with guns or rifles laid themselves down on the cobbles, their weapons all aimed at the mouth of the street. Everything was much quieter now. Except for a few sounds of sobbing, a tense, expectant silence help the whole scene. And then, in the background, one became aware of a grinding, scraping noise; not loud but continuous."

Sunday, 25 April 2010

Mr Stink - David Walliams

Chloe is an unhappy little girl; bullied in school, picked on by her little sister and nagged by my mum. She decides one day to overcome her shyness and speaks to Mr Stink, the local (smelly) tramp. That one decision will change her life forever.


This book made me love and appreciate Roald Dahl even more; not that this book isn't a well-written, funny, touching tale, but it just lacks some essential, mysertious Dahlness. The characters are good, the horrible mum who is truly repugnant in many ways and the ineffectial dad who lets her bully Chloe. The story bowls along and has some very funny moments and since there will be no more Dahl books this one will do!


"Mr Stink stank. He also stunk. And if it is correct English to say he stinked then he stinked as well. He was the stinkiest stinky stinker who ever lived.


A stink is the worse type of smell. A stink is worse that a stench. And a stence is worse than a pong. And a pong is worse than a whiff. And a whiff can be enough to make your nose wrinkle."





The Host - Stephenie Meyer


The earth has been invaded by aliens. Not little green men firing lasers or blowing up famous monumnets but Souls who take over your body and live your life. Melanie was a rebel, fighting to survive but captured and taken over by Wanderer. However nobody, not the Souls nor Mel's nearest and dearest ever predicted what will happen next.

This story is an interesting take on the invasion story - the point of view is from the alien and just as she is swept up by human emotions, we are swept up and swept along by the story. Wanda is a likable character and her dilemnas are dealt with with and there is something very appealing about a story where it is the human spirit that wins. (hey, I'm human it's bound to appeal to me!) However, my one real complaint is the the tinge of teenage melodrama that hangs over this; the idea that love conquers all is a bit naff to a cynic like me and I did find myself snorting at certain lines! (but like I said I am a cynic!)

Despite that it is a thought-provoking enjoyable read!


"Though there was no sound, there was a change. The atmosphere, which had gone tense at my accusation, relaxed. I wondered how I knew this. I had a strange sensation that I was somehow receiving more that my five senses were giving me - almost a feeling that there was another sense, on the fringes, not quite harnessed. Intuition? That was almost the right word. As if any creature needed more than five senses."


Read more;









Monday, 19 April 2010

Lieutenant Culver is a US Marine reserve called up due to the Korean War. Having survived the horrors of WW2 he struggles with being back in the military life and this is compounded when he is ordered to go on a thirty six mile march.

This is a typical American novel; beautifully written almost poetic, terse and masculine writing and a sparsely written plot. It is a very interesting look at war, after the major conflict how people cope with the continuing horror and monotony of military life. Stryon explores two coping mechanisms through Culvert and Mannix and how men who grew up in a conformist world are finally being to rebel.



"It had all come much too soon and Culver had felt weirdly as if he had fallen asleep in some barracks in 1945 and had awakened in a half-dozen years or so to find that the intervening freedom, growth and serenity had been only a glorious if somewhat prolonged dream."

Read more;
+ http://www.enotes.com/short-story-criticism/styron-william

Sunday, 18 April 2010

The Statement - Brian Moore

Pierre Brossard is a man on the run, condemned to death in his absence for his war crimes during the Vichy reign in Occupied France. He has been sheltered by the Catholic Church but finally, after forty years, his past is catching up with him.

This is a study of old men and how humans manage to survive - survive being on the run and also survive guilt of crimes committed. Brossard is a man not to be hated but pitied, the way he wriggles and contorts in order to stay on the run and also justify his existence; to himself and to his God. It is also a study of power and how people in power can manipulate events.
It is a calmly told story that underlies and emphasises the horror of what happened and what is unfolding in the story.

"Again he saw the stranger coming towards him lifting the briefcase, taking out the revolver. If I had let my guard down after all these years, if I had lost that sense of being followed? But God be thanked, He protected me in the past. I must give thanks tonight at Devotions. But no, I can't stay for Devotions. Some vineyard worker passing above that ravine will see the car. And the police will come here, for this road leads only to the abbey. Get up. Pack."

Read more;

+ http://members.optusnet.com.au/~waldrenm/moore.html

Thursday, 15 April 2010

Auslander - Paul Dowswell

When Piotr's parents are killed by a tank and he is sent to a orphanage he has little idea of how lucky he is to have blond hair and German ancestry. He is adopted by the Kaltenbrauch and is taught how to be a good German. At first he enjoys being part of German, joining the Hitler Youth and dreams of being a Luftwaffe pilot, however he is soon exposed to the reality behind the propaganda and the decisions he makes will change his life forever.
You would think with a topic like World War Two every story has been told and every horror revealed but by telling the story through the eyes of a child Dowswell shows the true horror of what the Nazis did - how they corrupted and warped normal life. He shows how a normal boy can be seduced by the Nazis and the culture of fear and suspicion that permeated German life at that time. Yet this is not a preachy book that you feel you should read but a thrilling story that grips you from the first and only lets you go when you have finished.


"It was a sad, rotten business, not being able to trust people. Anna had always known that she and her family were different. Finding out who else was like them was a dangerous, treacherous game. The Gestapo, they had heard, sent agent provocateurs to catch people out. It was even whispered someone would tell an anti-Hitler joke, and then report you if you laughed, or even report you if you did not report them for telling the joke."

Read more;
+ http://www.pauldowswell.co.uk

Wednesday, 14 April 2010

The Incredible Adam Spark

Adam Spark isn't what you would call lucky. He is eighteen but going on eight and a half. He lives with his sister but she is about to move out and live in Glasgow with her girlfriend. However Adam believes that his luck is going to change when he comes round from an accident and thinks he has superpowers...is he the first McSuperhero?
Alan Bissett is a very Scottish writer (like Gordon Legge in fact) not just in his use of dialect but in his style and love for Scotland in all its (dis)glory. Adam Spark is a rollercoaster ride inside the head of the narrator - and you constantly have to stop and think about what is actually happening and often it is not what Adam thinks. Like Flowers for Algernon you feel a real sympathy for Adam as he struggles with life but there is also gallons of humour as he negotiates his way through growing up in Hallglen. Nobody, not Glasgow yooni students or the H-Glen animals, really escapes Bissett's wit.

"So how did it feel sparky when you were out there using your powers for good not evil? Well im just glad i could do a job for the manager and the rest of the boys. And do you think theres too much pressure on you as the teams star player? No not at all. Im just getting ma head down trying to use ma powers for the benefit of humanity. And if I can help a few friends along the way (shrug) all the better. Sparky you are a true champion. Thanks now if you dont mind im gonnay join the rest of the boys in the bath with the trophy. Absolutely sparky you deserve it. There goes a hero ladies and gentlemen. Away to was his tadger."

Read more;


+ http://www.alanbissett.com/


+ http://www.guardian.co.uk/profile/alanbissett