Sunday, October 13

Micro-Reviews of Books Read, September 2013

   Reviews of books read last month. Again, another all fiction selection
   - in fact, all four novels would be classified as speculative fiction.


   1. "Wool" by Hugh Howey
     <http://www.amazon.com/Wool/dp/1476733953>

   An undisclosed global catastrophe (most likely a nuclear war) has
   made the earth's surface uninhabitable. Survivors and their
   descendants have been forced to live underground in a massive silo,
   which goes down more than a hundred levels. Over many successive
   decades, silo-dwellers divide into classes with specific roles.
   Rules have developed to maintain order in this subterranean, self-
   sufficient society. The ultimate punishment is being banished to
   the surface to clean the silo's viewport, which is a death sentence.
   While most officials are elected, the workers in IT seem to have a
   lot of power. Suspicion builds that the head of IT knows more than
   he's letting on. Some people start questioning things: what is IT
   hiding? Is the wool over being pulled over their eyes? Why?

   This is the first of a three book series, which actually tells the
   middle part of the story so as to not give away too much too soon.
   I found it an enjoyable and well-written start, and look forward to
   reading the rest of the series.


   2. "The Third Policeman" by Flann O'Brien
     <http://www.amazon.com/Third-Policeman/dp/156478214X>

   The story opens with the narrator admitting to taking part in a
   violent robbery and murder. He blames his behaviour on the
   corrupting influence of his former guardian and later best mate.
   After laying low for a while, the robbers decide it's safe to
   recover the stolen goods. Then things take a surreal turn. The
   narrator arrives at a police station that defies Euclidean
   geometry, staffed by policemen obsessed with bicycles and pancakes,
   and who speak in non-sequiturs. The narrator is himself beholden to
   the writings and philosophy of a crackpot named de Selby. Is he
   having a bizarre dream?

   This darkly comical novel felt like a condensed and twisted Irish
   version of Crime And Punishment, or a bit like Franz Kafka meets
   Douglas Adams.


   3. "The Ocean at the End of the Lane" by Neil Gaiman
     <http://www.amazon.com/Ocean-End-Lane/dp/0062255657>

   After attending a funeral, a middle-aged man visits his old family
   home and seeks out his old neighbours. His was an unhappy childhood,
   spent mostly reading books to escape an unloving father, strange
   live-in tenants and a controlling housekeeper. He recounts a magical
   episode that happened when he was seven, involving members of his
   unusual household and some other-worldly neighbours who lived at
   the end of the lane.

   The author has had success writing novels and comics, as well as a
   handful of episodes of TV shows including Doctor Who. This is the
   first novel of his that I've read. Personally, I'm not that into
   magic and fantasy, but I can see why fans like his work. It's a
   well written and engaging short novel.


   4. "The Drowned Cities" by Paolo Bacigalupi
     <http://www.amazon.com/Drowned-Cities/dp/0316056227>

   This is a sequel to "Ship Breaker", set in the future when the
   Earth's climate has changed irreversibly. The United States didn't
   cope well, so China sent peacekeepers to try to restore order. But
   when the Chinese left, competing factions fight to control what's
   left in a brutal civil war. One of the characters from the earlier
   novel, Tool, is a main protagonist. He's an augmented human/dog/tiger
   hybrid, bred for loyalty and fighting on behalf of his master. But
   after his newly-gained freedom, he struggles to find a purpose.
   Should he help war orphan Mahlia rescue her friend from a local
   warlord's band of soldiers?

   This is a sometimes violent but definitely thought-provoking novel.
   It's probably uncomfortable reading for proud conservative Americans
   - surely this could never happen?