The Book
Ruthless
corporate business and environmental exploitation are nothing new, as
Ron Rash explores in his Shakespearean tale of a lumber company during
the 1920s depression. Pemberton and his wife Serena hatch plots and
dispatch enemies as they lay waste to the forests of North Carolina.
The book starts as it means to go on with the body count clocking off with the outraged father of a young worker girl, Rachel, who has been made pregnant by Pemberton. He confronts the newly-wed Pembertons at the train station and is promptly disemboweled by the husband, urged on by the unfazed and callous Serena.
The Macbeth couple murder anyone who gets in the way of their business empire, whilst trying to harvest every living tree on their land before it can be turned into a National Park.
Serena gains a faithful servant and henchman in Galloway, who she saves from bleeding out when a green lumberjack swings at a trunk and lops off the pointing hand of the foreman instead. He has the useful means of tracking victims through his cloudy-eyed mother, who has the second sight.
Sunday, 26 October 2014
Monday, 13 October 2014
The Maze Runner
"Thomas" is awakened from a metal lift with no memories of his life before and introduced to a new life - an established community of boys that have gradually been brought, via the lift, to a Glade surrounded by an ever shifting maze which contains mutant killer creatures. Instead of a Lord of the Flies type scenario, however, the boys maintain a civilised group with rules and a leadership by elected board in order to stay alive, find a solution to the maze and escape.
It is interesting that the author restricts the group to just boys rather than a mixed society. (Yes "Teresa" is introduced, but only as a means to end the trial). I suppose that if there were girls as well, the group might just have decided not to bother to find a way out and just establish families in the Glade. As the boys have no memories of what they have left behind, they don't know that what they are trying to escape to is better than what they currently have.
Thursday, 9 October 2014
Gone Girl
The Book
Nick comes home on his 5th wedding anniversary to find a crime scene in their house with all the clues pointing to the murder of his wife, Amy; except there is no body. As the police investigation gets under way, the prime suspect becomes Nick, with all the evidence stacked against him. As Nick is telling the first half of the story, the reader wonders whether he is being entirely honest, as it is revealed that he was having an affair.
In essence it is a one trick pony - a big twist that comes not at the end but right in the middle with a change of narrator. This is what drives the narrative on to the end, as a few people I have passed this book on to found it a bit dull until I tell them to just keep going until the middle.
It is difficult to say much more without revealing the twist, but I did find the ending very unsatisfactory. You do not sympathise with or like any of the characters, however, so perhaps the self imposed purgatory that the book finishes on is a fitting finale. It just seems very implausible after all that has gone before.
Nick comes home on his 5th wedding anniversary to find a crime scene in their house with all the clues pointing to the murder of his wife, Amy; except there is no body. As the police investigation gets under way, the prime suspect becomes Nick, with all the evidence stacked against him. As Nick is telling the first half of the story, the reader wonders whether he is being entirely honest, as it is revealed that he was having an affair.
In essence it is a one trick pony - a big twist that comes not at the end but right in the middle with a change of narrator. This is what drives the narrative on to the end, as a few people I have passed this book on to found it a bit dull until I tell them to just keep going until the middle.
It is difficult to say much more without revealing the twist, but I did find the ending very unsatisfactory. You do not sympathise with or like any of the characters, however, so perhaps the self imposed purgatory that the book finishes on is a fitting finale. It just seems very implausible after all that has gone before.
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