Sunday, March 31, 2019

The Synthetic Man aka The Dreaming Jewels

By Theodore Sturgeon

Horty is just a grade school kid when he gets in trouble for eating ants at school. When his adoptive father finds out, he punishes Horty by shoving him into a closet but accidentally catches the boy's hand in the hinge, severing three of the Horty's fingers. After the man leaves the room, Horty grabs his favorite toy, a jack-in-the-box called Junky and runs away.
Junky is just a toy but the toy has two eyes made of crystal. The crystals look like ordinary glass but are something else entirely. And Horty is bonded to the crystals, as becomes apparent when a thief unknowingly damages the toy and Horty cries out in pain.
Fortunately for Horty, he has fallen in with a small group of carnival people, one of whom recognizes Horty for what he really is, something that Horty himself does not know. And she makes it her duty to protect and educate Horty and hopefully turn him into the human being that he truly is not.

This is such a gratifying story. Horty starts out a weak and defenseless child but he takes satisfying revenge on those who harmed him and those he cares about. It's always nice to see justice rain down on those who deserve it.

Review from Kirkus Reviews.

The Risk Pool

By Richard Russo

The story of a boy and his dad. Ned's dad Sam is unreliable. At one point he was gone for years. He drinks too much and gambles too much and chases women. He can't keep a job. He is jealous and refuses to give Ned's mom, Jenny, a divorce.
But when Jenny ends up in a mental hospital, Ned ends up with Sam, who is an indifferent parent at best. From his dad, Ned learns all about drinking, gambling and shady business.
Jenny eventually is well enough to return home and continue raising her son. Life becomes more predictable but certainly less exciting for Ned once Sam is no longer in charge of him. Though he wasn't well cared for under his father's wings, it certainly was an education in the ways of the world. And Ned becomes quite familiar with some of the more "colorful" characters that inhabit his father's world.

This was a engaging story of a boy learning to understand his errant father and his troubled mother. And of learning how to avoid the missteps that blighted his father's life in so many ways. Good read. And not without its humorous moments:
It was a rare night that did not generate at least one fight in the pool room, and while most of the combatants were either too drunk or too inept to hurt each other much, bystanders were sometimes mangled hideously. My father said if it was just him, he'd let me stay and shoot  to my heart's content, but there was one thing he never wanted to do, and that was report to my mother that I'd been killed in the pool hall.

Review by Publishers Weekly.

The Chisellers

By Brendan O'Carroll

A continuation of the story of Agnes Browne and her family, begun in The Mammy. 
The two oldest children are more of a focus in this story than in the first. The oldest son, Mark, is doing quite well in his job at the furniture factory. But his younger brother, Frankie, has fallen in with a gang of skinheads and eventually steals his mother's money she won playing bingo and runs away to London.
Agnes and the kids have a new home, as the place where they were living is slated to be torn down. So even though problems still have to be dealt with, overall, things seem to be getting better for Agnes and her brood.

This was a pretty good read, a lovely story of a son who stands by his mother and of a son who does the exact opposite and comes to his just desserts.

Review by Publishers Weekly.


The 5th Wave

By Rick Yancey

So aliens have decided to attack humanity. So far they have released four waves of strikes. The first wave took out technology. The second wave was huge tsunamis that attacked coastal populations. The third wave was plague. The fourth wave was assassins whose job is to hunt down the survivors. The fifth wave is to turn the remaining humans against one another. This is done by capturing survivor children and turning them into an army of killers, fooled into believing any survivors they find are either the aliens or are pawns of the aliens and must be destroyed.

This another entry in the teen dystopian novel genre. Our brave young teen heroes are the only ones capable of standing up against the aliens, especially since the author quickly kills off any adults who are left alive.
This is also another entry in the "everyone is a suspect and no one knows who can or cannot be trusted" genre, a common theme in fiction these days.
This is also another entry in the "alien falls in. love with the human" genre.
Nothing that new here, really.

Review from The Guardian.

Thursday, March 28, 2019

The Infinite Sea

By Rick Yancey

Book 2 in 5th Wave trilogy.

This book finds the ragged band of human escapees from the alien's training camp living in a deserted hotel in Ohio. Cassie, Ben, Ringer and the other kids are just barely surviving and living in fear of being spotted by the aliens and their human/alien hybrid killers known as the Silencers.
Meanwhile, Evan Walker, due to his alien enhancements, survived the destruction of the training camp, Camp Haven, and has been rescued by a fellow Silencer, Grace, a girl who actually knew Evan before the alien attack. Evan strings Grace along, trying not to reveal that his sympathies now lie humankind and not the alien overlords. He bides his time for as long as he can but finally  escapes, headed to Ohio and the rest of the kids.
Ringer, one of the more capable kids in the group, is sent out on a mission to find a cave system they read about as a possible refuge for the winter, as the Ohio location is too dangerous. She is followed by Teacup, who was supposed to stay behind. They are both captured by the aliens and Teacup is used as a tool to break Ringer, both physically and mentally.
Evan shows up at the hotel, just in time to warn the remaining kids that the latest arrival, a little girl named Megan, is actually a walking time bomb. Unfortunately, Grace shows up and she is focused on killing everyone in the hotel, including Evan. The kids fight for their survival and manage to escape just as Evan detonates the bomb that was attached to Megan and the whole building is destroyed, including anyone left inside.
Back at the alien base, Ringer is getting to know her attendant, Alex, who she calls Razor. She gradually converts Alex to her side and together they plot their escape. Which will be made much easier by the biological implants the aliens have installed in Ringer's body, against her will. Together she and Razor bust out of captivity and steal a helicopter and little Teacup.
But you can't trust anyone and Ringer soon finds herself betrayed and captive once again.

The first book was depressing. This one is even more so. There is a lot of brutality and people getting beat up and hurt and killed. I found it to be way too violent for me to enjoy. I also find combat uninteresting and usually skip those parts, of which there are so many in this story. I doubt very much that I will read the third book in the series. I only read this one because I bought it when I bought  the first book. My mistake.

See also a review by The Guardian.