Reviews and Comments

zaratustra

zaratustra@ramblingreaders.org

Joined 1 year, 10 months ago

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Mary SanGiovanni: Thrall (Paperback, 2013, CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Createspace Independent Publishing Platform) 3 stars

Review of 'Thrall' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

I read it until the end? That means I am basically okay with it? I guess?

Thrall is a city where things in various flavors of Spooky happen. These Spooky things aren't very thematically related, they're kind of a mash of various horror tropes reminiscent of a Netflix series. Jesse is going in to face his old demons, with a shotgun.

Adam Roberts: On (Paperback, 2002, Orion Books Limited) 3 stars

Review of 'On' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

What you'd get if you asked Franz Kafka to write a coming-of-age sci-fi novel of the "the Dome is the World" variety.

The majority of the book has the protagonist teenage - that obviously believes the World is not the Dome - having various forms of abuse put upon him. The theories about the Dome never amount to much. Characters often talk past each other rather than to each other.

At some point a Doctor Who comes around and explains the backstory of the premise. Then there's a few more pages, and then the book ends.

Charlie Kaufman: Antkind (Paperback, 2021, Random House Trade Paperbacks) 1 star

Review of 'Antkind' on 'Goodreads'

1 star

good heavens this was painful

the first half of the book is charlie kaufman restructuring the basic woody allen/larry david character for the 21st century: the nebbish yet inexplicably popular with women middle-age white male, integrated with every "beta male"/"soy boy" stereotype to form a hideous creature whose ramblings about paying lip service to "wokeness" while secretly getting off on being humiliated populate roughly three hundred pages

i feel like i felt when i was watching Adaptation, which is to say, what you get when charlie kaufman is not directed towards more fruitful pursuits and away from his primary obsession: charlie kaufman

anyway the second half of the book goes a bit away from that, and in the process, disintegrates into various plot threads that "intertwine", or rather, clip through each other like videogame characters with shitty hitboxes. nothing builds upon anything else - if anything, things subtract from each …