Saturday, April 25, 2015

Dewey's Book 4: The Ocean at the End of the Lane by Neil Gaiman

Several years ago, I managed to snag a ticket to see Neil Gaiman when he was doing a tour for the Ocean at the End of the Lane. Getting to hear him read this book in person was really something - he is pretty darn eloquent. It had the desired effect of getting me to buy it, but for some reason I never quite got around to finding out how the story ends. I had too much on my plate to read, or the books from the library that week were too enticing. Most of all, I think I just didn't want to ruin the memory of the reading in case the rest of the book turned out to be a dud, as some reviewers had hinted might happen. (NB: Ignorance is bliss. Spread the word.)

Today I sat down and read it. In one go. Captivated. It wraps you up in the world he's created of regular people and "varmints" and "fleas" and Hempstocks. A world where people can have a side of the house that only ever shows the full moon, no matter what quarter it should be. A world where an entire ocean can be contained in a pond. And where a property boundary can be life-changing, literally. He introduces us to a homewrecking supervillain named Ursula Monkton. And a new use for old toys. There's bravado. Fear. Mystery of many kinds. And sacrifice. It had my heart pounding and my brain bemused several times.

Good job, Neil. 5 stars.
Dewey's Book #3 :
Y: The Last Man, vol. 6: Girl on Girl

Finishing off my graphic novels today with this one. I'd say this one is a 4.

The trio is taken on board a cargo ship, continuing their travels. But it's a cargo ship with a particular payload and it's wanted by the Royal Australian Navy.The viewpoint on who the evildoers are in this volume is transient --is it Kilina and her crew? Is it the Australian Navy?  Old players from earlier episodes are re-introduced again, with  Alter Tse'elon, the Israeli Army Officer who originally tried to kidnap Yorick , appearing for a brief interlude. And then there is Girlfriend Beth. By the end of this book we are up to date  on how her and Yorick met and why she is in Australia to begin with. .


Dewey's book 2:

Y:The Last Man --- vol 5. Ring of Truth by Bryan K Vaughan and Pia Guerre.

The adventure continues from the last volume. This volume, more than the others, focuses on the female players of the series. In this one we:  meet up with two Beths -- one new, and one Yorick's girlfriend; delve into Hero's backstory some more and how she comes to be with the Daughters of the Amazons; and 355 has to make a difficult choice about which task to give her allegiance to. But the most important revelations in this edition belong to Allison --both the true cause of what may have saved both Yorick and Ampersand from the plague, and a hint that she may have an unsuspected affiliation with one of the groups that has been threatening them.

Great book -- longer than the last one and riveting.
Dewey's Book # 1:

Y: The Last Man --- Safeword


What would be the ultimate in world disasters you can think of? A tsunami? A drastic earthquake? Aliens coming from the planet Boggart and destroying civilization as we know it? All would be horrific, but humans are pretty darn adaptable. While a large portion of the Earth's inhabitants might die, so long as there are at least a few men and women around, eventually humanity could repopulate. In Y: The Last Man, Brian K. Vaughan and Pia Guerra takes the idea of drastic world-changing events and examine the impact of the male half of all of the species suddenly ceasing to exist. All, except for one male capuchin monkey, Ampersand, and Yorick Brown, our affable schmuck of a protagonist. When his mother, a Congresswoman in the American government realizes that her son has managed to survive, an agent of the Culper Ring, going only by 355,  a super-secret agency controlled by the government is assigned to him --- to make sure that Yorick stays alive despite the intentions of various radical groups that have sprung up in response to the crisis . Along the way the two are joined by Dr.Allison Mann, a scientist specializing in bioengineering of human clones
. Together, the trio is making their way overland from Washington, DC to San Francisco, California -- the location of Dr. Mann's laboratory-- in order to figure out why Yorick survived and billions of other males did not.

When we start back up in this edition, the trio has been travelling for a year and a half.and are heading into Colorado. Ampersand is doing poorly, so the trio splits up; 355 and the doc head with Ampersand to the nearest treatment place for Ampersand, while Yorick is left with a Culper agent friend of 355's -- agent 711. After the expected crude jokes on Yorick's part ---seriously, dude? You're insulting the friend of a woman that can kill you in a billion different ways? ---355 entrusts him with one of her guns --and 355 also gives agent 711 the journals she's been keeping while on the trip.  and they take off.  His time with 711 is lifechanging in ways that this reader was not expecting. Later in the volume we are introduced to another militia-based organization searching for control -- the so-called "Sons of Arizona."

Overall, this was a good installment. I'd give it a solid 4 stars.


Friday, April 24, 2015

Dewey's

Tomorrow I am participating for the first time in a read-athon. The Dewey's 24-hour Read-athon to be precise. For my time zone, it will start at 5 AM, Pacific Daylight Savings time. The goal is to do as much reading as possible in 24 hours, much like the title says.

Here are the books I am going to pick from:

The Definites:

Y: The Last Man by Brian K Vaughan et al.. Books 4, 5, 6.

Cinder by Marissa Mayer

The Possibles:

The Ocean at the End of the Lane by Neil Gaiman

Zombicorns by John Green

The Girl who Circumnavigated Fairyland in a Ship of Her Own Making by Catherynne M. Valente

Homicide in Hardcover by Kate Carlisle

Brave New World by Aldous Huxley

Codex Born by Jim C. Hines

Seven for a Secret by Elizabeth Bear

This Book is Overdue: How Librarians and Cybrarians Can Save Us All by Marilyn Johnson

Enders Game by Orson Scott Card

Ready Player One by Ernest Cline

Just One Damned Thing After Another by Jodi Taylor


The Slim Chances:

The Book Thief by Markus Zusak

The Fault In Our Stars by John Green

The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams

We shall see how far I get!


A definition

Compendium: n. 1. a selection, esp. of a variety of games or other objects, in one container. 2. A book containing a collection of useful hints. 3. a summary, abridgement or epitome. 4. A brief treatment or account of a subject. 

Source: Dictionary.com

The Great Compendium: a blog wherein books and other items shall distinctly digested, discussed, displayed or designed as necessary.