Posts Tagged ‘ dystopia

Book Review: Flashback by Dan Simmons

Flashback by Dan Simmons. © 2011 Little, Brown & Company. ISBN 9780316006965. Hardback. Science Fiction / Dystopian / Noir. 550 pages. Source: ARC provided by the publishers.

Synopsis: The near future. The United States isn’t so much. There are forty-four states remaining and that number is tenuous. The country is in economic collapse. And a good portion of the population is addicted to a drug called Flashback. With the world in such chaos, who would want to live in it when it’s possible to relive the earlier, better times? You can be with your loved ones who have died, you can once again experience the life that was before The Day It All Hit The Fan. Or, in the case of the flash gangs who run rampant, you can relive the crimes you commit, getting that “rush” without the risk. (Though really there is no risk for the flash gangs because law enforcement is so overrun that frankly the gangs are not a priority.)

It’s in this world that Nick Bottom lives. He didn’t always. He remembers a time before entitlement programs and other outrageous government spending bankrupted his country. A time when serving on the Denver police force meant something. A time when his wife was alive and his son lived with him. And it’s in this life he chooses to exist. Fired from the Denver PD because of his addiction, Nick doesn’t care about much except how to get the money for his next vial of Flashback. So he’s a bit confused when he’s hired to find the killer of Keigo Nakamura, son of the Japanese adviser to Denver. He’s especially confused because the murder happened six years earlier, back when he was a cop, and he was one of the cops on the case. Confused because not only did the case go cold, but because every high-ranking government agency had been called in to find the killer and none were successful. So why in the world would a former cop, current detective, and flashback addict be asked to solve a seemingly impossible case?

Review: Flashback was a difficult novel for me in some ways. The dystopian future is terrifying both because it seemed so real, seemed as if it could easily happen, and also because it was caused by political ideas I strongly believe in. I know the politics have thrown some people off. But there’s a very important thing to remember here: this is fiction. The world represented does not necessarily reflect what the author believes and I think a lot of readers have forgotten that.  Read more

Jennifer

Jennifer works as a production editor for a major publishing company in NYC but will not review any books put out by the company (under any imprint) on this site since that can be considered a conflict of interest. Areas of interest include Robin Hood, pirates, zombies (and horror in general), Beowulf (and other early English literature, though Beowulf has a soft spot in her heart), medieval history, Celtic history and literature, history of diseases, and some odd subjects like bog bodies. She lives in New Jersey with a husband and a cat. You can find her on LibraryThing, Twitter, and Goodreads.

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Book Review: Z by Michael Thomas Ford

Z by Michael Thomas Ford. © 2010 HarperTeen. ISBN 9780060737580. Hardback. Young Adult/Urban Fantasy. 288 pages. $16.99 US. Source: ARC from publisher

• On sale 07 September 2010
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Synopsis
Josh is by far the best zombie Torcher around. At least, he is in his virtual-reality zombie-hunting game. Zombies haven’t existed in the real world in more than fifteen years, and the battle to defeat the devastating zombie epidemic is now the stuff of history lessons. Or so it seems.

When Josh accepts a coveted invitation to join an underground gaming league in the dark, forgotten tunnels of the city, he soon realizes that hunting zombies is not all fun and games. Real blood is spilling, members of the team are disappearing, and the zombies in the game are acting strange. And then there’s the matter of a mysterious drug called Z…

Review
It’s 2032. Antarctica is turning into a rain forest. The oceans are brown, capped with yellow foam. Books, magazines and all things made of paper belong to museums. And 15 years have passed since the great Zombie purge…

In 2017, a mutated strain of the flu caused a portion humanity to be reverted back to the reptilian brain—the part of the brain which is focused on instinctual behaviors such as aggression, dominance, and territoriality—as a primary source. From there, they became zombies and wreaked havoc upon society, finally stopped by a militant group known as the Torchers. Read more

Teresa

Teresa (nom de plume: Torrance Sené) is a self-proclaimed geek, a Janeite, a lover of werewolves and bad-ass angels, an aspiring novelist and an avid book reader who freelances as a web designer. You can follow her on Twitter at @eireannoir.

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