Tuesday, May 15, 2012
Gibson, William: Spook Country
Gibson has been a consistently entertaining and
perceptive commentator on the rise of the present day world governed by computers and electronic devices of various sorts. In a series of short chapters, he introduces various characters whose worlds are intertwined though some of the connections are only apparent in the closing scenes. There is a rather
disturbing background atmosphere about the events
which is mainly a reflection of how pervasive the
surveillance of everyday life by unaccountable
governmental bodies seems to be. Quis custodiet
ipsos custodies is certainly an underlying theme in this well-written book which kept me more than
interested over the period it took me to read it.
Preston, Douglas & Child, Lincoln: Reliquary
A sequel to 'Relic' featuring the same major characters dealing with an apparent recurrence of
the same type of killings that featured in the earlier novel. As well as the scientific details
which one takes on trust, the actual location is as
much below the surface of New York as on it; this is
a reflection of the actual reality with references
to non-fictional source material. Although it is
still a cerebral puzzle, much of the book deals with
the physical both in respect to the chapters dealing
with below ground and to the scenes above ground,
especially the depiction of the protest march and its aftermath. Lengthy but enjoyable.
Anderson, Pamela: Star Struck
The sequel to 'Star' descends into melodrama as it
continues the fictionalisation of Pammy's life. The
two early TV series are mentioned though some of the films are not except for a disguised version of
'Barb Wire' with her marriage to Tommy Lee and the
famous sex tape also featuring before the book takes
a sharp turn into fantasy with a decidedly laughable
ending.
Anderson,Pamela: Star
Yes, it is the celebrated pin-up, actress, icon in a fictitious ghosted biography. Here she is not a Canadian but a Floridian and the years from her first exposure at a football match, thrrough local
celebrity to being the centerfold of 'Mann' magazine
are depicted with relatively little depth and quite a lot of underplayed sexual scenes.
Monday, May 14, 2012
Preston, Douglas & Child, Lincoln: Relic
Starting in the Amazon Basin where an expedition comes to a disastrous end although there is a shipment of collected items, the book tells of the
planned opening of an exhibition at the New York Museum of Natural History where the shipment has been received and stored. A series of gruesome murders threatens the opening of the exhibition which would lose the Museum a lot of money. While the corpses are being examined by a scientist in a wheelchair and a woman finalising her Phd work with their efforts under the eye of a New York detective, Pendergast, an FBI agent turns up because of the similarity of the murders with some in New Orleans some time earlier. He wants to close down the exhibition but is overruled politically. The exhibition is opened but the monster performing the killings runs wild in a scene
of grand guignol proportions before being itself
killed. Full of scientific explanations which I
am sure have been well researched and deft character
studies of the main characters this is a lenghty but
enjoyable read though Pendergast does come across as
something of a superman intellectually. This is the
first but by no means the last of these author's books in which he appears.
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