Book Adaptations

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Every Tuesday over at the  The Broke and Bookish we all get to look at a particular topic for discussion and use various (or more to the point ten) examples to demonstrate that particular topic.  This week’s topic is:

Top ten book to film/tv adaptations

This includes, likes, dislikes and some where I’ve seen the adaptation but not read the book.  Some of these really won’t be a surprise but here goes:

  1. Lord of the Rings by JRR Tolkien – love the books, love the films.  Aragorn *le sigh.  Simple really.  These films are so good and so true to the books.  Yes, of course, some things are not included and some sequences maybe slightly altered, but not by much (to my mind anyway).
  2. Harry Potter – very much ditto the above.  Great books.  Great films.  Although, and I hate to be critical, the last two films annoyed me somewhat – no need to split the book into two and I didn’t like some of the changes.  Just saying.
  3. I am Legend by Richard Matheson.  This is only a short book but it really does have an impact.  It’s a very dark read and frankly is a bit miserable – but it’s supposed to be because you’re supposed to feel how the main protagonist does – and he’s pretty bloody miserable.  I think the film adaptation is a really good film – but it annoys me so much how they changed the ending.  For me, the ending of this book is what really has an impact.  It’s just so unexpected and so good – it gives meaning to the title of the book in fact. Why change it?
  4. Watership Down by Richard Adams. This is a great book and a good film.  Thank Frith.
  5. Bram Stoker’s Dracula. This book is so good and there have been so many adaptations that it would be difficult to list them all here.  My personal favourite is the film with Gary Oldman and Anthony Hopkins.
  6. Frankenstein by Mary Shelley – again, a magnificent book.  Such a conundrum – nurture/nature and who is really the monster here.  It’s difficult to really pin down a favourite adaptation but I really like the one that takes a more comical look, Young Frankenstein.  Brilliantly funny, shot in black and white and surely one of the most quoted films ever – if only by me!
  7. Shakespeare – could there be any more adaptations – I’m sure that somebody somewhere most have checkout if he has the most adaptations ever.  I’ve not read all his plays.   Okay, I’ve read one – which is A Midsummer Night’s Dream – and I’ve watched a few adaptations for this.  Not sure how brilliant they were to be honest – I hold out for a really good one given what can now be achieved.
  8. We Need to Talk About Kevin by Lionel Shriver – this is the sort of book that takes you a little while to get into but, once it sinks its hooks in, you read it with an ever increasing sense of dread/fascination and horror.  Yeah, I wanted more answers from this book – why oh why!  Just why?  The film.  I have mixed feelings for.  I’m not sure that it quite gives the same sense of foreboding as the book and it’s even more gloomy.  They’re both pretty grim to be honest but I think the book had me more hooked.
  9. The Lovely Bones by Alice Sebold.  This is a book that doesn’t resound with everyone but it totally had me hooked. I think, given the way the book grabbed me, it was always going to be a difficult act to follow.  I think the adaptation is pretty good but the book is so much better.
  10. The Outlander by Diana Gabaldon.  A series that is very good to read and an adaptation that is really faithful to the books so far.  Very enjoyable on both counts.

This list could have been a lot, lot longer.  But, 10 it is.  What adaptations have you enjoyed??

Morningside Fall by Jay Posey

Posted On 21 April 2014

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Morningside was my weekend read and the follow up to last year’s Three which I really enjoyed.  If you haven’t read Three then beware of potential spoilers.

Morningside continues more or less where Three left off.  Wren is the new Governor of Morningside and with his mum and his Council struggles to make the right sort of decisions for the inhabitants.  Unfortunately, the Council are not quite as straightforward as they may seem and following a failed attack on Wren’s life Cass has to take action into her own hands.  Without wanting to give away the plot Cass and Wren end up back on the wrong side of the walls facing all sorts of life and death situations and finally coming to the realisation that petty politics and bids for authority are the least of everyone’s worries.

Without wanting to be too negative I didn’t enjoy Morningside as much as I did three which is a shame, but not totally unexpected.  Part of me thinks second book syndrome had popped up it’s ugly head.  Three was really quite unique and so anything that follows won’t have the same impact because the world is now familiar.  And, yet, I don’t think that’s the case for me with this book.  My main issue with this story lies in the fact that Wren and Cass are not really substitutes for Three – they just don’t hold the attention in quite the same way.  Three was such a good character to read about that you definitely feel his loss when reading Morningside.  Plus, to be fair to the author I did have issues with Cass in the first book and they continued to a degree in this one – which I think is more to do with me probably than anything to do with the story.  I just, for some reason, find it difficult to like Cass.  It’s a bit unwarranted and unjustified to be honest.  In the first book I found her a little bit irritating and to be frank my feelings towards her haven’t really changed.  Why, I just really can’t put my finger on it.  The other thing is the whole idea of a city being run by an eight year old.  Okay, it could happen.  However, in the world that Posey has created here with the constant walking on a knife edge fear of death at any given time type of situation – I’m really not quite sure that would cut it.  I simply think that Wren comes across too young, he’s insecure and unsure of himself although he grows in confidence as the book progresses.

On the positive side – which I realise I’ve probably come across as quite critical above  The book does find it’s feet again – it just takes a little time.  We travel back to some familiar territory – where in a number of situations – things have unfortunately deteriorated!  We also have a mystery character who seems to slowly be making his way back to Morningside and we have the slow reveal of another mmm, ‘baddie’ – both these are played in such a way that it leaves a mystery as to who is the good or bad guy in the situation.

On the whole a good read.  Yes, I didn’t enjoy it as much as the first but I’m still interested in finding out how all this ends and the ending of this leaves a perfect set up for the next instalment.

I received a copy of this through the publishers courtesy of Netgalley.  The above is my own opinion.

 

 

Three by Jay Posey

Posted On 12 July 2013

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Just finished reading Three by Jay Posey.

This is a post apocalyptic world where people are all connected through internal ITs (wired).  The world as we know it no longer exists and small pockets of civilisation exist living behind high walls and strong gates.  Protection from the Weirs.  The Weirs are a sort of zombie type creature.  No longer alive or cognisant but with glowing blue eyes, the frantic compulsion to hunt and kill and the ability to communicate through sounds that can only be described as static.

Enter into this world Three.  A lone bounty hunter.  Tough and with killer instincts.  He’s used to living alone and surviving in a harsh world where the phrase dog eat dog is closer to the truth than you would like to think.  He’s brought in his latest find, been paid in hard cash which is pretty rare in these times and is now looking forward to making the acquaintance of some hard liquor to try and help him chill out – the hard cash will certainly help him along on this mission – and he almost succeeds, just starting to bask in the hazy glow verging on drunkenness when a woman in need, with a small child in tow, comes crashing into his life with her pleas for help.  Three isn’t used to caring about others.  He lives by a strict code that keeps him alive and taking on others who are not so finally tuned can frankly mean death in this world.  Cass is the damsel in distress with her son Wren although don’t be fooled into thinking she’s some shrinking violet here because that’s the furthest thing from the truth.  Cass is not innocent, and whilst she may be seeking some sort of last minute redemption for her past actions,  you won’t be in any sort of doubt from fairly early on as to the past life she led.  Basically, Cass is running away from her former life and in doing so has set up a chase which will lead in bloodshed.

Okay, it’s difficult to say too much about the characters without giving things away.  What I can say is that none of the characters are exactly as you think and there are surprises along the way in terms of all of them.  I really enjoyed the way the author kept things back in the story not giving much away and drawing me in with a slow reveal.  I also quite enjoy the fact that he doesn’t hold your hand.  You’re chucked straight in and expected to hit the ground running.  No gentle introduction, no coddling.  After all, we’ve all ready zombie/post apocalyptic books or seen the movies that give us a flavour for this type of world and I think it’s sort of assumed that you’ll pick things up (even if you haven’t you’ll be able to jump on board).  There is a little element of sci-fi thrown in with all the ‘wired’ attributes that people have which mean they can contact each other, access internal time clocks and other such information – it’s all a bit ‘big brotherish’ – I read it almost like people are chipped and so whilst they are able to access certain information it also means they are traceable and ultimately all linked.  I also thought this gave me an understanding of the Weirs – almost like the ‘person’ has died or been taken over, but the body was still alive and running on something else – maybe the strange ‘wired’ connection keeping them going somehow – basically I’m not 100% sure!

I liked the pace of the story.  There’s no messing about or going round the houses.  It’s fast and there’s plenty of action and I think that the author’s use of the whole mystery concerning the characters keeps your attention because you simply have to know what’s going on.

I wouldn’t say the world building is exactly thorough but I didn’t find it a problem.  I got the impression of a world lying in ruins and dust.  Little food or water.  Very few other resources.  People, in most instances, reduced to their very basic self with little pity or self respect for other humans.  There isn’t an over abundance of words here, no flowery descriptiveness.  If a leaf falls from the branch you won’t know, well, there may not be any branches for that matter!  But, I quite like the style here.  To the point and with nothing wasted.

In terms of characters.  I quite like Three.  He’s a good deal more patient than I would have been given the circumstances he finds himself in and in fact shows a completely vulnerable side to his character along with his ninja-kick-ass-building-climbing-knife wielding self.  A bit of a stereotype in that he’s a tough guy who is suddenly compelled to help someone else (who just so happens to be incredibly easy on the eye) but, nonetheless, quite likeable.  Cass.  I liked her, but I also disliked her.  Sometimes she was tough, and quite merciless, she loves Wren, and that much is apparent, she’s lead a very dubious past and is now trying to run away and make things better.  I can live with all of that but sometimes the assumptions she made about Three sort of grated a little, felt a little bit judgemental, which given her own past….  She wanted it all ways.  Throw herself on the mercy of others and then give them a hard time about themselves.  It sort of came across as a little hypocritical on her part – given that she was being a good deal less than honest about who she was – or more to the point what she was involved with and running from (and in the process bringing down upon others).  Basically, I’m all for the strong, tough females but if you’re going to go in that direction then don’t then turn on the ‘female’ switch when it’s convenient.  Put bluntly, Cass was trouble with a capital T.  I’m not saying that she’d not had her share of trouble and hard times but that’s nothing unique in a world this harsh – but, if you look at it objectively – she involved a lot of other ‘relatively’ innocent others in her running, caused a bit of a tide of circumstances. She’s the pebbles in the pond, throw it in and watch the ripples grow.

In terms of criticisms.  I had the obvious mixed feelings about Cass – which I won’t clarify any further to avoid spoilers.  There is very little clarification given about the world portrayed in the book – no explanations for the ability of certain characters – other than that maybe they’ve mutated perhaps?? On top of that I found the action scenes a little jarring – only in that they sort of read a little bit more like a commentary than a description.  I realise that’s probably a bit vague but it was the feeling I had on a couple of occasions – not enough to spoil my enjoyment though.

I enjoyed this book.  I think it’s a great idea that if not totally unique manages to bring something different to the scene.  I liked the tension and suspense that the author achieves.  I also like the fact that he assumes that as a reader you will bring your imagination with you.  I will certainly read other books by this author.

I received a copy of this book from Net Galley in exchange for a honest review.