Saturday, June 18, 2011

Book Review: The Rogue Crew


The Rogue Crew by Brian Jacques

This is the last book in the epic Redwall series. The author Brian Jacques passed away this year, which of course means that he will not be writing any more books. This book is definitely different from past books in this series. It is darker in respect to the villain, a villainous Wearat named Razzid. Razzid is a sea vermin who mercilessly attacks the coasts. He is finally defeated and nearly killed by the sea otters. He is taken back to his island where he slowly heals and builds a colossal ship with wheels, the Greenshroud. He then takes his ship on wheels to attack by sea and by land. He and his crew kill everybeast in his path, whether burning an unarmed old sea otter or crushing unaware hares under the wheels of his monstrous green ship.

In this book, Redwall Abbey is not a main scene. Razzid Wearat does not reach the Abbey until the very end of the book. The Abbey is briefly mentioned here and there, but the action is centered more around the shores of Mossflower with the Long Patrol hares and the sea otters, led by Skor Axehound. This book is also darker because a visitor to Redwall dies by accident. In the other Redwall books, I cannot recall someone dying by accident, especially not in Redwall and especially not near the beginning of the book. The villain is not killed by a warrior either, but by a brave Redwall maid who never held a sword before in her life. There are a few other books where the main villain is not killed by a warrior or is even killed by one of his own, but it does not happen often in this series.

As to be expected of the author, the book is filled with the usual excitement, bravery, battles, food, death, and  finally victory and peace. There are not many riddles, as is characteristic of most of the books. Overall, it is another great Redwall book, the last of these great books.

Sunday, May 29, 2011

Book Review: Dorothy and the Wizard in Oz

Dorothy and the Wizard in Oz by L. Frank Baum

This book takes place after the classic Wizard of Oz tale and is one of the numerous stories about Dorothy and the Land of Oz. An earthquake drops Dorothy Gale and her cousin Zeb, along with an old horse named Jim and a white cat named Eureka, into an underground world where the people are made of vegetables and all the architecture is made of glass. There they meet up with the Wizard of Oz who helps them escape the hostile vegetable people (he's the man on the cover with the piglets). However, they do not escape danger yet as they are attacked by invisible bears and strange creatures wearing wooden wings. They are finally rescued by the Princess Ozma of Oz and continue their adventures in the safety of Oz.

This book is written in a story-telling fashion as though the author were telling the story to children. The adventures the children encounter are ridiculous and entertaining as well as the solutions they find, just what one would expect in a children's tale.

Friday, May 20, 2011

Book Review: Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets


Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets by J.K. Rowling

The second book in the Harry Potter series starts with Harry back at the Dursley's (his "Muggle" guardians) for the summer. An enslaved house elf named Dobby comes to warn Harry not to return, and even gets Harry in trouble to try to keep him away from harm. However, Harry does return (after practically stealing his best friend's dad's magical car), and Dobby's warnings prove true as disaster begins to strike. Worse, Harry is being blamed for the attacks on the "Mudbloods." But the plot only thickens as Harry and Ron discover the truth behind the mystery of the Chamber of Secrets. Who is the attacker? And why does Harry exhibit characteristics of a Slytherin? These are some of the questions answered in this book, but many more must wait for the next.

While the book does not emphasize good moral decisions (seems to be a trademark of the series, more pragmatic than moral), the mysterious plot kept me reading to see who was the real culprit and to see what other details that will help expound on information from the past book and will probably relate to something in the next book to thicken the plot. I would definitely have to say that the plot is the series' finer point. I also loved the ending when Dobby is freed from his slavery by Harry's stinky old sock.

Background info: Apparently, when the master gives his house elf slave a piece of clothing, any piece of clothing, the slave is free.
Book quote:
"Come, Dobby. I said, come."
But Dobby didn't move. He was holding up Harry's disgusting, slimy sock, and looking at it as though it were a priceless treasure.
"Master has given a sock," said the elf in wonderment. "Master gave it to Dobby."
"What's that?" spat Mr. Malfoy. "What did you say?"
"Got a sock," said Dobby in disbelief. "Master threw it, and Dobby caught it, and Dobby - Dobby is free." 

Saturday, May 14, 2011

Book Review: Phantom of the Opera



The Phantom of the Opera by Gaston Leroux

The newest Phantom of the Opera movie doesn’t really do the book justice. Let’s start with Erik, the Opera Ghost. As I recall, I don’t think he was ever once named the Phantom. It is in the title, but throughout the book he was always just the Opera Ghost. He also had nothing gentlemanly about the way he treated Christine. He terrified her and messed with her mind. He behaved every inch the madman he was. The movie portrays him in a much lighter, kinder way than he is portrayed in the book.

Some things to note as to the differences between the movie and book:
  1. The chandelier incident: It did not happen at the end and burn down the opera house. Actually, it happened during Carlotta’s croaking incident. This is also the first performance where the managers sold the Ghost’s opera box since they did not believe that he was real. The chandelier only killed the lady who was in Erik’s box.
  2. The Persian: This a deleted character, however he was actually a very important to the story. The Persian is the man who saved Erik’s life, not Madame Giry. He helps Raoul rescue Christine at the end and narrates the whole ordeal.
  3. Erik’s torture chamber: As I said before, Erik was in no way a gentleman towards anyone, even Christine. At the end, he even tortures Christine. His torture chamber is very effective, and he uses it against Raoul and the Persian, who barely escape death many times in his psychological torture.
  4. Erik’s disfigurement: His whole face was disfigured, described as dead skin, like a corpse. It was not merely half his face. He is also described as having glowing yellow eyes. And he was a madman, not just someone who was angry with his circumstances.
  5. There was no awesome cemetery swordfight between the Ghost and Raoul. However, at the cemetery, the Ghost did topple a large pile of bones on Raoul that knocked him unconscious.


One thing the movie does get right is Erik’s transformation after Christine allows him to kiss him. However, he only kisses her forehead. He ceases his madman behavior, allows Christine and Raoul to leave, and tells the Persian that he is going to stop his insanity. Erik then leaves the opera house and is never heard from again. Christine and Raoul are never heard from again either, since they had to elope (you know, Raoul being from an upper class family and Christine being the daughter of a poor man).


A few of my favorite quotes from the madman:
“Oh, my poor Christine, look at your wrists: tell me, have I hurt them? …That alone deserves death…Talking of death, I MUST SING HIS REQUIEM!”

“But I am very tired of it!...I’m sick and tired of having a forest and a torture-chamber in my house and of living like a mountebank, in a house with a false bottom!”

“But what does this mean?...The wall is really getting quite hot!...The wall is burning!” 
“I’ll tell you, Christine, dear: it is because of the forest next door.” 
“Well, what has that to do with it? The forest?” 
“WHY, DIDN’T YOU SEE THAT IT WAS AN AFRICAN FOREST?”

Friday, April 29, 2011

Book Review: Peter Pan


Surprisingly enough, the Disney classic cartoon version of this book is actually very close to what happens in the book. Of course, there are differences. For example, the father is more of a jerk in the book than in the movie. This is the classic tale of the boy who refused to grow up and shunned everything grown up. Peter Pan wishes to take Wendy back to Neverland to be their mother. Together with her brothers John and Michael, Wendy travels to Neverland. There, they meet the Lost Boys, have adventures of childish proportions, befriend the Indians, and defeat Captain Hook. However, Wendy realizes in horror that John and Michael are forgetting their real mother and are beginning to believe that Wendy really is their mother. They return, against Peter's will, along with the Lost Boys. Peter Pan promises Wendy that he will return every year to take her back to Neverland, but as boys often do, he forgets. When he returns, Wendy is grown up and has a daughter, Jane. Since grown ups cannot go to Neverland, Peter takes Jane instead. And after Jane grows up, he brings her daughter Margaret. And the cycle continues from generation to generation.

If you enjoy Peter Pan, then you might also like its darker sequel - Peter Pan in Scarlet.

Sunday, April 24, 2011

Book Review: Myst: The Book of Atrus



Written by Rand and Robyn Miller, Myst: The Book of Atrus is a novel which tells the tell of Atrus, the main protagonist in the amazingly intricate puzzle computer game Myst (and most of the sequels as well). This book tells the tale of Atrus, from his birth to the meeting of his future wife Catherine (whose name is actually Katran, but oh well). Atrus's mother died right after his birth, and his father will have nothing to do with him. This leaves him in the hands of his kind grandmother who raises him in a barren cleft. Atrus grows up to be inventive, creative, and curious. His grandmother tells him wonderful stories about the people of D'ni, a powerful race of people who were destroyed by one of their own. His life is wonderful. Suddenly, his father returns and demands that Atrus come with him. His father, Gehn, seeks to teach his son the dying art of writing whole worlds into existence. Atrus is excited to learn that he is not only one of the last D'ni but that he also has ability to create worlds from words. However, the more he learns from his father about the art, the more he realizes a frightening truth which will lead him to take drastic measures against his own father.

I have to admit, but I am rather biased about this book. It's a novelization of one of my favorite childhood computer games. Seriously, the Myst computer series are really great puzzle games with beautiful scenery and ambiance, which is reflected in the descriptive writing in this book. Detail is key. Of course, this is not Christian science fiction, and the father, Gehn, often refers to himself as a god, with which Atrus strongly disagrees. The book makes good arguments against humans playing god, although it does not have any other theistic elements to it.

Saturday, March 19, 2011

Book Review: A Book of Dwarfs


Written by Ruth Manning-Sanders and illustrated by Robin Jacques, A Book of Dwarfs is a collection of tales about dwarfs and tiny people from over half-a-dozen different countries. It is a children's book and many of the stories promote hard work and kindness (for those are the type of people these dwarfs tend to reward). In almost all of these stories, the dwarfs are good creatures who use their magical abilities to bless good people who may be poor or have had bad circumstances fall upon them. Among these tales are "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs," "The Cobbler and the Dwarfs," and "The Story of Maia" (probably more well known as Thumbelina). Overall, these stories were very fun to read. In most of these stories, the moral is that if you treat a dwarf well, he will reward you with his riches and magic, but if you anger a dwarf, he will play mean tricks on you. (While writing this review, I had constantly correct myself to write "dwarfs" instead of "dwarves.")

Book Review: The Golden Key and Other Stories


The Golden Key and Other Stories is a compilation of four short stories by George MacDonald. The first of the stories, "The Golden Key," is about a boy who lives on the border of Fairyland. He hears a story about a mysterious key that can be found at the end of a rainbow. One day, he sees a rainbow unlike any other and pursues the key at the end in the depths of Fairyland. However, once he find it, he doesn't know what to do with it or what it unlocks. He then begins his quest, along with a girl about his age, to discover what his golden key unlocks.

The next story, "The History of Photogen and Nycteris," tells the story of a witch named Watho and two children she aquires, Photogen and Nycteris. The witch raises the two completely separate from each other. The boy, Photogen, she raises in the sunlight and teaches him to fear the darkness. The girl, Nycteris, she raises in the darkness and keeps her from the sun. This goes on for years, and the two have grown into young adults now. However, one night, Nycteris escapes from her prison of darkness into a moonlit night. She is amazed by the moon, which she mistakes for the sun, and continues to go outside whenever she had the chance (which is always at night because she's been trained to sleep during the daytime hours). One evening, Photogen becomes curious about the night which he fears so much. He is a mighty hunter, able to conquer anything he can see. That evening, he leaves without Watho knowing, and waits for the night. And who also happens to be out that night? Nycteris. The two meet, and Watho's evil plot begins to unravel as the two realize how they have been tricked.

"The Shadows" is about an old man named Ralph Rinkelmann, who is chosen by the fairies to become their king. They choose a human to become their king to switch up their mundane lives for a while, and they choose him because he is old and soon to die (Seriously? These fairies are cruel). During the night after his coronation, Shadows visit him and implore him to learn more about them. The rest of this story is the interactions between the Shadows and King Ralph and the stories the Shadows tell about their lives.

The last story in this collection, "The Gifts of the Child Christ," was indeed most interesting. This story focuses on a family during Christmastime. The family consists of a father, mother, daughter, and a servant. All except for the very young daughter, the family is self-centered and lack the true meaning of Christmas. The maid, Alice, is soon to inherit a fortune from her dead uncle, and her character takes a change for the worse. The father and mother care little about their daughter, Phosy (her name is actually Sophy, but Phosy is her nickname and most used in the story). On the other hand, Phosy does not realize that she is being ill-treated and continually wishes for the Lord to chasten her, because "Whom the Lord loveth, He chasteneth" and she wants God to love her. Then, circumstances start to upset their plans. On Christmas morning, the family and servant Alice come to realize the importance of Christmas because of Phosy. The story does not present the Gospel or get too deep into theology, but it still has spiritual application.

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Book Review: Green



Green by Ted Dekker is part of his highly allegorical series called The Circle Trilogy (Black, Red, and White). How does that work? Well, this one is called Book Zero, therefore making it possible to have four books in a trilogy. Anyway, this book is both an introduction and an ending to the Circle Trilogy. The purpose of this book is to further mesh together the plot of the other three to the point of creating a never ending, circular plot.

The story continues where White, the last book in the trilogy, left off. Thomas of Hunter (also known as Thomas Hunter, depending on which world he's in at the time) is leading the "albinos" (representing Christians) as they strive to live for Elyon (representing God) as they are persecuted by the Horde (representing unbelievers). As I mentioned before, this series is highly allegorical and you will need to keep your brain in gear as you read it in order to fully grasp the depth of the book. Each book in the series traces through themes in the Bible. Black deals with creation and the fall; Red deals with Old Testament believers; White deals with the church age; and finally Green deals with the tribulation period. However, once you reach the end of Green, there is this sense of eastern mysticism in the sense of the never-ending circle. I know it sounds complicated, but Green, which picks up where White ends, ends where Black begins. Dekker tends to remain vague on some doctrinal issues and leaves them up to the reader's interpretation of the story. It all depends on how much you read into the allegory. Green ends where Black picks up, therefore completing the Circle that makes this series a circle. Altogether, it was interesting to read.

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Book Review: The Shining Company




Around A.D. 600, the Saxons are attacking Britain. The Shining Company tells the story of three hundred Britons, called the Shining Company and hence the title, who take a stand against the Saxon invaders from the vantage point of a boy named Prosper. In a time where the first-born is the only one who gets any real privilege or inheritance, the second-born Prosper wishes to join the king's army and leave to go adventuring. His closest companion is his bondservant Conn, a foreign boy about the same age as himself. When Prosper comes of age, he and Conn leave home to join the king's army, he as a shield-bearer and Conn as a metal smith. For a whole year, they do nothing but train, feast, and overall enjoy themselves. Then they fight in the tragic battle recorded in poem The Gododdin. This historical fiction is filled with stories of ancient Britain, about their ways of life, superstitions, fighting, and feasting.

I have posted two covers for the book. The first cover is the one on the copy I read. I found the other cover when I was searching for an image of the book's cover, and I thought that it was a nice cover. In the story, the white hart has to do with how Prosper got invited to join the king's army.

Monday, March 7, 2011

Book Review: Peter Pan in Scarlet


Peter Pan in Scarlet is authored by Geralidne McCaughrean and is the first official sequel to J.M. Barrie's Peter Pan. I haven't read Peter Pan, but I know the story well from the classic Disney cartoon movie and other books I have read. The sequel starts with Wendy, John, and the Lost Boys from the last book who returned to London, who are now all grownups and most of them with families of their own. They begin to have dreams about Neverland, with objects from Neverland appearing in their rooms after the dreams, and they deduce that something must be wrong in Neverland. But they are now adults, and they lack the faiy dust to fly to Neverland. They search for a baby's first laugh and find a newly born fairy, named Fireflyer, and they discover that the only way to become children again is to wear their childrens' clothes. Now suited with both pixie dust and the bodies of children once again, they head off to Neverland. Upon reaching Neverland, they discover that everything has changed, and Neverland appears to be growing old. I won't tell you anymore because that would be telling. It is a very fun book to read.
Funny snipet:
"Have you been saying your prayers?" she [Wendy]
demanded (a question every bit as scary as a sword waved in your face).
"Well, I haven't been saying anyone else's!"
retorted Peter.