Showing posts with label science fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label science fiction. Show all posts

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Virals

Author: Kathy Reichs
Genre: Science Fiction/Adventure
Series: Virals (book #1)

Summary
(Note: Since a good synopsis of this book already exists from the publisher at barnesandnoble.com, I copied the following section from that site. My own evaluation of the book starts with the section "Positive Elements.")

Tory Brennan, niece of acclaimed forensic anthropologist Temperance Brennan (of the Bones novels and hit TV show), is the leader of a ragtag band of teenage “sci-philes” who live on a secluded island off the coast of South Carolina. When the group rescues a dog caged for medical testing on a nearby island, they are exposed to an experimental strain of canine parvovirus that changes their lives forever.

As the friends discover their heightened senses and animal-quick reflexes, they must combine their scientific curiosity with their newfound physical gifts to solve a cold-case murder that has suddenly become very hot–if they can stay alive long enough to catch the killer’s scent.

Fortunately, they are now more than friends– they’re a pack. They are Virals.



Positive Elements

Science and technology lessons are woven throughout this fast-paced adventure story. Most notably, the reader learns how sonicators work to remove layers of grunge from an object, how forensics are used to identify a human skeleton, how a person's fingerprint is obtained and then interpreted, and a bit about neuroanatomy. The four friends (referred to as the Virals) are very loyal and protective toward each other. They demonstrate courage and determination as they strive to solve an old murder mystery.


Spiritual Content

Hiram (Hi) is part of a Jewish family, but he does not like accompanying his parents to synagogue. Tory's dad (Kit) took her to church once; she recognized within 10 seconds he had never been there before and they never went back. Tory muses, "I hear the Big Guy's pretty understanding. I hope so." A couple of times, Tory thanks "various deities" when she isn't caught after breaking the law. Another time, she whispers a quiet prayer of thanks, but to whom she is not sure. In a time of distress, Tory thinks "Dear God in heaven!" After recovering from the parvovirus infection, Hiram utters a genuine "Thank God."


Sexual Content

Early in the story, we learn that Tory was conceived when her parents "hooked up" at age 16. She was kept secret from her dad until her mother's untimely death, at which time she was placed into his care.

Tory came home earlier than expected one evening and found Kit and his girlfriend entangled (fully dressed) on the couch. They quickly separate when they see her.

While searching classmate Chase's mansion for clues, the Virals discover that his girlfriend Hannah sleeps overnight at his house when she shows up wearing lingerie.


Violent Content

The Virals are shot at on several occasions. Hi and Shelton use two broom handles to knock a gun out of the hand of a pursuer, and then proceed to knock him out with a blow to the back of his head. The scientist responsible for creating the mutated parvovirus was shot and killed. Hannah shoots at the Virals and accidentally shoots Chase in the commotion (he lives). Tory incapacitates Hannah by whacking her twice in the head with a human bone. When captured at gunpoint, Tory kicks her assailant in the crotch and hits him twice in the head with a rolling pin.


Drug/Alcohol Content

It is mentioned once that Tory is addicted to the caffeine in Diet Coke. Tory's deceased grandparents smoked, but this is a negative memory for her.


Crude/Profane Language

Expletives are disturbingly frequent in this story. There are at least 26 uses of the word "hell"; 16 uses of "damn"; 11 uses of "bastard"' 5 uses of "bitch(es)"; 8 uses of "God" (in vain); and 3 uses of "Jesus" (in vain). The word a** is used 5 times, but it is also used as "kicka**" twice, "jacka**", "Head A**", and "Dr. Dumba**." "S**t" is used twice by itself, but also shows up as "s**tless", "apes**t", "bulls**t" twice, and "Holy s**t." The word "Holy" is also put in front of "hell" and "crap." "Frick" (as in "What the...") is used 3 times and "pissed" is used once.

Kit's girlfriend is described as having "jacked-up boobs."


Other Negatives

Tory doesn't call Kit a "jerk" to his face, but she thinks it. She also sarcastically thinks of stabbing Kit's girlfriend and receiving a medal for it. All of the Virals withhold information from their parents, including their serious illness after becoming infected with the virus.

In their quest to do something good by solving an old murder case, the Virals break laws and disregard adult authority figures. The Virals break into a research laboratory, a library, a lighthouse, and a mansion. When confronted in one-on-one interviews about the lab break-in, the Virals concoct an elaborate alibi and gloat afterward about how successfully they lied about their whereabouts.


Conclusion

The author does a good job making science "cool," and while there is some satisfaction at the end of the story that the Virals are able to use their smarts and their special abilities to solve the mystery, the way they reach their end point leaves a lot to be desired. The excessive, unnecessary use of profanity coupled with the law-breaking, disrespectful tactics makes this a book I cannot comfortably recommend to my children.

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

The Maze Runner


Author: James Dashner
Genre: Science Fiction
Series: (Unnamed) book #1

Summary
(Note: Since a good synopsis of this book already exists from the publisher at barnesandnoble.com, I copied the following section from that site. My own evaluation of the book starts with the section "Positive Elements.")

When Thomas wakes up in the lift, the only thing he can remember is his first name. His memory is blank. But he is not alone. When the lift's doors open, Thomas finds himself surrounded by kids who welcome him to the Glade - a large, open expanse surrounded by stone walls. Just like Thomas, the Gladers don't know why or how they got to the Glade. All they know is that every morning the stone doors to the maze that surrounds them have opened. Every night they've closed tight. And every 30 days a new boy has been delivered in the lift. Thomas was expected. But the next day, a girl is sent up - the first girl to ever arrive in the Glade. And more surprising yet is the message she delivers. Thomas might be more important than he could ever guess. If only he could unlock the dark secrets buried within his mind.

Positive Elements
The boys have done the best they can to create a working society minus adult supervision. There are gardeners, cooks, cleaners, explorers, etc. who answer to the leadership of two primary boys. Teamwork is essential, and the boys work together to solve problems. Difficult decisions are made by a council consisting of the named leaders from each working area of the Glade. Thomas believes that somehow he is partly responsible for the boys' predicament and risks his life on several occasions in order to help them figure out a way to escape. Thomas tells a younger boy that he should never feel bad about crying.

Spiritual Content
The boys know they are being watched at all times by their "Creators" (with a capital C), but I never got the sense that the writer wants us to think the Creators are a pseudonym for God. Though he doesn't remember specifics, Thomas senses that the boys are part of a big experiment.

Sexual Content
When Theresa (the first girl ever to arrive in the Glade) is hoisted from the lift, the boys joke that the medical attendant shouldn't have "first shot" at her. Someone else yells, "I'm next!" The leader of the group warns that anyone touching the girl will spend the night with the Grievers (see Violent Content below) in the Maze. Theresa is able to communicate telepathically to Thomas and the two of them are baffled as to how this can be. At one point, Theresa suggests that perhaps the two of them were lovers before having their memories erased. Thomas is attracted to Theresa, but their relationship doesn't move beyond holding hands.

Violent Content
The biggest threat to the boys' safety comes in the form of creatures called "Grievers" (part animal, part machine). Their bodies resemble a slimy slug, six feet long and four feet thick, with several randomly placed mechanical arms wielding dangerous weapons on the ends. The creatures are more likely to be moving through the Maze at night, and the only protection the boys have against them is that the walls of the Glade close at sunset. If a boy is "stung" by a Griever, he must receive a serum or he will die. After receiving the serum, he goes through an excruciating process known as "The Changing," in which his veins turn green and bruises and red marks appear on his body. He thrashes around in a delirious state as some of his old memories come back to him. A couple of the boys' demeanors change significantly after recovering, and they turn against decisions made by the leaders. Things that Thomas did in their past life particularly bother them and one boy attacks him for it. A leader shoots this boy with an arrow to his cheek and we think he is dead. When it is discovered that this boy didn't die, he is banished to the Maze overnight (only the collar from around his neck is found in the morning).

Theresa arrives with the message that "everything is going to change", and things slowly start to do just that. Most significantly the walls of the Glade stop closing at night, eliminating the community's only protection from the Grievers. Grievers roll into the Glade and take (and presumably kill) one boy each evening before retreating to the Maze. Thomas deliberately gets "stung" in an attempt to bring back any memories that could help them solve the Maze and secure their freedom. During their escape, half of the boys are killed in a bloody battle with the Grievers before Thomas and Theresa find the way to shut them down. In a particularly disturbing scene, a younger boy (Chuck) is killed when he throws himself in front of a dagger meant for Thomas. Thomas had made it his mission to get Chuck safely home to his parents. After Chuck dies, Thomas violently attacks the boy who threw the dagger, rendering him unconscious before two friends pulled him away.

Drug/Alcohol Content
Anyone stung by a Griever receives a serum to counter the effects. The serum is one of many provisions sent regularly to the boys by the Creators.

Crude Language
Newcomers to the Glade are called "Greenies." "Shank" is a derogatory way to address someone (the context implies the so-called is a loser or idiot). The word "klunk" is the oft-used term for excrement.

Other Negatives
The Keeper of the Blood House (the place where animals are slaughtered for food) is a disturbing character who seems to like his job a little too much. He makes few appearances in the story, but at one point after butchering a hog, Thomas sees him sitting in a dark corner gnawing on raw pigs' feet.

One boy who went through "The Changing" decides he doesn't want to go back to his old life after seeing the memories revealed to him. As a result, he willingly sacrifices himself to the Grievers with the hope that his life is enough to turn them away while the others escape (he doesn't tell anyone his plan).

Conclusion
This book was a suspense-filled read, mainly because the story is written from Thomas' perspective. If he doesn't know something, the reader doesn't either. The importance of friendship, teamwork, loyalty and bravery are strong throughout, but the heaviness of the boys' situation coupled with the desperate escape plan and the death of Chuck left me feeling hopeless at the end. [Spoiler Warning] The set-up for the sequel promises more of the same - the reader is led to believe that the kids are rescued from the Creators by a rogue group of adults, only to learn in the epilogue that the rescue is all a ruse to get them to their next trial. If an adult "rescuer" is telling the truth, the kids are part of an elaborate experiment to find those capable of helping discover a cure for a terrible sickness affecting the world (the "Flare"). I am quite certain I will not read the sequel if I learn the tone is similar to this one.






Thursday, November 5, 2009

The House of the Scorpion

Author: Nancy Farmer
Genre: Sci-Fi

Awards: three-time Newbery Honor Award, National Book Award, Michael L. Printz Award for Excellence in Young Adult Literature

Summary
(Note: Since a good synopsis of this book already exists at barnesandnoble.com, I copied the following section from that site. My own evaluation of the book starts with the section "Positive Elements.")

Matt is a clone of El Patrón, a powerful drug lord of the land of Opium, which is located between the United States and Mexico. For six years, he has lived in a tiny cottage in the poppy fields with Celia, a kind and deeply religious servant woman who is charged with his care and safety. He knows little about his existence until he is discovered by a group of children playing in the fields and wonders why he isn't like them. Though Matt has been spared the fate of most clones, who have their intelligence destroyed at birth, the evil inhabitants of El Patrón's empire consider him a "beast" and an "eejit." When El Patrón dies at the age of 146, fourteen-year-old Matt escapes Opium with the help of Celia and Tam Lin, his devoted bodyguard who wants to right his own wrongs. After a near misadventure in his escape, Matt makes his way back home and begins to rid the country of its evils.

Positive Elements

Ultimately, Matt is a boy who wants to do the right thing. Even though he admires El Patron, when he tries to emulate some of his behaviors, he doesn't like the way he feels as a result. He is deeply loved by his caretaker, Celia, and his bodyguard, Tam Lin. Both of them recognize and treat Matt as the human he is.

Spiritual Content

Celia's faith seems to be very important to her. She has a large, glow-in-the-dark crucifix above her bed, along with a picture that Matt finds frightening of Jesus being pierced through the heart with five swords. Matt frequently has, or recalls, conversations with Celia about God or the Virgin Mary. Some of the things she tells him are inaccurate (i.e. the Milky Way spurted from Mary's breast when she first fed Jesus, and a falling star is an angel flying down to carry out orders when God answers a prayer). Celia tells Matt the story of a woman named La Llorona who drowned her children and then out of remorse, drowned herself. She went to heaven and was told by St. Peter that she was a bad woman who couldn't come in without her kids. She ran to hell, but Satan wouldn't let her in either. As a result, her spirit was left to wander around all night and her voice could be heard in the wind calling for her children. Matt recalls this story several times during the book. A priest, calling Matt an "unbaptized limb of Satan," orders him removed from the funeral service for El Viejo. Matt's bodyguard recognizes "the good Lord" as passing him over when it came to musical talent. Matt and Maria discuss the need to be baptized in order to go to heaven, but Maria tells him that since he does not have a soul, he wouldn't go to heaven or hell - he would just cease to exist. Matt reads a book about St. Francis, and finds himself challenged by the saint's practice of accepting and loving all things, and his practice of giving away his possessions. Late in the story, a convent provides refuge for Matt and his friends.

Sexual Content

When the children first discover Matt hidden in Celia's house, they question whether he is her illegitimate child. It is implied from the story that the staff doctor has had illicit relations with several of the women on the ranch. Matt, in a moment of anger, orders Maria to give him a birthday kiss in front of a crowd of guests. His rude treatment of her delights El Patron, who says, "That's the stuff. Make your women toe the line." Matt almost immediately feels remorse for making this demand, but thinks it might be dangerous for Maria if he withdrew the order. We learn that Tom is not Mr. Alacran's son, but Mr. McGregor's after a past affair with Felicia.

Violent Content

Celia keeps Matt inside as a young boy by warning him of chupacabras - monsters that suck your blood and leave you to dry like old cantaloupe skins. Matt smashes a window to get out of Celia's house so that he can play with his newfound friends. He jumps out, not knowing that the broken glass will cut his bare feet. The children rush him to the main house for care, but when Mr. Alacran enters and sees the clone, he throws him outside. Matt is physically and verbally abused by Rosa, one of the servants while he is locked up in a spare room in the servant's quarters. Eventually, Rosa covers the floor in sawdust because she says that is how to keep an animal's pen clean. Matt throws a rotten orange at Tom, hitting him square in the face. He feels peaceful at first, but later feels remorse because he knows the Virgin Mary would not approve. Rosa physically attacks the doctor when he lies about his awareness of Matt's living conditions. Emilia slapped her sister. Tam Lin struck Matt down with a blow to his jaw. In the orphanage, first one boy and then Matt are beaten with a cane by a Keeper (caretaker) to the point of requiring the infirmary.

Drugs/Alcohol

The bulk of this story takes place in a country called Opium on the border between the U.S. and Mexico. Matt grows up on a well-guarded ranch surrounded by the poppies that are used to make the drug. He studies the opium business as part of his homework, and from this learns that opium dissolved in alcohol (laudanum) is a strong drug. Felicia (Tom's mother) is an alcoholic and a user of laudanum. At El Patron's birthday party, alcohol is available in abundance, as well as "water pipes" for those wishing to smoke. Matt sticks his finger into a wine fountain, but determines its taste is not as good as it looks. In an effort to get Maria alone so he could talk to her, Matt decides to steal some laudanum from Felicia in order to kidnap and drug Maria's dog. At a different celebration, Tam Lin gets drunk and Matt is given champagne diluted with lemonade. As the story progresses, Matt becomes violently ill on several occasions and it is revealed that in order to protect him from becoming replacement parts for El Patron, Celia had been poisoning him over time with foxglove and arsenic to make his heart too weak to transplant. One of the boys in the orphanage discusses stealing laudanum from the Keepers in order to "trip out." Matt recalled what this drug did to Felicia and knew he didn't want to follow her example. Some of the boys (Matt not included) drugged the Keepers with laudanum in order to escape the orphanage. Matt was concerned that the amount they had given them may have been lethal. We are not told if this is the case, but the boys are chased by some of the Keepers during their escape. At the wake for El Patron, his family and some staff share a "special" wine that was bottled in the year of his birth 143 years earlier. El Patron intended it to be shared on his 150th birthday, or on his death, whichever came first. However, El Patron had poisoned the wine and all who drank of it died.

Crude/Profane Language

The word "damn" is used four times. Someone is described as a "self-important ass." Mr. Alacran calls his son an idiot. Tam Lin makes a rude (but undefined) hand gesture. "Crot" a curse word used frequently by the boys in the orphanage. "Eejits" are zombie-like people, made that way by a computer chip implanted in their brain. People trying to cross the border either into the U.S. or into Mexico were frequently captured and made into eejits for farm labor. They were very obedient and could only respond to commands (i.e. they would die of dehydration if no one told them to drink water).

Other Negative Elements

While Matt admires El Patron and believes he loves him like a son, he comes to the realization that he was only allowed to exist with his brain intact for El Patron's entertainment (most clones were, at "birth", given an injection of something to blunt their intelligence). He learns that their were other "son" clones like him in earlier years. El Patron's ultimate purpose for the clones, however, was to provide him with new organs in order to extend his life. Rosa is made into an eejit once El Patron learns how she had taken care of Matt. Tom frequently played mean pranks on others, especially Maria. One time he urinated into a bottle and told her it was lemon soda. Another time he attempted to drown her dog in the toilet. He takes Matt and Maria to the hospital to show them a blunted clone who was strapped to a table and thrashing around - he cruelly compares Matt to this boy. A boy in the orphanage moons a Keeper. Tam Lin, when faced with an opportunity to escape the ranch, tells Matt he needed to stay behind to make things right (face the moral consequences) for some bad things he had done in his past. Unfortunately, for him, this meant drinking the poisoned wine even though he strongly suspected it was bad (he warned another bodyguard not to drink it). Matt was very disturbed when he learned this, shouting that Tam Lin was a stupid idiot.

Discussion

I copied these great questions from the barnesandnoble.com page on this book, under the section "A Simon Pulse Guide for Reading Groups":

1) Matteo Alacrán is the clone of El Patrón, the lord of the country called Opium, and lives in isolation until children playing in the poppy fields discover him. Why is he so eager to talk to the children, after he is warned against it? Why is Mariá especially attracted to Matt?

2) Describe Matt's relationship with Celia.Why is she the servant chosen to care for Matt? Celia snaps at Matt when he calls her mama. Then she says to him, "I love you more than anything in the world. Never forget that. But you were only loaned to me, mi vida." Why doesn't she explain the term loaned to Matt? Celia really believes that she is protecting Matt by keeping him locked in her cottage and ignorant about his identity. Debate whether this type of protection is indeed dangerous for him. How does Celia continue to protect Matt throughout his life on the Alacrán Estate?

3) After the children discover Matt, he is taken from Celia and imprisoned in a stall for six months with only straw for a bed. How might prison be considered a metaphor for his entire life? Who is the warden of his prison? Discuss the role of Mariá, Celia, and Tam Lin in helping him escape his prison.

4) Rosá describes El Patrón as a bandit. How has El Patrón stolen the lives of all those living on his estate? Which characters are his partners in evil? Debate whether they support him for the sake of their own survival. Explain what Tam Lin is trying to tell Matt when he says, "If you are kind and decent, you grow into a kind and decent man. If you're like El Patrón...just think about it." Considering that Matt is the clone of El Patrón, debate whether environment influences evil more than genetics.

5) El Patrón celebrates his 143rd birthday with a large party. Though Matt was "harvested," and doesn't really have a birthday, the celebration is for him as well, since he is El Patrón's clone. How does Matt imitate El Patrón's power when he demands a birthday kiss from Mariá? Discuss how El Patrón encourages Matt's uncharacteristic behavior. Why is Mariá so humiliated by Matt's demand? How does Matt feel the crowd's disapproval?

6) El Viejo, El Patrón's grandson and the father of Mr. Alacrán, is a senile old man because he refused the fetal brain implants based on religious and moral grounds. Debate his position. Why does El Patrón consider Mr. Alacrán rude when he mentions El Viejo's religious beliefs? Celia is also a deeply religious person. How is this demonstrated throughout the novel?

7) At what point does Matt realize that Tom is dangerous? He remembers what Tam Lin had told him, "If you didn't know Tom well, you'd think he is an angel bringing you the keys to the pearly gates." How does Tom mislead Mariá? Discuss why Tom takes Matt and Mariá to see the screaming clones. How is this a turning point for Matt and Mariá's friendship? Why does Celia feel that Matt deserves the truth once he has seen the clones?

8) What gives Celia the courage to stand up to El Patrón and refuse to let Matt be used for a heart transplant? What does El Patrón mean when he says to Celia, "We make a fine pair of scorpions, don't we?" Explain why she is insulted by this comment.

9) How does Tam Lin know that Matt's future lies in finding the Convent of Santa Clara? Describe Matt's journey to the convent. What does he discover along the way? Discuss Esperanza's role in helping Matt gain his ultimate freedom — to live as a human.

Some questions that I would add are:
10) Discuss the significance of the fact that Matt displayed musical talent when neither El Patron nor any of the clones before him did.

11) Just what does make us "human"? What makes us "humane"? Discuss how various characters were humane.

Opinions/Recommendation

Overall, I think that in spite of the negative content, this book has a lot to teach the reader about humanity. I appreciate that the use of drugs and alcohol as well as Tam Lin's suicide are not painted in a favorable light from Matt's point of view. For me, Tam Lin's suicide is one of the most disappointing elements in this story. It would have been much more meaningful to see him find redemption. The book definitely reveals the negative consequences of a life filled with power and greed. I think that coupled with a good discussion using the questions provided above, this book gives a mature reader much to think about.