Los Libros Mutantes
  • Home
  • Blog
  • Libros
    • La Colonia
    • Forjando la Colonia (LC, libro 2)
    • Breves Historias del Multiverso
    • Así fue como perdí la luz del Sol
    • El Otro Borrador
    • Platalandia
    • Shard of Hope
    • Arcadia
  • Textos
  • Reseñas
    • Los libros que tenés que leer ARCHIVE
  • Contacto
  • Discusión sobre libros
  • Press Kit

Review: The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay, Michael Chabon

3/23/2013

1 Comment

 
The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & ClayThe Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay by Michael Chabon
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This is a great, beautiful, moving book. I could find no flaws in it. It's always interesting, funny, poignant. It's a must-read book for anyone interested in comics, obviously, since it deals with the subject extensively, but also for anyone interested in such varied issues like the life before, during and after WW2; the plight of the immigrants and of those left behind in Europe; the life of women and gays in the pre-60's US; stage-magic, and underneath it all, a profound need to escape it all.

Well-researched and always on point, this is one of the books that, as a fellow writer, you just wish it was you who had written it, but are nonetheless glad that someone else did, so you can enjoy it in full.

View all my reviews
1 Comment

Review: Middlesex, Jeffrey Eugenides

3/23/2013

0 Comments

 
MiddlesexMiddlesex by Jeffrey Eugenides
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This is a beautiful book, full of great images and dialogues, filled with prose that is really, really good.
The characters are great and perspire the truthfulness that comes from writing about one's culture to be seen by the "mainstream", whether it's cultural (as the characters are greek-americans) or sexual.

I couldn't suggest any improvements to the book, since it's really solid, though some of the portrayals border on the charicaturesque, maybe due to stereotypes that are not the author's fault but which undoubtedly have their weight on the reader (the old wise grandmother, the selfish second-generation immigrant, etc).

What I missed, as I was approaching the end, was another look at Cal's adult life. We spent so much time on his grandparents and parents that it seems we barely get to know him/her before the book's over. I guess that's just the way it had to be, since most of life's strongest experiences are when we find out who we are, usually in adolescence. But watching the character cope with his condition was like an afterthought in a book that is, ostensibly, about a rather complicated-to-put-your-head-around theme. So I wished we got more than a glimpse at adult Cal and his relationship with Julie, too.

Overall, a must-read for anyone that likes beautiful prose and quirky characters with a good dose of social commentary on the "Americana" circa 1930-1970.

View all my reviews
0 Comments

Review: Brave New World, Aldous Huxley

3/23/2013

1 Comment

 
Brave New WorldBrave New World by Aldous Huxley
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This is a good book I overlooked far too long due to having a horribly spanish-translated version.

I think it's interesting and really thought provoking given the period in which it was written. It seems it could have been written ten years ago and it still would have been spot-on with most of its social critiques.

Anyone interested in it should also take a look at Guy Debord's Society of Spectacle, since it speaks about much of the same issues.

The book makes you uncomfortable because at some point you start thinking: "maybe this society ain't all bad", while, if you read 1984, you never get that kind of feeling because it's so easy to step into an opposition to the society posited in that book.

The ending is powerful and monstruous.



View all my reviews
1 Comment

Review: Fever Pitch, Nick Hornby

3/23/2013

0 Comments

 
Fever PitchFever Pitch by Nick Hornby
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I haven´t read the other books by Nick Hornby, though based on the scripts of his two movies (High Fidelity, About a Boy) I wanted to read something by him. This is a quirky book, not quite a novel, a bit incomplete for a memoir. I would define it as a love story, though its and unconventional love between a man and football. It is laugh-out-loud funny at times, and it gives a thoroughly honest look at a man's relationships and obsessions.
Not being a big football fan, I could relate to the feelings he has (I just follow the Argentina national team, a constant source of joy and sorrow), and the way in which he tells the story of a country in different decades through one set of phenomena (football, that is) is very interesting. I'll definitely check out his other books.

View all my reviews
0 Comments

REview: The Magicians, Lev Grossman

3/23/2013

2 Comments

 
The Magicians (The Magicians, #1)The Magicians by Lev Grossman
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

This book is interesting, because it could have been awesome. Don't get me wrong, it's a good book, but I can't help thinking that if only the author had taken another turn somewhere, it would be a more poignant meditation on the dangers of growing up and imaginary worlds. As it is, it was great up to the third part, in which it kind of jumps the shark, and when the character is given a way out of the madness he's in, and it seems he has gotten over his childhood fantasy worldview which has brought him only despair, the author makes him forget all of that and jump right in the fray again. Which kinda undermines all the character work he did before. I haven't read the sequel yet, but it seems the author did a disservice to his own work by trying to turn it into a saga, and thus robbing this book of the emotional resonance it could have had. I would rather he had turned this into the best novel it could be, instead of a good novel that sets up even more stuff.

Also, the whole Fillory-as-Narnia is so overdone that it's kinda ridiculous. The magic element is played more or less straight for most of the book, and then WHAM! off to fairy-tale land we go. It doesn't work seamlessly.

All in all, I wish we had gotten to see more of Quentin's life as an adult magician out and about in the world, or taken a different direction at the end. There seemed to be a lot of story to mine from the setting the author created, so running off to Fillory seemed a waste of a good groundwork.

I'll go ahead and read the sequel and see if my opinion is tempered by a new perspective on the saga. Don't get me wrong, this is a good book and you should read it if you like fantasy, but it could have been a great literary work and not just "book 1" in what appears to be an attempt at a "Harry Potter for grownups".

View all my reviews
2 Comments

Review: Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell

3/23/2013

1 Comment

 
Jonathan Strange & Mr NorrellJonathan Strange & Mr Norrell by Susanna Clarke
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This is a wonderful book and one of those few cases in which I was sure I was going to love it even before reading one page.

The amalgam of genres is interesting in itself, but most of all, Clarke manages to make the whole reading consistently entertaining through her tone, which is delightful and funny. It exudes englishness in the manner of Conan Doyle most of all, I think, though it winks and nods at many other authors.

The mythology she sets up is well thought out and interesting in itself. The footnotes are well used and illuminating, and are often the better parts of the chapter they're in.

I also liked that though I knew where the story was going, there are a few twists and turns and things left completely in the dark that I didn't mind at all because the road to getting there was so enjoyable.

Alas, the bad thing about it is that I now long for more books in this vein, and for a more full mythology to be built up from this. The Raven King has got to be one of the more interesting additions to fictional English history that I know of, and would love to read a book about his exploits since his presence is so big and prevalent in this one that it makes one think of him as the unseen third protagonist of the book.


View all my reviews
1 Comment

Review: the well of ascension (mistborn trilogy, book 2)

3/23/2013

0 Comments

 
The Well of Ascension (Mistborn, #2)The Well of Ascension by Brandon Sanderson
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Just when you think you've got it figured out, Brandon pushes one more curtain and reveals a twist or a secret that has been percolating since the first book. His world-building is awesome because of this same reason, because he'll probably keep digging into the same mythology of half-truths he built on the first book. That's why his books seem so organic. Most writers seem to juggle a lot of things and it's harder for them to keep up the tension in sequels to successful books. Not this man, he had it all figured out.
As a fellow author, I'm impressed. Even though this one isn't as good as the first book, in many respects (mainly because the first one reads as a great caper and has more tension), this one didn't have any less of an emotional punch.
I'm anxious to see how he caps it off with the third book, and I've already bought "The Alloy of Law" because I'm addicted by now.

View all my reviews
0 Comments

REVIEW: Mistborn, the final empire

3/23/2013

0 Comments

 
Mistborn: The Final Empire (Mistborn, #1)Mistborn: The Final Empire by Brandon Sanderson
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Mistborn is a great book. I read "The Way of Kings" (a later book by Brandon Sanderson) first and I could see the resemblances: impressive world-building and a magic system that is a "plot system" itself.

It's a great read, with no jarring passages, intense action and though some things were predictable, there were still a few twists I didn't see coming.

As a fellow fantasy writer, hat's off to Sanderson's skills.

View all my reviews
0 Comments

Review: Slaughterhouse Five, kurt vonnegut

3/23/2013

0 Comments

 
Slaughterhouse-FiveSlaughterhouse-Five by Kurt Vonnegut
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This book is full of marvelous phrases. You could quote it forever. But the thing that stands out most of this quite-short book, is the voice of the narrator. Vonnegut shrewdly stands aside from the main narrative, even though ostensibly this is based on his experience of being a POW and the bombing of Dresden. But he just appears at the beginning and the end, kind of framing the narrative in which he uses an absurd character as his protagonist, only implying here and there that he, too, was standing next to him and living much of the same experiences.
The amazing thing is how he manages to make such an anti-war manifesto from a narrative that is so humane and touching, without feeling sorry for himself or pontifying. He uses the absurd to remark on the absurdity of it all, and focuses on both awful and beautiful moments to make it all the more poignant.
Another high point is his use of flashbacks and flashforwards as an actual plot point, making his character go back and forth in time, illuminating different aspects of his story so as not to focus solely on 'the bad parts'.
It's a solid, solid little book, one which leaves you thinking and feeling different while establishing a voice that makes it a very personal affair.

View all my reviews
0 Comments

Otras narrativas: Mass Effect 3

10/29/2012

0 Comments

 
Picture
Shepard y sus aliados, amigos, amores











Mass Effect es una narrativa serial en forma de juego. Es una forma complicada de decir que no es "un jueguito" o un videojuego cualquiera. En mi opinión, amerita pertenecer a una categoría particular de entretenimiento mixto en el que se aúnan las mejores características de varios medios de comunicación.
¿A qué me refiero con esto? ¿Por qué hablar de un juego en un sitio ostensiblemente dedicado a libros?
No voy a decir que la calidad narrativa de esta saga de juegos es equivalente a un Thomas Pynchon o un George R.R. Martin al menos. No. Pero es la conjunción de elementos en estos juegos que lo elevan a un nivel narrativo y emotivo pocas veces alcanzados por entretenimiento alguno.
Voy a intentar explicarme en más detalle, pero primero un poco de contexto para los que no están familiarizados con Mass Effect:



Read More
0 Comments
<<Previous
Forward>>

    Autor

    Alejandro Gamen es el autor de varias novelas, cuentos, artículos y opiniones contradictorias. Actualmente satisface sus necesidades creativas escribiendo varios libros a la vez (de acuerdo a qué lo inspire), desarrolla conceptos de videojuegos y tv mientras se ducha, lee en la fila del supermercado y básicamente invierte una cantidad enorme de tiempo en palabras escritas.



    Categorías

    Todo
    Cine
    Juegos
    Libros
    Mini Rese&ntilde;as
    Reviews
    Tools
    Tv

    RSS Feed

    quotes Alejandro likes


    Goodreads Quotes

    Alejandro's bookshelf: read

    La Colonia
    Neonomicon
    The Eye of the World
    After Dark
    Sputnik Sweetheart
    Historia Del Llanto
    Magick Without Tears
    Marvel Boy
    Cosmopolis
    Screwjack: A Short Story
    The Remains of the Day
    The Color of Magic
    Anansi Boys
    Belgarath the Sorcerer
    The Gathering Storm
    Ender's Game
    2001: A Space Odyssey
    The Year of the Flood
    Rocannon's World
    City of Illusions


    Alejandro Gamen's favorite books »
Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.