The Man From Beijing

image Author: Henning Mankell

Publisher: Knopf (2008)

The book starts with a wolf that enters the town of Hesjovallen that is deserted because someone came and murdered everyone. An older man discovers a body in blood, gets in a car accident, and has a heart attack, dying in the process. Enter the investigators Vivi Sundberg that has to figure out who responsible for this Swedish massacre. Then we are introduced to judge, Birgitta Roslin from another town who learns that her grandparents were killed in that massacre. Then we are introduced to these Chinese brothers – San, Guo Si, and Wu, who have to leave their home in China because the landowner has murdered their parents and will come find them to pay a debt. As the book unravels, these three stories are intertwined in a roundabout way that makes the ending anticlimactic.

 As a book club selection, this book was a doozy. Perhaps it was the translation from the Swedish language to English, but I found this book very hard to get into and read. The English was stilted, stiff, trite, too direct, too much the way people don’t talk but should, and not fun or interesting to read. The plot started interesting enough; I thought the author would stay and thrill the reader in the way the story started. I thought this story would be more of a thriller the way it started with each different character section. But as much as each part was necessary to tell all parts of this story, this didn’t work as a whole. It was so damn awkward and blah that I found it so very hard to care. There was social commentary about the Chinese government and affairs which was clunky and bogged down the story; the direction of this tale was on pause as the characters talked about the Chinese government. I was bored to tears. I found myself scanning most of those sections to see what else would happen which was Nothing! I like fiction with current affairs integrated when it’s done well; even Dan Brown made history entertaining and I’m not too enamored with his work. If you are a fan of this author’s work, pick this up. If you are not familiar with Henning Mankell’s work, avoid this and try his other series. As a stand alone work of fiction, The Man From Beijing was weak, uninteresting, and bland.

Freddy’ Krueger’s Tales of Terror: Blind Date

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Author: Bruce Richards

Publisher: Tor (1994)

This is funny – just for fun, I’m going to include the synopsis on the back of this book.

Alicia has it all: good looks, talent and the start of the football team for a boyfriend. Why then is she hanging around with “weird” Evan, the nerd? Evan is the biggest dweeb in school and Alicia feels sorry for him and for all the cruel jokes her friends play, but sympathy only makes it worse. the nicer she is to Evan the more they beat him up. Then Alicia’s friends begin to disappear. A dead cat with its eyes plucked out is found in the trunk of a car and a terrible accident is about to happen. But will it really be an accident?

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The Pretties

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Author: Scott Westerfeld

Publisher: Simon Pulse (2005)

Tally Youngblood is now a Pretty. She meets Zane who makes her feel bubbly. She’s having a blast at a party in which she finds out if she’s a Crim or not and is faced with vague memories when she was an ugly when Croy, an ugly from The Smoke, delivers a package to her. She opens the package and her world turns bogus from bubbly. She and Zane connect and make each other bubbly as they plan to indefinitely leave New Pretty Town and reach The New Smoke. When the Specials track down Tally, her bubbly making days may be over.

As fast and as good a read as the first book in the series, the vernacular was much more in my face: bubbly making, pretty making, sad making, bogus. The first half of the story was annoying because Tally was this pretty head totally lost in herself and a total airhead. Then she becomes bubbly with Zane’s help and she is so much more tolerable. The things that happen to this girl are unbelievable – which only made this story more entertaining the whole way through. The ending was a complete cliffhanger so I can’t wait to start the next in the series, The Specials. Scott Westerfeld is Awesome!!