Friday, April 23, 2010

Interactive Books on the iPad

image of iPad
I think I just saw the coolest thing to come along in the book reading world! Check out this video of the special iPad version of Alice in Wonderland. In looking a bit more, I also found this cnet article about other interactive book ideas. I have scoffed at using the Kindle, iPad, nook, etc, as substitutes for books for all kinds of reasons: digital form costs same as the book, can't share or trade the book with friends, I like the feel of books in my hands, etc. But if people really start putting effort into books like this, that would change my mind. I think I would begin to feel a toy envy that I have never felt before...

I was talking with some guys at work about this. Imagine interactive maps in fantasy books: showing the path a specific person has taken in the book, touch the name of a town in the text and have the map show you where it is, or show you where armies all are as you progress through the book. Imagine tutorial books about chess or Sudoku: when a challenge is shown, you can try and solve it before the technique is shown, or even a video sequence showing a specific technique. Imagine choose your own adventure books. Imagine mystery books where you can keep track of different clues found throughout the book. Imagine books that you have to solve a riddle or puzzle before you continue just like the actual hero/heroine.

Oh my gravy!

Thursday, April 15, 2010

City of Bones

City of Bones (The Mortal Instruments Series #1) by Cassandra Clare: Download Cover

Published Information

Author: Cassandra Clare
Series: The Mortal Instruments Series, #1
Published: March 2007
Genre: Modern Fantasy
Pages: 496

Ratings

Violence: PG-13 (Fantasy violence, demon blood)
Sexual Content: PG-13 (Teen flirting, kiss)
Language: PG-13 (B and A words used)
Reading Age: High School
Buy Recommend: Borrow (I am only one if family that might enjoy it)
Overall Rating: 6 out of 10 (Imaginative, light read)

Plot Summary

The book is set in an alternate reality where most people have no idea magic and monsters exist, but a small subset of the population can see how the world really is. The normal people are called mundanes, and the sub population are called shadowhunters. The world is populated by humans, underworlders (fairy, werewolves, vampires, etc), and demons. Demons don't belong in our universe, but invade every once in a while. It is the shadowhunters job to remove them to keep the mundanes safe.

As the book begins, Clary and Simon are mundanes who, very quickly, become involved with the shadowhunters world. Clary witnesses a group of shadowhunters, Jace, Alec, and Isabelle, killing a demon, not knowing that she is seeing things no other mundane can see. The shadowhunters are just as surprised when they realize she has seen them. Later, as a demon attacks Clary, the shadowhunters realize Clary is someone special.

The rest of the book is dealing with figuring out who Clary is, and that she is much more involved in the shadowhunter world than anyone at first believed. She holds the information necessary to find a hidden item of power, the Mortal Cup, one of the Mortal Instruments, that allow new shadowhunters to be created.

Comments

I did enjoy this book. It was a quick read and worth the time. It was fast paced and kept me turning pages. There were some points where the book was very predictable, though, and that was a bit disappointing.

As a parent, there are a couple of topics that can be considered offensive, but more importantly should be discussed if you allow your teenagers to read it (Please note, these will include spoilers):

  • One of the characters is homosexual, but isn't open about it. Some of the characters know about it, and it brings in some tensions about relationships.
  • One of the characters grew up in an emotionally abusive home, but believes his parents to be dead. Later, he is reunited with his father, though it turns out his father is the bad guy of the book. But even with that being the case, he still has wanted a father all his life and is willing to overlook (at least for a while) who is father is.
  • One of the main themes of the book is that demons and angels exist. Demons are evil, and angels are fighting on the side of the light. At one point, the main characters need to find some holy weapons. The go to a Catholic church, but have a discussion that they could have gone to any religious sect to find the weapons, since all sects are just the same thing taught from a different culture.
  • Along those lines, one of the characters thinks shadowhunters must be "believers" then, since they are fight evil using holy weapons. That is not the case, and one of the shadowhunters explains that this is just a job that he is good at, and if god does exist, he doesn't care.

Monday, April 5, 2010

Brandon Sanderson

Image of Brandon SandersonI was introduced to Brandon Sanderson's works about a year ago and have loved everything I have read. The first book I read of his was "Warbreaker". I have read through most of the rest of his books (still working through the Alcatraz series...) and am looking forward to others that are coming out. In general, the plots hold your attention, the story lines are believable (assuming you look past that his books are fantasy with magic and fictional creatures...), and his characters are well developed and deep. I usually have a very hard time putting down any of his books. Most of his books seem to target adults and older teenagers (Alcatraz being the exception). As a word of caution with his books, there tend to be a couple of very violent scenes in each of his book that will make most of them PG-13, if not border-line R in the violence category.

One of the most interesting aspects of his writing is that every world he creates in a given book or series has a different magic system. In one series, magic is based on ingesting specific metals and drawing powers from them. In another, you can collect partial "souls" of other people (they can only be passed to someone else voluntarily) and the more souls you have the stronger your magic abilities. In another, glasses that you wear contain different magic properties and the more you collect the greater your array of weapons/tools in your arsenal. And on and on. Often, when reading one of his books, I find myself wanting to read more simply to better understand the system.

Oddly enough, his style of different magic systems in each book is also a pet peeve of mine. In at least one of his books that I read, I felt I was playing a Pokeman game with people leveling up, etc. Along that line, much of the book revolves around the different systems. I would love to see him write a book without a new system. It has nothing to do with not liking his books. I am just curious to see how a book would turn out that had a system that is familiar to most people (or no magic at all) and see him focus all his attention on the storyline or characters. But like I mentioned, that is one of his hallmarks

Two series of books need to be called out as very different from the rest of his writings. First, his work with the late Robert Jordan's "Wheel of Time" series. Before Jordan passed away of cardiac amyloidosis, he worked on completing as much as he could and sharing plot lines with family. After Jordan's passing, Sanderson was selected by the family to finish the series using the notes and details from Jordan. I will eventually re-read that book and get it into my blog. But the point being, this series has a very different feel to it than any of his other books. It seems that Sanderson tried hard to stay true to Jordan's characters and writing styles, and the books (at least the first) match closely with the previous books in the series. That must be a very tough assignment for a writer to build on a series that is so critically acclaimed, but Sanderson did a great job. In the series, this last book is one of my favorites.

The second is his Alcatraz (a youth, not the prison) series. The books are written in a light comical voice. The book is written in a first person style with the "author" being Alcatraz with a pen name of Brandon Sanderson. Then, throughout the book, Alcatraz gives some commentary to the reader. For example, often Alcatraz will tell us how how evil and bad authors are. This is because if you read a book and enjoy it, you feel bad there isn't more to read. If you read a book and don't enjoy it, you feel like you have wasted your time. So the point of reading, no matter how much you enjoy it, is to torment the reader. If you are looking for a serious read, these are not your books. But if you are looking for something light and quick, and don't mind a very interesting sense of humor, these are great.

Bibliography

  • Elantris - 2005 (Stand alone novel, have read)
  • Mistborn - Series
    • The Final Empire - 2006 (have read)
    • The Well of Ascension - 2007 (have read)
    • The Hero of Ages - 2008 (have read)
  • Alcatraz - Series
    • Alcatraz Versus the Evil Librarians - 2007 (have read)
    • Alcatraz Versus the Scrivener's Bones - 2008
    • Alcatraz Versus the Knights of Crystallia - 2009
    • Alcatraz Versus the Shattered Lens - 2010 (Not yet released)
  • Warbreaker - 2009 (Stand alone novel, have read)
  • Wheel of Time - Series
    • The Gathering Storm - 2009 (have read)
    • Towers of Midnight - 2010 (Not yet released)
    • A Memory of Light - 2011 (Not yet released