Thursday, February 28, 2013

Final - Preface


The Doctor, Zoe, Phee, and Officer Sonia Paley have just escaped the Mnemosyne, one of saturn's moons rich with a substance called bernalium. A space colony has been constructed around the moon to facilitate mining this ore, but what no one knew is that eons before, a civilization saw signs of disaster, and bundled up all that was necessary to preserve or restore their race into a machine called The Arkive. They sent it off as their world burned, and it crashed into the moon, too damaged to fulfill its purpose. It cast an allohistorical lure to the Earth, beckoning humans to one day venture out to the moon and (however indirectly) provide her the technology to build a way to go home. 

Of course, this story wouldn't be complete without the single-minded radical business type, Florian Hart, in this case. The manager of the mine, she merely sees all this as a liability, with no regard to the value of cultural preservation. Enter The Doctor and his companions Jamie and Zoe, who arrive when their ship detects the anomalies. My project is a  narrative of what went through The Doctor's head on the penultimate trip back from the moon.

Final - Protagonist Narrative


Having made sure that Zoe, Phee and the others were stable, I could finally breathe and sigh of relief. Once we  were back to the safety of the wheel I could put the next step of my plan into action. Now that we had sorted out what the Arkive really was, an ark of knowledge, we could decide what the best to deal with it would be.

“Resilience” I had heard through First, “remembrance restoration”. I could only hope that Arkive, after having failed two of the three, wouldn’t decide that the best course of remembrance was not slaughtering every human on the Wheel.

“A made thing”, First had called the Arkive. Something manufactured by such intelligence would have some kind of morality. Unlike Florian Heart, I groaned inwardly, as my thoughts turned to the volatile and corrupt Forewoman. Florian seemed more than willing to sacrifice her employees to remove the threat of Arkive and the blue dolls.

Florian, who seemed to be more than comfortable with sacrificing her employees to rid the lunar mines of Arkive, the blue dolls and soldiers; all mere obstacles to her goal of building wealth from harvesting the bernaliun within. The woman seemed like the type willing to blow up a moon to achieve her purpose. I mentally logged this away as a very real possibility, and pondered our next confrontation. I would give her one more warning before descending back to Arkive's chamber for the last step in my plan.

“Zoe,” I turned to my companion, “do you think you could adapt the sensors on the wheel to register the movement of the neutrinos that Arkive is spewing out? I'll have my hands full with explaining things to Jo and Sonia.”
“I believe so,” she said, “ but would we be able to detect them through hundreds of feet of moon?”
“The boys can been given low power blasters to make a sort of liquid amplifier in the ice of the moon. It should make for a fine neutrino detector.” Not to mention a trap if Florian's desire to be a success continues to blind her, I thought, but I kept that one to myself.
The shuttle was nearly back at the Wheel. Back there, I'd be able to get a further poke around the Blue Doll we'd autopsied earlier. Yes, it appeared to be synthetic, but I wanted to take a closer look at its cognitive functions so that I'd know if I'd need to be humane if it turned into a fight.
It wasn't fair for the Blue Dolls and Soldiers to have to be caught up in all this. They were made things, as they thought of themselves; made in turn by a made thing. Hopefully my last encounter in which Arkive told me her story of ruin through the Blue Doll had placated her and shown that at least my crew and I meant it no harm.
Sonia touched my shoulder. “We're here, crew. Let's go see how Jo is getting along.”
Yes, I thought, now comes the explaining. Jo must understand that all I do between dealing with Florian and the Arkive, I do with the best intentions of her citizens. Peace, resolution, and repair of the relative continuum displacement zone, probably not without cost.
“Fantastic,” I grumbled as I stepped off the shuttle, “I’m beginning to sound like the bloody machines.”

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Reflection 7

Memoirs and nonfiction

Memoirs, autobiographies and fiction have fine lines  between them. The author that had so much drama over his book would not have been in the trouble he was in if he had published it as fiction. He wanted to changed the type of book to a nonfiction memoir to pick up the sales of his book.

I think his first mistake was changing the facts, lying, embellishing, whatever we want to call it. After that he was just being a people-pleaser; he changed facts and labels to make his book more appealing. Isn't that what we do with reports and essays though? If all high schoolers typed the way that words first occured to them, some grades may look pretty bleak. The difference is that he should have at least had a small print disclaimer of a statement that said something along the lines of "Hey, some of these details were changed to please you. I'm sorry you're welcome."

FInally, I think that most of the blowing-up came from Oprah, not the audience of the book. She seemed mostly concerned with how endorsing a book that turned out to not be totally factual made her look bad. Hasn't she had fictional books on her list before though? Authors of the future; please take this as a lesson in the importance of covering yourself.

Heroes and Villains (no Beach Boys references, please)

Which literary heroes or villains were the most glaring omissions from the lists in class?
-Spoiler warning-

-Arthur Dent
   This gentleman is alarmingly simple and hapless for the situations he's thrust into. In The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, his home planet is destroyed and he gets dragged along on a quest to find an ancient civilization of planet manufacturers and uncover the ultimate question of life, the universe, and everything, all the while grumbling about how no one in the universe seems to be able to make a decent cup of tea.

-Skagra
   The villain in Shada, by Douglas Adams. An ego maniacal Drornidian  that tried to realease a Time Lord called Salyavin and kidnapped a gaggle of other scientists to basically replace every mind in the universe with a copy of his. Most people that think that God might not exist react with relief or despair. Only Skagra responded by thinking "Wait a second, that means there's a situation vacant."

Claudius
   -A crafty Shakespearean villain. He murders his brother and marries his sister in law to become king of Denmark. His only remaining obstacle is main character and tragic hero, Hamlet, who also happens to be his nephewson. Spoilers; he dies at the end.

Scar
   -The Claudius of the Disney Kingdom. The parallels between Scar and Claudius were too many to go without giving him an honorable mention. In addition to the treachery he gets up to with taking over the pride lands, he also manages to turn a pack of goofy hyenas into the Third Reich with one song.

Angel

   -If the shark from Jaws gets a mention, then the Mama Megalodon (huge shark(really huge(like, it's ridiculous))) in the MEG series by Steve Alten deserves to be here too. Angel wreaked a heckuva lot more havoc than Jaws, and she had a much greater finale; defending the son of the man who discovered her from mososaurs and liopleurodons. 




Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Reflection 9

Great Moments from book 3

-There's some serious tension when Phee uncovers the Doll that Sam brought home for their little sister. I think the Dolls are  manifested reflections, forms taken on by whatever's mucking about Saturn's moons. There's also a bit where phee goes to pick up said Doll and it smiles. With some nasty teeth.

-There's an epic save when Jamie Mcrimmon dashes across the ice moon and uses the low gravity to vault over a crater to save Phee from the geysers. You'd think that it would lose its effect because it's a lot of text for the short amount of time that it describes, but the language used to describe it pulls it off quite well. You should read it.

-The last great moment I'll list here is when The Doctor, Zoe, and Luis find the half-doll half-human body in the wreckage of the tractor explosion. There's really good detail with the body, how the blue flesh is composed, as well as some good Holmsian logic.

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Book 2, Review 1 (from way back then)

Upon losing my original book 2, Anthem(a story of individuality in a dystopian future) I've landed on a book called Tempest, which promises to be a cool time-travel-action-romance, sounds like a mash-up of The Time Traveler's Wife and Jumper. I also see there's family tension, the main character has probably lost people near and dear to him. Hopefully I haven't made a misstep as I start this new book. It looks like it'll be a good time.

Book Gate

Book gate
A book gate, I guess curtains were too mainstream..

Reflection 8 - My Top 5

My Top 5 Favorite Book Series

Sherlock Holmes

  • This book series is about the mystifying adventures of Sherlock Holmes and Dr. John Watson. Told from Watson's perspective, the books chronicle the thrills of living with Holmes, the world's only consulting detective. Through ridiculously accurate observation, attention to detail, uncommon knowledge, and logic, Sherlock can size a man up and tell you his life story just minutes after you've introduced him. When the police of London are stumped, Holmes is on the case.
  • I love this series so much for its classy charm and the fact that even if you have started  to sort out what's going on, you always feel impressed by Sherlock's brilliant solutions
  • Read if you like mystery, thrillers, and plot twists


Ender's Game
-This series follows the story of Ender Wiggin, a boy hopefully destined to become a brilliant general and the savior of earth. After the first story, which you can read about in my earliest reviews, the series takes Ender on a journey to new worlds to make sure that history's mistakes aren't repeated.
-I like this series because it's an epic story of progress and I think that the way that Card writes and describes the battles and strategy is very thorough.
-Read if you like strategy, espionages, and scifi
Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events
-after their parents are killed in a horrible fire, Violet, Klaus, and Sunny Baudelaire are carted from guardian to guardian while trying to keep the greedy Count Olaf from stealing their family fortune and make sense of the mysteries around them.
-I grew up on this series. It lasted me through grade school. The story is enthralling, and in hindsight i probably took it too seriously. Along with a great plot, the author is constantly teaching you things like definitions or sciencey wiency facts in the most backhanded ways. The 13 book story arc can easily be split into sections if you're not a big reader.
-read if you like charming orphans, secret organizations, and learning on accident

Evil Genius
-Cadel Piggot has absolutely no idea who he is, mostly because his adoptive parents, numerous scientists, and a malicious man called Prosper English are all telling him different things. Cadel is a computer genius, and everyone seems to wants to use him one way or another.
-I like this series because its about trying to find somewhere to fit in. When he isn't being forced to do things or trying to escape mad adults, Cadel spends a lot of his time trying to sort out who he really belongs with.
-read if you like computers, quirky children and villains, and secret schools

Uglies
-In a world where beauty is mandatory, anyone normal is hideous. When one comes of age in this world, they go under the knife to become beautiful like everyone else. Tally Youngblood stands alone when she is implored by Special Circumstances to to go and find a place called The Smoke, a camp of humans that choose to stay normal, free of the influence of the surgery. The series takes tally and her friends on a whirlwind adventure with the goal of liberating everyone under the special's control.
-I like this series because it has cool gadgets and crazy plot twists. You never know which side someone's going to be on next.
-Read if you like warped futures, dystopian society, and twists and turns.

Tempest Review

After reading through Tempest, I think I can say I’m really satisfied with my choice. It’s a great sci-fi, action-romance story, and I kept being surprised by the character, who were very well written. The only thing I didn’t like was how long the story hung onto Jackson’s relationship with Holly, especially when most of it happened for nothing. Also in some parts the consistency of Julie Cross’ version of time travel lacked a bit, but to give her the benefit of the doubt, we’ll put it down to things the writer hasn’t revealed quit yet (there are 2 other books)
The plot of Tempest is a bit of a temporal roller coaster. Some people have trouble following a story because they see the events from a linear perspective. To make this kind of thing easier to follow, you have to get away from the idea of time as a strict progression of cause to effect and think of it more like a big ball of wibbly-wobbly, timey-wimey stuff that is constantly in flux. Along with the ability to transport themselves to another time, the characters also have the added element of half-jumps; these work like other time jumps, but in this case when the travelling character returns, nothing they change or prevent has any effect on their present. During a half-jump body goes into a sort of vegetative state in the present while the traveller gallivants about in the past. That having been said, maybe the plot summary makes better sense.
So in the beginning, Jackson and his buddy, Adam has been experimenting with Jackson’s ability. Up to this point, he’d only been able to do the half-jump, but that’s all he knew. Adam provides the theories, logic, and tests, and Jackson provides the super power. It’s all harmless, since the half- jumps don’t change anything, Jackson always returns to his present, ‘home base’, and everything’s the same.
One night, Jackson is at his dear girlfriend Holly’s dorm room when suddenly two men (who we later learn are two of the Enemies of Time) come in and try to take Jackson away. The couple resist, and Holly is shot. In his panic, Jackson accidentally does a full jump to 2007, two years in the past.
While trapped in 2007, he makes several attempts to jump back to October 30, 2009, with no success. He decides to settle in, as his past self seems to have vanished and he has to take his place. He gets a job at the gym ‘007’ Holly works at to worm his way into her life, and falls in love with her all over again before he’s even met her the first time. He also meets Adam and uses 2009 Adam’s latin notes in the journal to get him to believe him.
During his half- jumps from 2007, he ends up at certain points around his childhood and learns disturbing things about the man he thought was his flesh and blood father, mainly that he’s a CIA agent that hunts down the Enemies of Time, people born with this time-travel ‘Tempus’ gene and have some vaguely malicious intent (that part wasn’t the best writing). They have a similar role to Samuel L. Jackson in Jumper, if that helps.
He also learns he and his (deceased(braincancer)) sister Courtney are test tube babies, half breeds of a woman with the Tempus gene.  Jackson decides that his best chance of getting his answers and saving Holly in 2009       is joining his father’s organization, Tempest. After getting Holly and Adam involved in a scrape with EOTs, Jackson unlocks something within himself that lets him be able to make a full jump back to 2009, a few months before the incident occurs. Jackson’s father sends a memory card to update his 2009 version with these events, since for some reason (poor writing) the events of Jackson’s full jump to 2007 don’t change his present 2009.
            He reunites with Holly and Adam around March of his present year, giving himself about 6 months to avert Holly’s death. He runs off with Holly on a vacation to a resort to just escape from all of the current stress, but his dad and a gaggle of agents, Freeman, Chief Marshall, and Dr. Melvin, follow them with Adam in tow. Jackson sort of gets on Marshall’s good side by joining Tempest gets his dad to continue his training, but the EOTs crop up again and do a number on the group.
Jackson is shown parallel futures but a mysterious girl named Emily and the EOTs ring leader, Thomas. Emily’s future is a dusty, dystopian world, and she has to be vague about what caused it because she can’t give too much away. Thomas’ future, however, looks pretty ideal. Clean earth, happy people. Jackson and Thomas have a little chase and end up back at the resort, where in their absence, EOTs and Tempest agents have been going at it. They manage to withdraw, and Jackson sees how much danger Holly is in as long as they’re connected.
            Jackson does a full jump back to the day he first met Holly, taking the place of his past self that was about to bump into her, causing her to spill smoothie all over his shoes and cross his path for the first time. Instead he stands off to the side, and watches her walk away, never to meet him. Now she’s safe. And Jackson can begin his training.
            So, the book ends on kind of a sad note. I didn’t really see his sacrifice coming, especially when he spent most of the book fueling his relationship with her, twice. I was pretty upset by it, and I guess Jackson is too, but I think if you really love someone, you’re willing to burn the bridge to keep them safe. The relationship with his dad is well written, sometimes you do want to love and trust someone but you can’t be sure. The dialogue and dynamic between them later on in the book is really good, and hopefully there’ll be less tension in the next chapter. The book is left wide open for a sequel, which is nice, unless he’s gonna spend a ton of time whining about Holly. I’d give this book 9 out of 10, a good read for those with passionate open minds.