Book Challenge Count

  1. Need by Sean Michael
  2. Genocidal Organ by Project Itoh
  3. Dreamweaver by Tiffanie Helmer
  4. Raised By Wolves: Wolves by W. A. Hoffman
  5. Drawn Together by Z.A. Maxfield
  6. The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood
  7. Mark of Cain by Cash Cole
  8. Not My Wolf by Eden Cole
  9. Mouse Trap by Sophie Duncan
  10. Forgotten Soul by Tasha D-Drake
  11. Chalk Butterfly Part One by Audra Red
  12. Dreams and Shadows by C. Robert Cagill
  13. Love’s Evolution by Ally Blue
  14. Ever After by Kim Harrison
  15. The Walking Dead: The Road to Woodbury by Robert Kirkman and Joe Bonansinga
  16. Rogue Rider by Larissa Ione
  17. Tides of Memory by Sidney Sheldon and Tilly Bagshawe
  18. Amaranth by Rachael Wade
  19. Battle Royale by Koushun Takami
  20. Mother of Wolves by Zoe Brooks
  21. Erotic Diaries Of A Warlock: Book 1 of 3 by Justin Kairo

  22. The Snow Queen’s Shadow by Jim Hines
  23. On the Plus Side by Tabitha Vargo

Battle Royale Part Two Thoughts

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After the brutal events in part one, I don’t expect part two to be any lighter or less gruesome. It’s basically a free for all. The game is in full swing and the students are dropping like flies. The two main plot points here are Noriko Nakagawa and Shuya Nanahara teaming up with Shogo Kawada – a veteran of this game – and Shinji Mimura teaming up with Yutaka Seto to try and hack the system and bring the game down.

Noriko’s gunshot wound from the beginning gets infected; as it should considering they are all in the middle of nowhere with no access to proper medical care. The bulk of their time consists of evasion and Shuya and Shogo trying to find medicine and a place for Noriko to rest. They encounter students and try to get them to join their merry band, but to no avail. Just as well since the three of them seem to travel pretty quickly and work together well.

Shinji manages to find a laptop and tries to hack into the computer system running the island. When it fails because their collars are wired for sound and Sakamochi heard the whole plan and shut them down, Shinji and Yutaka try to find a way to bomb the central location where Sakamochi and his crew are running the whole thing. This fails because Kazuo Kiriyama shows up with his machine gun and kills both boys.

Mitsuko is in rare form, too, popping off former friends and any random person she happens to come across. I have to say, she is the character to despise right now. She’s a ruthless, manipulative, liar, who has no care for anyone but herself. She shoots the injured Takako Chigusa after Takako bravely survives a brush with Kazushi Niida. Mitsuko is another character who seems to just have needed a forum like The Program to allow her to take her crappy behavior from before it into a larger stage. If they weren’t such obvious sociopaths, I’d say Mitsuko and Kazuo would make a very lethal team in this game. Let’s hope they’re both too crazy to realize this.

Confused by the names? Yeah, me too. It’s not like we get a lot of character time with these kids. Just a couple pages to get a general idea of what they were like before they came to the island (a track star, a delinquent, a martial artist, a rocker) then BAM! Gone.

Shuya is thankfully less “we can save everyone” as this part concludes. Who can blame him, really? He’s grabbing allies wherever he can, very aware of the nutjobs around the island who are participating in the game. This is a thought process I can get behind; hopeful but practical.

17 students remaining.

Battle Royale Part One Thoughts

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This book reads really fast and since some chapters are really short (as in a page and a half, short) I found myself at the end of part one fairly quickly.

As such a book suggests, once the killing gets started, it keeps going fairly quick. Noriko Nakagawa and Shuya Nanahara escape together after Nanahara manages to escape the school building without being shot with a crossbow by Yoshi Akamatsu, who shot Mayumi Tendo as she exited the school. Kazuo Kiriyama lured out all the members of his little gang and killed them one by one. Sakura Ogawa and Kazuhiko Yamamoto; “the school’s No. 1 couple” decide there’s no way they can do this and commit suicide together. Megumi Ito tries to call out for help with a phone her parents gave her but reaches Sakamochi instead. Sakamochi calls the phone, exposes Megumi to Mitsuko Souma – the class bully – and Mitsuko tricks Megumi into a hug before slitting her throat with a sickle.

Because why shouldn’t there be a sickle…

Now, I expect these kids to participate in the game or optout like the couple. It’s not how fast these kids turn into monsters that surprises me, its how many of them already were. Kazuo doesn’t feel a damn thing as he shoots all the boys who looked up to him and Mitsuko produces tears on demand to get close enough to kill Megumi. It seems the novel operates on the same concept as Crossed (don’t get me started on that one) and The Purge (which isn’t out yet but it still applies): people are just one law – or virus like in Crossed – away from complete fucking anarchy because deep down inside, we are all monsters. If you aren’t a monster yet, you’re gonna become one to defend yourself.

How… Bleak.

This of course begs the question as to the society that invented this game and forces these children to be monsters no matter what; who are the real monsters? The people who set this up or the people who LET this be set up; i.e: the parents and the populace at large. As V said:  “Truth be told, if you’re looking for the guilty, you need only look into a mirror. ”

Aside for my soapbox, it is really hard to tear myself away from this book; save for the brain saving breaks to look at cute puppies and kittens to get my faith in life back. But there was one part that really gave me pause. Nakagawa and Nanahara stop to rest after fleeing the building and realize something: how well do they really know their classmates? How well to YOU know the people you go to school with or work with every day?

I remember the valedictorian at my high school graduation saying how we were all one great big family. The first time I heard her name was right before she made that speech. Hell, I didn’t even know the person I was sitting next to because we were in alphabetical order. They recognize me on the street now and I couldn’t remember their names if you… Well, if you strapped exploding collars around our necks and told us to fight to the death. It baffles me how they know who I am since we were never friends or spoke once in those 4 years.

Four years in the same school and I have no clue who that person is and they certainly don’t know me.

Nanahara’s naive statement of “We’re all classmates. We could never do this.” is defeated pretty early on. If it continues, I will be disappointed because how many of your classmates bodies do you have to step over to realize you’re wrong? Hell, in the last year of my life, I’ve learned you can be betrayed by ANYONE. Has that made me a monster? No. But it has certainly made me less naive.

However, the screaming guy on the roof with a crossbow? He’s probably out to get you.

31 students remaining.

Battle Royale – Chapters 1-5

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Ok, I’m finally getting to read this book after checking it out from the library numerous times and having to give it back before I could even start it.

Too many books coming in at the same time. I have a reading problem and I have no shame about it.

So, I sit down on my lunch break to start this book (supposedly the Hunger Games was inspired by this, though the author claims she hasn’t read the book) and begin this story, fully prepared for the violence level I’ve read about in various reviews.

Or at least I thought I was.

Hence these posts.

I’ve decided to blog about every 5 chapters to share my thoughts as I go and to brain dump the Lord of the Flies, Handmaid’s TaleFahrenheit 451 level depression and House of a Thousand Corpses level violence in this book. If you would like to follow along with me, feel free.

Also, there may be spoilers for the book for those of you following along with me but not reading. And I will probably curse… A lot.

I watch a decent amount of random Japanese horror movies so I spy the trailer for Battle Royale the movie and figure the book is just as bad or worse. The summaries of both are enough to tell you this not a book about bunny snuggling, these kids are kidnapped, shackled with exploding collars, and told to fight to the death till only one is left. Then you win!

Yay?

As of 5 chapters in, I am hooked. I cannot use the word “love” in terms of this book because the chain of thought that says “I love this book where random teens are getting killed!” just doesn’t seem right. But I am enthralled and curious enough to want to keep going despite how completely horrifying it is.

We meet Shuya Nanahara, an unassuming kid, on a study trip with the rest of his ninth grade class. He is very smart to sense something is wrong when he is on a bus full of kids that’s completely quiet. He passes out and wakes up in an unfamiliar classroom with a metal collar around his neck. As the kids slowly awaken, Kinpatsu Sakamochi walks in with some soldiers to announce they were the chosen class to participate in this year’s “Program.”

The kids know about the program, having known people who knew people who were chosen or seeing the broken and bloodied “winners” on TV, and are understandably scared out of their minds. The Program is used as a conscription system for the youth of this alternate universe, dystopian Japan to protect their country. To show he’s not freakin kidding, Sakamochi has the corpse of their former teacher, Mr. Hayashida (who didn’t want his class in this deathmatch), pulled in and a soldier pumps a few rounds into the corpse’s head to spray brain matter on the students in the front row.

As of right now, Sakamochi creeps me out to no end. We are not even 50 pages into the book when he smiles and drops that he raped another woman, school superintendent Mrs. Ano, who also thought “Gee, I would rather not have my students fight to the death.” as calmly as you would say “I went to Starbucks before work today.” My brain goes:

(I have to be funny or this book will break my brain)

Yoshitoki Kuninobu, a childhood friend of Nanahara’s, has the proper reaction a person would have when hearing an adult you admired was hurt, flips out and threatens to kill Sakamochi.

This earns him a body full of Special Defense Forces bullets.

Noriko Nakagawa rushes to help her classmate and is shot in the leg for getting out of her seat without permission.

Fumiyo Fujiyoshi whispers as Sakamochi goes through the rules of the game and earns a knife in the forehead as punishment.

My jaw fell open and I was as dumbstruck as the remaining students in that room.

My fellow readers, this is no Hunger Games. I’ve seen the start to those; the kids in battle gear, training, trussed up and paraded in front of the masses before thrown to the woods to survive. But this… Two dead students and the game DIDN’T START YET.

A quick disclaimer: I have not seen The Hunger Games apart from the opening and some trailers so comparisons to that will officially stop here. I’ll watch the Battle Royale movie, then Hunger Games and (maybe) write up a comparison later.

For now? I’m a little scared to see the movie or continue to read the book. I have been told by friends who’ve read it to “Strap in.” As I leave the first five chapters with 40 of 42 students remaining all wearing explosive collars being told to write lines of “We will kill each other” and “If I don’t kill, I will be killed” I am chilled to the bone. I feel trapped along with them.

And how do I know how many kids are left? There’s a handy note at the end of each chapter so you can’t lose count.

How helpful. (/sarcasm)

2013 Book Challenge Count

  1. Need by Sean Michael
  2. Genocidal Organ by Project Itoh
  3. Dreamweaver by Tiffanie Helmer
  4. Raised By Wolves: Wolves by W. A. Hoffman
  5. Drawn Together by Z.A. Maxfield
  6. The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood
  7. Mark of Cain by Cash Cole
  8. Not My Wolf by Eden Cole
  9. Mouse Trap by Sophie Duncan
  10. Forgotten Soul by Tasha D-Drake
  11. Chalk Butterfly Part One by Audra Red
  12. Dreams and Shadows by C. Robert Cagill
  13. Love’s Evolution by Ally Blue
  14. Ever After by Kim Harrison
  15. The Walking Dead: The Road to Woodbury by Robert Kirkman and Joe Bonansinga
  16. Rogue Rider by Larissa Ione
  17. Tides of Memory by Sidney Sheldon and Tilly Bagshawe
  18. Amaranth by Rachael Wade

Before I forget (again) New review up!

I’m kinda proud of this one. Seems I’m pretty funny when I don’t like something. Here’s my review of The Walking Dead: The Road to Woodbury.

 

 

Book Challenge Count!

  1. Need by Sean Michael
  2. Genocidal Organ by Project Itoh
  3. Dreamweaver by Tiffanie Helmer
  4. Raised By Wolves: Wolves by W. A. Hoffman
  5. Drawn Together by Z.A. Maxfield
  6. The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood
  7. Mark of Cain by Cash Cole
  8. Not My Wolf by Eden Cole
  9. Mouse Trap by Sophie Duncan
  10. Forgotten Soul by Tasha D-Drake
  11. Chalk Butterfly Part One by Audra Red
  12. Dreams and Shadows by C. Robert Cagill
  13. Love’s Evolution by Ally Blue
  14. Ever After by Kim Harrison
  15. The Walking Dead: The Road to Woodbury by Robert Kirkman and Joe Bonansinga
  16. Rogue Rider by Larissa Ione

Book Challenge Update!

  1. Need by Sean Michael
  2. Genocidal Organ by Project Itoh
  3. Dreamweaver by Tiffanie Helmer
  4. Raised By Wolves: Wolves by W. A. Hoffman
  5. Drawn Together by Z.A. Maxfield
  6. The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood
  7. Mark of Cain by Cash Cole
  8. Not My Wolf by Eden Cole
  9. Mouse Trap by Sophie Duncan
  10. Forgotten Soul by Tasha D-Drake
  11. Chalk Butterfly Part One by Audra Red
  12. Dreams and Shadows by C. Robert Cagill
  13. Love’s Evolution by Ally Blue
  14. Ever After by Kim Harrison

*crickets chirping*

Yes, it’s been quiet here on the blog but for good reason.

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Those are the printed pages of a draft of Greenhouse, the Dreamhunter sequel. Not for nothing but I thought mu time was better spent working on this than scrambling for something to talk about in the blog. I’ve also finished another book review so I haven’t been lazy with the blog, just busy with other things. 🙂

And since there is truly no rest for the wicked, I’m moving right to more edits and getting more projects finished.

Updated Count for Book Challenge

  1. Need by Sean Michael
  2. Genocidal Organ by Project Itoh
  3. Dreamweaver by Tiffanie Helmer
  4. Raised By Wolves: Wolves by W. A. Hoffman
  5. Drawn Together by Z.A. Maxfield
  6. The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood
  7. Mark of Cain by Cash Cole
  8. Not My Wolf by Eden Cole
  9. Mouse Trap by Sophie Duncan
  10. Forgotten Soul by Tasha D-Drake
  11. Chalk Butterfly Part One by Audra Red
  12. Dreams and Shadows by C. Robert Cagill