Review: Who Censored Roger Rabbit?
Who Censored Roger Rabbit? by Gary K. Wolf
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
This book is completely different from the movie it inspired, the movie I’ve loved since I was a kid and have found layers to appreciate as an adult. It isn’t bad, it’s just wholly different. I’ve written in some reviews on here and in other places that in the past few years I’ve come to terms with the idea of adaptations. Movies and books will never be perfectly similar because adaptations require each to play to the strengths of the medium in which it’s in. This, however, is much more than an adaptation. The movie took 80% of the same characters and the thinnest connection to the plot in here and then made its own thing. And that’s good, because this book’s plot points are quite a bit too convoluted for a movie, especially a mass-market movie.
Review: The End of All Things
The End of All Things by John Scalzi
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This book is as fitting an end to the series as the third one was. Scalzi does a good job of wrapping things up so that if this book truly was the end of all things Old Man’s War, you’d be pretty satisfied. I don’t know if he knew whether his $10 million deal with Tor would pan out or what it would contain specifically, but we know now he’s contracted for one or two (I can’t remember the exact number) more books in this series. Still, if he died tomorrow and/or never wrote another book in the series, this would be a good end.
Review: The Human Division
The Human Division by John Scalzi
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
As I stated during one of my status updates, the structure of this book reminded me of I, Robot. In that short story collection, Asimov has a couple guys who work for US Robotics (or whatever the company’s called) who somehow always end up being on the scene when one of the robots finds a loophole through the Three Laws of Robotics. I loved both the “cruelty” of the situations Asimov put the guys through and their logic steps as they solved the problem. I don’t know if Scalzi was directly influenced by I, Robot, but the crew of The Clarke end up in a similar situation with Wilson and Schmidt playing the parts of the two guys from US Robotics. The book is also structured as a series of short stories with a bit more of an overarching plot linking them than in I, Robot, but they almost function as singular stories.