Showing posts with label horror. Show all posts
Showing posts with label horror. Show all posts

9/22/2012

Star Wars - Dark Forces: Rebel Agent Review

Star Wars - Dark Forces: Rebel Agent
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I bought this graphic novel on a whim! I'm an avid Star Wars fan and am willing to read anything Star Wars. However, graphic novels tend to be expensive, so I usually just satisfy my Star Wars cravings with a regualr novel. I saw my opportunity to check out this portion of the Dark Forces trilogy, based upon the Dark Forces video game, when it was marked down as a special deal in a local store. I figured that if I didn't like the novel, I didn't pay much for it, and I can sell it off. Well, I can say with confidence that there is no way I'm going to sell this graphic novel!...
...Not only will you find the story entertaining, but the artwork is amazing. The novel has 25 lithograph-style pictures beautifully done by Ezra Tucker. The story is full of action and you'll find yourself rooting for Kyle and his partner Jan. I find myself wanting to get a hold of the rest of the series! Definitely a trilogy worth checking out!

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8/11/2012

Star Wars: We Don't Do Weddings (Dramatized) Review

Star Wars: We Don't Do Weddings (Dramatized)
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I was expecting to hear a standard reading, but this was more like a narrated radio drama! It was well worth the money!
Very entertaining backstory for the band in the Star Wars cantina. The story is augmented by music from John Williams and original music for the band! I read it on the book "Tales from the Mos Eisley Cantina" and while good, this was much more informative!
Buy it and enjoy!


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6/06/2012

Star Wars: Night Lily: A Lover's Tale Review

Star Wars: Night Lily: A Lover's Tale
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Do you remember the Star Wars Cantina?
Nightlily: the Lover's Tale by Barbara Hambly audiobook is about an Imperial tax official on our familiar backwater planet who is running a few scams on his own in order to make some pocket change and keep his skills honed. I don't think he was especially honest.
I think that part the appeal is the same as reading a novel set in your home town or a town so many people are familiar with either by personal experience or by association. We all remember Mos Eisley on Tatooine and Obi Wan's comment from the first several times we watched Star Wars. Its easy to integrate the visuals of the town and the cantina and I had no trouble imagining seeing it from the other side of the room and knowing what the band was thinking and going through* and witnessing the famous events from a second, or in some cases third, point of view.
This recording is dramatized and incorporates the music and sound effects from the movie, further adding to the effect.
*See "We Don't Do Weddings: The Band's Tale" by Kathy Tyers to witness this same moment from the Band's point of view. This is fun!

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8/27/2011

Star Wars: Death Troopers Review

Star Wars: Death Troopers
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I've read a fair share of Star Wars books, but never anything this gory or downright scary. Star Wars is usually pretty tame. So I was surprised to find this book whose cover is comprised of a bloody Stormtrooper head hanging from a chain with a hook jammed through its eye. I like old-school Star Wars, from the Classic Era, Episodes IV-VI, so I was eager to read this to see what the "Death Troopers" were all about. Well, that decapitated Stormtrooper head scene is actually in the book, along with many others that could probably not be proudly displayed at your local bookstore. I'm actually surprised that this book doesn't contain a warning label or sticker that this book is for "Suggested for Mature Readers". But here it is, for the first time, a Star Wars book about flesh-eating zombies in deep space. Parents, the Clone Wars this book is not. Here are some sample lines:
"[The zombie's] mouth was buried in Pauling's throat and it was busily slurping its blood, ripping off huge gobbets of his flesh... Strands of Pauling's flesh were dangling from its teeth."
"The leg was connected to a torso, covered up by another, and another, the pile growing in front of him comprising what he realized was hundreds of dismembered corpses--heads, arms, legs, and whole bodies, bare bones, many of them still dressed in rotten Imperial uniforms... hacked recklessly to pieces, still others partially devoured, whole gobbets of of flesh gnawed off. Many of the parts were bloated to the point where the skin itself had begun to split open like sausages..."
Well, that's probably enough for you to get the idea. There's an exciting, gritty story here with a couple of fun cameos from classic Star Wars characters, but to get through it your imagination will have to cope with all kinds of horrific imagery and gristly situations where people eat each other alive and poke weapons into eye sockets and shove cleavers into heads. There are also some heart-racing chases in the dark for those who dig that kind of thing. So if you like that stuff, you'll enjoy this. I can't say I ENJOYED that part of it, but I was able to stomach the content and I particularly enjoyed the fact that it takes place within 5 years of Star Wars: Episode IV. However, I can't imagine letting my little boy crack this book open and I hope other parents won't blindly buy this book for their kids just because "it's Star Wars". If you wouldn't let your kids read a book based on Night Of The Living Dead, steer them clear of Death Troopers too.

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When the Imperial prison barge Purge—temporary home to five hundred of the galaxy's most ruthless killers, rebels, scoundrels, and thieves—breaks down in a distant part of space, its only hope appears to lie with a Star Destroyer found drifting and seemingly abandoned. But when a boarding party from the Purge is sent to scavenge for parts, only half of them come back—bringing with them a horrific disease so lethal that within hours nearly all aboard the Purge die in ways too hideous to imagine. And death is only the beginning. The Purge's half-dozen survivors will do whatever it takes to stay alive. But nothing can prepare them for what lies waiting aboard the Star Destroyer. For the dead are rising: soulless, unstoppable, and unspeakably hungry.

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8/16/2011

Star Wars: Red Harvest Review

Star Wars: Red Harvest
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Okay, okay, I hate revealing ANYTHING about the story you are about to read, but if you are buying this book and can't tell by the cover that there will be zombies (and Sith), well then I am sorry to spoil the surprise, but it should be rather obvious.
So, a Star Wars zombie book with our favorite bad guys. But is it any good? Yeah. It is a fun ride, and while I would be tempted to give it 4 stars, there are certain aspects to the Star Wars universe that are introduced that struck me as new and different. Some books are fun to read (like the first Thrawn) because they completely change everything you thought was cool about Star Wars. Other books are worth reading because the story is solid--but the real beauty is the implications the story leaves behind; the questions it raises. IMHO this book falls in the second category.
The plant life in this story is food for thought when you extrapolate that into the overarching SW universe and the Jedi order. Much room for growth, here there is! I like the main Jedi character. I think you will like her as well. She opens up the world of the Jedi past the hack and slash we see in the movies. It shows a much deeper understanding of the Force--something that would be interesting to see explored more deeply in future novels. I think that's what I really liked most about this book. It is less "Luke Skywalker/Han Solo Star Wars," and more "a day in the life of the supporting cast." It adds to the scope of the world of Star Wars but it feels like a behind the scenes story that shows us how things can go wrong in the very places that create heroes and villains, not just on Death Stars and in capitals like Coruscant.
Is it safe for kids? Hmmm... I would put the minimum reading age at 14-15, keeping in mind that it's almost impossible to reach that age without seeing at least one zombie movie or playing a zombie video game, or some other shooter game with gore and blood. While there are moments of descriptive mayhem, it was pretty tame considering this is supposed to be a horror novel. I enjoyed the story, I was deeply afraid my favorite characters would die (you will have to read the book to see if they did), and the villains were villainous to say the least, but it is not a book that will give you nightmares or send you into therapy. It is about as scary as a Victorian horror novel. Like I said--I liked it, but it wasn't Stephen King scary.
If you must know the basic details of the, keep reading; but if not, just now that it is a very dark story with lots of unpleasant surprises and some very "not nice people." I feel as if we are being set up for a larger story, as if this is the beginning of a new area of problems for both the Republic and the Empire. Just for that reason alone it is worth reading.
Okay--so some of the basics of the story without revealing the plot. The story takes place for the most part at an outlying Sith academy where young men and women are trained in the ways of the Force; the dark side of course. In a school like this there is no room for weakness. You fail, you die. It is a much purer way of understanding nature than we see in the mamsy-pamsy Jedi academies where we get to play with flowers and bunnies. The teachers are a bit less forgiving and a bit more exacting in their instruction methods. It would have been nice to see more of this though, as it takes something of a backseat to the real action. The beauty of the Sith students is that the biggest do well but not necessarily as well as the smaller, more determined ones. This educational facility is really all about who can survive by any means at their disposal, not just who is "stronger in the Force." This is good soil for future Sith stories.
Fortunately for us though a lot of that goes out the window with the zombies show up. Zombies present a problem unseen before in the SW universe: You can shoot them with a blaster, you can chop them with your lightsaber. Um...okay, then what? And what would happen if a Jedi, or worse, a Sith were infected with zombie powers? Well, I guess you would have to read the book to find out.
Please note: As of this time I have not yet read Death Troopers. That will be next on the list, even though it seems to go backwards in time. Nonetheless, this novel stands well on its own and definitely sets us up for a future story where we will DEFINITELY see gruesome carnage.
In any case, thanks for reading. I hope you enjoy it.

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