Tampilkan postingan dengan label YA Suspense. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label YA Suspense. Tampilkan semua postingan

No Safety in Numbers (YA)

No Safety in Numbers. Dayna Lorentz. 2012. Random House. Penguin. 288 pages. 

The back cover reads: "It's just another Saturday in a busy suburban mall. But not for long." The front cover reads: "Four teens, 150 stores, 1 bomb." I'm not sure which one is more effective as a hook for drawing readers in, what do you think?! Essentially this is a book about a mall that gets quarantined with all its shoppers "trapped" inside after one employee discovers a hidden bomb. The book covers, I believe, the first week. And by the end of the week, the novelty has definitely worn off.

You should definitely know that there is no ending, this is book one, and those who absolutely need an ending to be satisfied should wait until the release of the second book. Personally, as long as I know that before I begin a book, it doesn't bother me that much. It's only when I spend two or three hours of time anxiously expecting an ending only to be surprised by a big "to be continued" that I get annoyed.

Is No Safety in Numbers premise-driven or plot-driven? I think it is. I think the premise itself is big enough to drive the plot forward. That doesn't mean that the characters are flat, boring, and lifeless. It just means that they are not the strongest element of the book. We've got two male narrators: Marco, a busboy at a restaurant; Ryan, a football player whose integrity is flexible depending on who is around. And two female narrators: Lexi, the daughter of a Senator, a true computer nerd who spends her time making movies, working with graphics and computer programming instead of having "real" friends; and Shay, who spends half her time taking care of her younger sister, Preeti, and her grandmother, Nani, and the other half of her time talking with either Marco OR Ryan.

Each narrator manages to bring a handful of other characters into view. (Lexi spends time with Ginger and Maddie, two popular girls from her school whom she's never really spent any time whatsoever with until this crisis; Lexi also keeps in touch with her mother, the Senator, and her father; all three are "trapped" in the mall. Shay has her younger sister and grandmother. Ryan has at least two if not three football players to hang out with. Marco, poor Marco, well he occasionally gets to mention a cook, waiter, or manager.) But despite the fact that readers are told about all the thousands of people who are trapped in this quarantined mall, despite the fact that readers see these people mass together to riot on at least one or two occasions, I couldn't help but get a sense of emptiness and loneliness. At times it felt like there were only ten or twelve people in this gigantic mall.

There were times it felt believable enough, then again, there were other times it didn't. And sometimes these instances are where you would least expect them.


I have a hard time putting No Safety in Numbers into a 'perfect' genre. On the one hand, there is nothing in it to make it science fiction. The setting could be present day or a few years into the future. So it could be classified as realistic fiction. There is a sense of danger, of terror, that makes this a thriller, to a certain extent. But for readers looking for ACTION, they might not appreciate all the time spent making friends and forming relationships. They might not appreciate the surreal "first date" between Shay and Ryan, for example. And all the talk of feelings and loneliness and not belonging. And the poetry reading.

So did I like it? Yes. For the most part. I found it compelling, or compelling enough. In other words, I read it essentially in one afternoon. I did get caught up into the story.

Read No Safety in Numbers
  • If you like thrillers and suspense novels; this one does have some action, but it isn't exactly fast-paced action. There is danger to be avoided, a sense of terror, but it is more subtle, at least for the first half. 
  • If you like survival fiction

© 2012 Becky Laney of Becky's Book Reviews

Two Graphic Novels (Ray Bradbury)

Ray Bradbury's Something Wicked This Way Comes, The Authorized Adaptation. Ron Wimberly. Introduction by Ray Bradbury. 2011. FSG. 144 pages.

First of all, it was October. A rare month for boys. Not that all months aren't rare. But there be bad and good, as the pirates say. Take September, a bad month: school begins. Consider August, a good month: school hasn't begun yet. July, well, July's really fine: there's no chance in the world for school. June, no doubting it, June's best of all, for the school doors spring wide and September's a billion years away. But you take October, now. School's been on a month and you're riding easier in the reins, jogging along. 

What makes a graphic novel adaptation work? I'm not sure I could say. For graphic novels are not in my comfort zone at all. I rarely pick up graphic novels to "review," for I don't feel qualified to comment. The graphic novels I tend to read are adaptations of novels that I've already read--for better or worse.

I recently read the official adaptation of Ray Bradbury's Something Wicked This Way Comes. What did I think of it? Well, it made me WANT to read the book, the "real" book. This story, in its adaptation, in its abridgment, just wasn't enough to satisfy me. I wanted more, needed more. That's not a bad thing at all. If every single reader of this graphic novel responds the same way I did--with the NEED or DESIRE to pick up the original Ray Bradbury novel, that wouldn't be a bad thing. Indeed, you might say it was a GOOD thing. For there is no replacing, no improving the original novel.

The magical wonder--the horror, the terror, the suspense--of this story is in the words, the phrases, the sentences. And this graphic novel adaptation is able to only capture a part of that wonder. Every reader will have to decide for himself (or herself) if the addition of the illustrations is worth losing a little something of the original. (For the record, only the cover has colored illustrations, the rest of the graphic novel is in black and white.) For me, the graphic novel just doesn't have that magical something of the original.

Read Ray Bradbury's Something Wicked This Way Comes, The Authorized Adaptation
  • If you're a fan of graphic novels
  • If you're a fan of dark fantasy, horror, and suspense
  • If you're looking for a dark(er) coming of age story
  • If you're a participant of the R.I.P. challenge and are looking for an easy read you could finish in just an afternoon
  • If you're a fan of Ray Bradbury
Ray Bradbury's The Martian Chronicles, The Authorized Adaptation. Dennis Calero. Introduced by Ray Bradbury. 2011. FSG. 160 pages.

One minute it was Ohio winter, with doors closed, windows locked, the panes blind with frost, icicles fringing every roof, children skiing on slopes, housewives lumbering like great black bears in their furs along the icy streets.

Compared to the adaptation of Ray Bradbury's Something Wicked This Way Comes, the official adaptation which I reviewed above, this adaptation of The Martian Chronicles is very satisfying indeed! Now, here's where it becomes tricky, compared to the original novel by Ray Bradbury, it still is second best at most. (I haven't listened to it on audio, or any radio dramas of it, and I definitely didn't make it past the twenty minute mark on the made-for-TV adaptation of it.) I definitely liked the cover and thought it well done! And the illustrations in this graphic novel are full color!!!

If this adaptation was a FULL adaptation, I wouldn't hesitate to give it my highest recommendation. But. Readers do not get the full collection of stories. Readers get just fourteen out of 27 stories. Here are the stories readers do get:
  • Rocket Summer
  • Ylla
  • The Summer Night
  • The Earth Men
  • The Third Expedition
  • --And the Men Be Still As Bright
  • The Green Morning
  • Night Meeting
  • Interim
  • The Musicians
  • The Martian
  • The Off Season
  • The Watchers
  • The Million-Year Picnic
Here are the stories, readers will be missing out on:
  • The Taxpayer
  • The Settlers
  • The Locusts
  • The Shore
  • The Fire Balloons
  • The Wilderness (*I believe The Wilderness replaced "Way In the Middle of the Air" in some editions. I don't know how other readers feel about the change, but I'm all for it. The Wilderness is a much better story in my opinion.) 
  • The Naming of Names
  • Usher II
  • The Old Ones
  • The Luggage Store
  • The Silent Towns
  • The Long Years
  • There Will Come Soft Rains
It is just wrong, wrong, WRONG that this adaptation does not include "Usher II" and "There Will Come Soft Rains."

Some of what is 'missing' are just vignettes or preludes, but, I think some of the preludes help transition between stories. For example, reading "The Luggage Store" before "The Off Season" helps. As does reading "The Old Ones" before "The Martian." And I think something is lost by not including "The Silent Towns" and "The Long Years" which reflect the absence of life on Mars, and "There Will Come Soft Rains" is the perfect, perfect story for setting up "The Million Year Picnic". Something important, something vital is missing--in terms of tone, of message--if you don't have the full sequence.

So the full-length stories that are missing are: The Fire Balloons, The Wilderness, Way In the Middle of the Air, Usher II, The Silent Towns, The Long Years, There Will Come Soft Rains.

How do I feel about the adaptations? Well, I thought some of them were well done. Probably my favorite adaptation was "Night Meeting."

Is the original novel still best? Yes!!! I won't lie. This collection of short stories is so wonderful, so amazing, so incredible, so thoughtful, so soulful, so beautiful, so practically perfect in every way that I have to say that the original is better than any adaptation.

Read Ray Bradbury's The Martian Chronicles, The Authorized Adaptation
  • If you're a fan of science fiction
  • If you're a fan of Ray Bradbury
  • If you're a fan of graphic novels
  • If you love short stories, Ray Bradbury's are among the BEST.
© 2012 Becky Laney of Becky's Book Reviews