Afbeelding auteur

Ari Bach

Auteur van Valhalla

5 Werken 67 Leden 4 Besprekingen

Over de Auteur

Bevat de naam: Ari Bach

Reeksen

Werken van Ari Bach

Valhalla (2014) 47 exemplaren
Ragnarok (2014) 10 exemplaren
Gudsriki (2015) 7 exemplaren
The Snail Factory 1 exemplaar

Tagged

Algemene kennis

Geslacht
male

Leden

Besprekingen

I hadn't realized it was intended as young adult when I sat down to read it, but I've been looking forward to this for a while now. A style of writing I don't normally go for, but a lot of fun.
 
Gemarkeerd
wetdryvac | 1 andere bespreking | Mar 2, 2021 |
Really well executed, and a prose improvement from the last outing. Neither are in a style that is my usual reading fare, but this is beautifully layered and hits some seriously difficult material more honestly than almost anything else I've read.

For a wetdryvac that doesn't connect to humans very well, the approach to character motivation and interaction made a hell of a lot more sense than I usually find, and while hitting some seriously painful material, did so in a manner where character interactions didn't feel contrived. Well observed social cause and effect, even - and particularly, I suppose - within abuse structures.

Things that kept me reading beyond that: The comfortable home-ness described in many ways throughout. The ungodly insertions of pop-culture, puns, black humor, and silliness that neither undercut nor was undercut by the regularly brutal material.

Highly recommended IF one has a strong stomach. Recommending anyway even without the strong stomach - a great ride - but one might need a bag every now and then.
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
wetdryvac | Mar 2, 2021 |
I picked up "Valhalla" after reading a review by Glen Hates Books. Take a look HERE. It was a good review. It was an even better book, which I probably wouldn't have found on my own.

Set in 2230, "Valhalla" tells the story of Violet, a teenage girl with the heart of a warrior, born into a society that sees violence as pathological and Violet as in need of a LOT of counseling.

At seventeen, on the brink of adulthood, Violet's family is murdered in front of her by the Orange Gang. Her response is instant, instinctive and lethal.

While the cops wait for her to fall into tears and request yet more counseling, Violet starts to figure out who killed her family and why. She joins the army so she can learn to be better at killing people but is thrown out because she's too violent.

The story kicks into higher gear when Violet is recruited by the legendary Valhalla, an independent group of heavily armed, cybernetically enhanced, very hard to kill and even harder to keep dead, warriors who see themselves as the good guys, and who's only rule is "Don't Fuck Shit Up".

This is a fun book that resists simple labels. It is a young adult right-of-passage book but its attitude towards religion (a cancer in society), violence (a way of letting off steam), and sex (as much fun as chocolate) is not going to get it into many school libraries. It is a science fiction book, filled with cool hi-tech weapons, medical techniques that can bring you back from the dead if your head is intact, and cyborg augmentation yet it is more focused on friendship and family and becoming yourself than it is on the toys. It is fast paced and packed with violence, achieving a body-count that would make even Hollywood action movies blush, it even includes a very graphic torture scene and yet none of it feels voyeuristic or even particularly repellent because of the tone of the story-telling.

The book carried me along quite happily, although some of the training in Valhalla went on a little too long. The plot had some nice twists and left me looking forward to the next book in the series.

The audiobook version is read by Steve Carlson, an American in his seventies, with the voice of an avuncular uncle who is also the black sheep of the family. He does a good job. I enjoyed listening to him but I wondered why he was selected. Violet is seventeen years old and from Scotland. Most of the action is in Scotland, Siberia or Norway. This would have been a very different book if it had been read by Gayle Madine, who did such a good job with "The Panopticon"



… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
MikeFinnFiction | 1 andere bespreking | May 16, 2020 |
There are so many awesome points to touch down on that I’m not sure where to start. In this thrilling horror read by Joshua Grant we are introduced to a ship known as the Emerald Rose which mysteriously disappears. When it reappears, a team is sent in to decode exactly what evil is lurking there. However, they may have bitten off more than they can chew. The Emerald Rose is just the tip of the iceberg with the evil known as The Organization.

There are plenty of POV jumps in this story which means there’s never a dull moment. The characters are all greatly written with quirks, flaws, and through backgrounds. Out of all of them, I found Aubrey’s story to be the most touching. She was the character I gravitated the most toward.

The book has everything I could’ve asked for: adventure, humor, chills, mystery, and of course, an unpredictable ending.

Solid five stars!
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
Kayla.Krantz | Feb 14, 2020 |

Statistieken

Werken
5
Leden
67
Populariteit
#256,179
Waardering
½ 3.3
Besprekingen
4
ISBNs
10

Tabellen & Grafieken