OtherEarth (Last Reality #2) – Review

Title: OtherEarth

Series: Last Reality (#2)

Author: Jason Segel, Kirsten Miller

Type: Fiction

Genre: Science Fiction

Format: Paperback

Pages: 320

Owned/Borrowed/Given Etc: Borrowed from the library

Rating: 3/5

Blurb: Simon saved his best friend, Kat, from the clutches of the Company and their high-tech VR gaming experience, Otherworld. But it was at a steep price. Now he, Kat, and their friend Busara are on the run. They know too much. About the Company’s dark secrets. About the real-life consequences of playing Otherworld. And about Kat’s stepfather’s involvement in everything. The group is headed to New Mexico to find Simon’s old roommate, who is a tech genius and possibly the only person who can help them reveal the truth about the Company before it’s too late and the line between what’s real and what’s fantasy is erased… forever.

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I borrowed this book from the library following my read of OtherWorld (Last Reality #1) by the same authors. I had to reserve it AND wait for it to be transferred from a different library to my local one. I paid a grand total of 75p for this pleasure. The cost didn’t really bother me, it was definitely cheaper than buying a copy of the book – especially since I wasn’t really sure whether I would like it or not.

Set in the same video-game/virtual reality world(s) as the first book in the series, we meet Simon and Kat again, along with some other key characters from the first story. This book picked up EXACTLY where the first book left off. This is not something that always happens in sequels, often you find that there has been a certain length of time passed between books but this did not. It was super easy to dive back into the story, continuing along the journey with Simon. Following him from the real world to the VR world and wondering what they were going to do in order to overcome the predicaments facing them. After reading some of the reviews on Goodreads, it seems I was not the only one able to easily continue with reading the story at the beginning.

Pulling up into the home run, where all the major action normally takes place, this book did not disappoint. We had plenty of action and lots of major plot points seem to be coming together. I got very excited thinking of everything that would be happening and then BOOM!!! It threw me off a bridge. So dang confused. I’m hoping 100% that the third book due out later on this year will bring everything round to a close. Make sense of the bits that have left me thinking WTF.


**If you have NOT read this book, please DO NOT read any further**


 

CLICK HERE TO READ SPOILER

Simon has been in and out of OtherWorld so many times, he has no idea what is real and what isn’t. There are plenty of hints given to this effect throughout the story, particularly by his Grandfather. Busara confuses me more and more as the story goes on, her main reasoning behind this is kind of explained as we draw to a close BUT that final chapter is the one that completely left me dumbfounded. It’s rare I feel this way about a book but man I was left feeling completely betrayed. Was the whole book a simulation, or just part of it? At what part in the story did it become a simulation? Why was it not obvious to readers such as myself (and I’m normally quite good at guessing twists)? I don’t even know where that leaves us now?
I’m feeling quite nonchalant about the whole series right now, especially as it’s fresh in my mind (I finished it about an hour ago). Is this what we want from a cliff hanger? I like a book that leaves me wanting more, a need to read the next book to see what happens next but I’m just not feeling that at the moment. I am waaaayyyy too confused right now.

Frostbite: The Graphic Novel (Vampire Academy: The Graphic Novel #2) – Review

Title: Frostbite: The Graphic Novel (Vampire Academy: The Graphic Novel #2)

Author: Richelle Mead (Adapter), Emma Vieceli (Illustrator), Leigh Dragoon (Adapter)

Type: Fiction

Genre: Fantasy

Format: Paperback

Pages: 156

Owned/Borrowed/Given Etc: Borrowed from the Library

Rating: 3/5

Blurb: WHEN LOVE AND JEALOUSY COLLIDE ON THE SLOPES. WINTER BREAK TURNS DEADLY.
A Strigoi attack puts St. Vladimir’s on high alert, and the Academy whisks its students away on a mandatory Holiday ski trip. But the glittering winter landscape and posh Idaho resort only provide the illusion of safety. When three students run away to strike back at the Strigoi, Rose must join forces with Christian to rescue them. Only this time, Rose – and her heart – are in more danger than she could have imagined.

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Before I start my review, I’d like to point out that I HAVE NOT YET read the Vampire Academy novels. I figured I’d try these before starting on the full-on books.

Knowing nothing of the story previously, I felt like I managed to get a pretty good idea as to what happens. It’s like a teenage saga. A group of teenagers (regardless of their species) hang around and get into all sorts of teenage trouble. The Dhampirs (half-human, half-vampire) are trained to protect the royalty of Vampire families. That’s pretty much all of it summed up in a nutshell.

I have issues with the illustrations in this (and its prior volume). Not that I don’t think Dragoon is an amazing artist, but they just don’t sit right with me in this instance. I couldn’t even really begin to tell you what it is, the characters don’t look like I imagine them to be when reading the words. That is with the exception of Rose. She is the only one in this story that seems to “fit” in with how the story works. 

That being said, I do like the story. I am definitely interested in reading more of the volumes (unfortunately, none of the libraries within my area have a copy of Shadow Kiss in Graphic Novel format and I am not all that keen to want to buy it). I think I may move onto the novels and take it from there, but I will have to start again from the beginning to make sure I get the full extent of the story and the detail that goes into a novel compared to the Graphic versions.

Twilight: The Graphic Novel, Volume 1 – Review

Title: Twilight: The Graphic Novel, Volume 1

Author: Young Kim, Stephenie Meyer

Type: Fiction

Genre: Fantasy

Format: Paperback

Pages: 224

Owned/Borrowed/Given Etc: Borrowed from the library

Rating: 4/5

Blurb: When Isabella Swan moves to the gloomy town of Forks and meets the mysterious, alluring Edward Cullen, her life takes a thrilling and terrifying turn. With his porcelain skin, golden eyes, mesmerizing voice, and supernatural gifts, Edward is both irresistible and impenetrable. Up until now, he has managed to keep his true identity hidden, but Bella is determined to uncover his dark secret…

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I’m a Twilight fan through and through. I always have been and probably always will be (I can’t confirm whether my 80-year-old self will still be interested in these type of stories but I’m hoping I will be).

There’s not really much for me to say about the story as its exactly the same as the books but the illustrations are absolutely fantastic! Young Kim has done a perfect job of bringing the characters to life. Whilst they resemble the characters seen on the big screen, they 100% match up with how I envisioned them when reading the books.

If you are a Twilight fan, then I would highly recommend reading this.

Otherworld (Last Reality #1) – Review

Ready Player One meets Game of Thrones meets The Lord of the Rings

Title: Otherworld (Last Reality #1)

Author: Jason Segel and Kirsten Miller

Type: Fiction

Theme: Virtual Reality/Game Based

Genre: Science Fiction

Format: Hardback

Pages: 355

Owned/Borrowed/Given Etc: Borrowed from the library

Rating: 4/5

Blurb: The company says Otherworld is amazing — like nothing you’ve ever seen before. They say it’s addictive — that you’ll want to stay forever. They promise Otherworld will make all your dreams come true.
Simon thought Otherworld was a game. Turns out he knew nothing. Otherworld is the next phase of reality. It’s everything you’ve ever wanted.
And it’s about to change humanity forever.
Welcome to the Otherworld. No one could have seen it coming.

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I loved this book. The story was just what I was looking for and it fit really well with my new found taste in genres. Otherworld is a tussle of a story between virtual and physical worlds, seeing the potential end of the world as we know it. This is definitely a science fiction book, but it centres around the video game side of science fiction and that’s why I liked it so much.

I was the first person to borrow this copy from my library so I got to read it, as new, in its hardback format. I’ve also reserved a copy of the second book in the last reality series and am hoping to collect it soon.

Some Possible Solutions Review

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What if your perfect hermaphrodite match existed on another planet? What if you could suddenly see through everybody’s skin to their organs? What if you knew the exact date of your death? What if your city was filled with doppelgangers of you?

Forced to navigate these bizarre scenarios, the characters search for solutions to the problem of how to survive in an irrational, infinitely strange world. In dystopias that are exaggerated versions of the world in which we live, these characters strive for intimacy and struggle to resolve their fraught relationships with each other, with themselves, and with their place in the natural world. We meet a wealthy woman who purchases a high-tech sex toy in the shape of a man, a rowdy, moody crew of college students who resolve the energy crisis, and orphaned twin sisters who work as futuristic strippers–and we see that no one is quite who they appear.

I borrowed this book through my local library app, Borrowbox. Recently I’ve developed a fondness for short story collections (providing the stories are within my preferred genres) and also an obsession to read books that have a similar vein to Black Mirror (the TV show). After reading the blurb (posted above, taken from Goodreads), I decided that this would be right up my alley.

I’ve never come across such a mixed bag of likeable stories in one book. Normally in a short story collection such as this, I would expect to like the majority of them and maybe only come across one or two that I wasn’t keen on. However, that wasn’t the case.

The best stories in this book, in my preferred order, are:
The Doppelgängers – A new mum finds that her entire town is filled with people exactly like her. I felt that I could relate to this one. I met a lot of new mums when I was also a new mum and although we weren’t identical in looks, our outward appearances and state of lives where eerily similar (the joys of night feeds and new babies).
The Knowers – A woman finds out the exact date of her death and has to live with that knowledge until the date in question. I didn’t relate to this one (I have no desire to know the date of my death) but I did like reading it. The story made me feel all warm and fuzzy inside, in a weird-knowing-when-im-going-to-die kind of way.

As for the rest of the stories in the book, whilst some of them were better than others, they have left no lasting impression on me nor can I remember what they are about.

As for the main reason I picked up this book, the “Black Mirror” vibe, I definitely got that on some of the stories but not all of them.

2 stars (1)