Minggu, 05 September 2010

Free Ebook , by Chuck Wendig

Free Ebook , by Chuck Wendig

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, by Chuck Wendig

, by Chuck Wendig


, by Chuck Wendig


Free Ebook , by Chuck Wendig

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, by Chuck Wendig

Product details

File Size: 8039 KB

Print Length: 428 pages

Publisher: Del Rey (July 12, 2016)

Publication Date: July 12, 2016

Language: English

ASIN: B015LZ04OK

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Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#111,753 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)

It's just not good.I have never felt so unattached to characters like I am to the Wexleys. If these are the heroes of the Republic, it's in big trouble. Norra still reels from losing (and even gaining back) Brentin, she's disinterested in being a mother and actually doing motherly things, and starts a love triangle that is as boring and predictable as I'll get out. Temmin is written so poorly, I found myself skimming his chapters or any mention of him. Chuck has no business writing teenagers. It's as if he had to google, "how do kids talk these days?" and "hip phrases in 2016".The Team is still atrocious. Jom is miscast and really should never be on the team. It was almost as if Chuck wanted a bearded guy so he could talk about beards (which he does uncomfortably a lot). His Jaime Lannister moment was so flat, I was surprised he even wanted revenge at the end. Jas was basically Rocket Raccoon, but GotG2 version, minus the humor, and Sinjir was gay. No, really, that's the biggest character development that he had from book 1 to 2 that actually made sense. In the torture scene, I was certain he liked doing it, but then he walks out a broken man? But then wants to do it again at the end and seems like he was cool with it because it was for his friends? Whatever...oh and he grew a mustache that he liked. Which was also mentioned uncomfortably a lot.The only redeeming quality in book 1 was the Empire, and boy did they take a huge step back. I was so done with the predictability of Sloan, Rax, Adea....these are the best and brightest of the Empire? Did they learn nothing from the endless backstabbing and backdooring? Is this Big Brother? is Rax getting evicted? Who has HoH? Does Yupe Tashu have a trick up his sleeve? Find out next week on BBIIGG BROTHER!The old characters never felt like the old characters. I know some of the EU books may have gotten the characters wrong, but boy, does Chuck not know how the heck to write Star Wars characters that already exist. Leia is a deus ex machina, turns out Mon Mothma is just a politician, Ackbar is just as confused as Sinjir about what he wants, Wedge is so awful, he's written like a romcom character that you want to love, but the movie is so bad, and Han...Han Solo might be the worst written Han in any book series out there. Chuck wanted him to come across as heroic, but he's just a deadbeat dad-to-be. This is probably the most unforgivable of Chuck's many sins. A pregnant wife means nothing to the power of friendship.The writing, of course, is poor. I actually don't mind the present tense narrative he uses. It's interesting and original. His downfall comes when he tries to describe any kind of anything. It's either boring or overly descriptive. There is no middle ground in this book. He straddled the GRRM Line with the overly descriptive nature of Kashyyk, to underwhelmingly so, as with Leia's saving of Han and Co. with the fleet. From the book: "The battle rages for some time." A whole battle, described in a sentence.Character development is nonexistent, evident from the beginning where Norra worries about Temmin's thirst for TIE Fighter blood & never thinks to address it with him later on because it never comes up again at all, Sinjir's apparent thirst for torture, Sloan's disturbing passivity after being the baddest chick in the club, and Jas and Jom's will-they-won't-they routine that goes on far too long. To his credit, he didn't try to kill everyone 4 or 5 times again.No review of this awful book would be complete without a mention of kissing or sex scenes. They are written as if by a teenager who has never has a kiss, but imagines it would be just like TV. For example, right from the get go, we have to slog through way too many paragraphs of this awkward courtship (I'll save you the trouble: between Jas and Jom), literally behind an apparently thin closed door, with everyone (incl. 15-year old Temmin) listening and gawking. I half expected the crew to bust out laughing, Norra shrug and make a silly "what's going on??" face, and a silly music score to play as the scene faded to black. Any scenes where characters expressed feelings or kissed was just way too long and painfully awkward to read.Save yourself the trouble and just don't read this book. It's bad.

First book was ok, but this one I couldn't finish. So much political overtones in the book and I had to stop reading when the gender neutral pronouns became apart of the book, at that point having to understand it was meant to say "He" or "She" but not saying it was too much of a distraction, I had to stop reading and re-read parts when the pronouns were present, and an obvious emphasis on adding homosexual couples into the storyline as it was needed for the actual story since the characters had already had a solid back story from the first book. It also changed their whole look in my opinion and didn't match the characters at all.

To start with, it should be known that I really did not like the first of the Aftermath series, see my review for more specifics. That being said, Life Debt is better, making steps in the right direction, but it still isn't where I would expect a good or a great Star Wars novel to be.First, let's talk writing. Life Debt is written in third person, but like the first book, it is written in third person-present tense. This style of writing is like nails on a chalkboard to me. It hurts to read. This gets. Compounded by. The lurching. Stop. And. Start. Of sentences throughout the book. The icing on the cake comes down to poor editing, with a number of obvious grammatical errors and outright misspelled words. Granted, authors are not perfect, so I can't blame Wendig for this, but his editorial team should be ashamed.Next, I want to discuss the story. While Life Debt is much better and far more interesting than its predecessor, there is one major plot hole that bothered me from one point in the novel all the way into the ending. Giving it away would be a major spoiler, but that makes it all the more egregious, so much of the plot hangs on this one element so awfully conceived as to render much of the novel senseless even if the idea was pretty cool.However, Wendig reclaims a little bit of credit for putting more focus on established Star Wars characters, with Chewie, Leia, and Han Solo taking center stage to much of the plot, even if the bulk of the novel follows the team established in the prior novel.Lastly, Star Wars fan credit. I cannot, as a fan, express how angry I am getting with little teases dangled in front of us with no explanation. For instance, there is a new sheriff in a town on Tattooine wearing armor we are lead to believe belongs to Boba Fett. But it it Boba Fett? Who knows, they don't answer the question. It gets infuriating that they won't answer small questions like this. That being said, I love trying to make guesses out of who might be Rey's parents or who Snoke is, if they are in these novels and I think pone of them is, but it is too early to tell.All that being said, the adventure was better this go around, but not great. It is still missing the punch of the old expanded universe that us long-standing Star Wars fans are looking for and feel the younger generation of Star Wars fans deserve.

Usually the middle section of a trilogy, whether movie or story or book, shines the most. This is due to the second installment being free of any need to establish the characters or the over arching conflict. However this novel falls to free itself from exposition and a sense of burden by the author to convince the reader that they should care about the story and characters. Even a shoddy attempt at throwing in the main characters of Leia Organa and Han Solo couldn't help. They had a feeling of just being there to placate fans that were upset of the absence of the movie characters from the last novel. Somehow this sequel is even more tiresome and worthless than the first. At the price of its conclusion as it sits, it's not worth the $15 to even bother reading how all this ends. I'll just look it up at the Star Wars Wikia.

The story is okay, but the story telling is awful. The author jumps around too often and inserts barely relevant ‘interludes’ that have no follow up and leave you wondering. I have read over 160 Star Wars EU novels and this one ranks among the worst.

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