Sunday, 25 May 2014
Godzilla Awakening Graphic Novel Unboxing/Review
Another unboxing video and this time, I look at Godzilla Awakening the graphic novel set before the events of the movie.
Godzilla The Art of Destruction Art Book Unboxing/Review
So here it is.
My very first unboxing and its...
Well you've seen the title of this post already :) so here's the video. Enjoy
My very first unboxing and its...
Well you've seen the title of this post already :) so here's the video. Enjoy
Godzilla 2014 Vlog & Review
Warning!
(Both videos in this post contain spoilers for Godzilla (2014). If you do not to hear spoilers, there is a link on the review video to skip them)
Quick Catch-up
Been somewhat neglecting my blog because I've been putting some time into my YouTube channel and other thing so here's a quick catch-up and it goes as follows:
- Went to Cheshire Oaks to see Godzilla (2014)
- YouTube account has been verified and now a partner :D
- Writing more for my own novel while writing reviews for various books and other stuff (soon to be featured here in written form & video versions on YouTube.
- Done my first two unboxing videos :)
- Got a job in Marks & Spencers ( I start next month.)
Wednesday, 14 May 2014
The Trench Review
Released in 1999, The Trench is the third entry in Steve Alten’s Meg
series. The Trench takes place four years after the events of Meg A Novel of
Deep Terror where our protagonist Jonas Taylor is now married to Terry Tanaka
and also working at the Tanaka Institute where he is looking after the only
surviving Megalodon pup that was captured at the end of the last book and held
in the whale lagoon.
The book’s prologue begins in the Mariana Trench with a submersible
named the Proteus is scouting the floor for helium isotopes as the captain
Barry Leace frets over the safety of his crew and takes the safe option of slowing
the Proteus’s speed to avoid the chances of colliding with a black smoker
(hydrothermal vent) which would make a breach in the titanium hull and the
pressure change would kill everyone onboard. Tension arises between Barry and
Ellis Richards, the team leader over the pace that the exploration is taking
and going outside a projected timetable and delaying the Prometheus and
Epimetheus submersibles from doing their assigned tasks.
On arriving at their designated coordinates, the crew begin to take
samples from a vent near a clump of tubeworms and things go smoothly at first
when a number of blips appear on the sonar screen heading toward the Proteus. Barry
wants to cease operations and retreat to the safety of the Benthos which is six
kilometres behind them while Richards refuses to retract the mechanical arms
which are still collecting the samples and he is insistent on securing them
onboard before the unknown life forms collide with the Proteus.
The blips become stronger and faster on the sonar and it indicates that
the approaching objects are to be forty feet long and Barry then ignites the
lateral thrusters which turns the Proteus counter-clockwise and almost tearing
the mechanical arms off and loosing every sample collected in the process. He
then takes the Proteus to its top speed of 1.8 knots in an effort to get within
visual range of the Benthos when it goes quiet and it’s followed by a sudden
jolt and the crew are thrown around from the impact.
As Barry tries to regain control of the Proteus only to discover that
the controls are not responding and a plate of the hull is loosening from the
attack but now the Benthos is now in sight so Barry puts out an emergency radio
call for the Benthos to open its hanger doors while the geologist of the team
Linda tells him that it takes five minutes for the Benthos to fill the chamber. A whistling sound then fills the cabin of the Proteus because the
integrity of the plates and another heavy impact rocks the submersible.
Barry looks to the port glass where his head just struck and see a
luminous crimson eye peering in from the other side. The whistling ceases when
a pair of rivets shoot out into the cabin and Barry’s head implodes before they
hit the floor.
Then the book brings us to our protagonist Jonas Taylor who wakes up
from a night terror where he was back in the Mariana Trench where he in a Lexan
pod and he spots another Lexan pod with Terry unconscious inside and he then
looked down into the dark abyss and sees a Megalodon rising towards Terry’s pod
and watches it engulf the pod. Jonas and Terry start to share an intimate
moment after Terry manages to calm Jonas down when they are interrupted by a
phone call from his assistant Manny at the Institute’s lagoon saying he needs
his help immediately.
About 20 minutes later, Jonas arrives at the lagoon in time for the
captured Megalodon’s 10AM feeding with a capacity crowd eagerly waiting in the
stands surrounding the tank. After arriving, Jonas goes to the underground
viewing area where the Megalodon is swimming at that moment, The Megalodon
nicknamed “Angel” now fully grown is 75ft long making her larger than her mother
as well as proving to be much more vicious presses her head against the side of
the tank and focuses her cataract-gray eye onto Jonas but Angel then disappears
and heads towards the canal where a large side of beef is attached to an A-frame
above the lagoon. Angel explodes from the water taking the food in a single
bite and severally bending the A-frame in the process. Jonas and Manny discuss
Angel’s behavior when it’s pointed out that Angel has been ramming her head
against the doors that lead outside to the open ocean and it becomes clear that
she wants out!
After reading the first book, I jumped into this sequel with baited breath...
and I wasn't disappointed.
The story begins with our hero from the first book Jonas Taylor and his life being in a right mess. After successfully killing the Megalodon in the first book, he captured her remaining offspring, a female pup to go and put on display at the Tanaka Institute. Jonas has now married his friend Masao's daughter Terry and everything seemed to be going great. Then lawsuits started to roll in with the families and friends of all the victims of the Megalodon began looking for compensation.
The story begins with our hero from the first book Jonas Taylor and his life being in a right mess. After successfully killing the Megalodon in the first book, he captured her remaining offspring, a female pup to go and put on display at the Tanaka Institute. Jonas has now married his friend Masao's daughter Terry and everything seemed to be going great. Then lawsuits started to roll in with the families and friends of all the victims of the Megalodon began looking for compensation.
Jonas, Masao and the Tanaka Institute were easy targets because of their
bold attempt to capture the Meg instead of just killing it and allowed the body
count to rise. Jonas now is trapped working at the Institute displaying the
nearly fully grown Megalodon named Angel to the public with nearly every penny
received going straight into another compensation settlement. Jonas feels the
strain from the trials and is haunted by the Megalodon, having re-occurring
nightmares of how the beast will one day kill him.
This puts a great strain on his marriage to Terry and further disaster
strikes when as Jonas has predicted Angel becomes too big to imprison at nearly
75ft, she is much larger then her mother was and eventually she smashes free
from the Lagoon and enters the open ocean and Jonas is obligated by the
Institutes owners to go after the Meg and re-capture her, but all is not quite
as it seems.
Now sequels are often a tough thing to get right the questions are:
Can the second installment
of a film series or book recapture the magic of the first, and still be fresh and
also can it stand on its own if you don't know the first one.
Fortunately, Steve Alten's second outing in the Meg series does everything right. You get more of what was brilliant about the first book - the characters, the little marine biology lessons, the spectacular set-pieces of shark on human action as well as a general upping of stakes across the board while also getting some exciting new ideas and concepts, some of which survive to take their place in the Meg universe, and some of which are devoured by the queen of the seas by the book's end.
Fortunately, Steve Alten's second outing in the Meg series does everything right. You get more of what was brilliant about the first book - the characters, the little marine biology lessons, the spectacular set-pieces of shark on human action as well as a general upping of stakes across the board while also getting some exciting new ideas and concepts, some of which survive to take their place in the Meg universe, and some of which are devoured by the queen of the seas by the book's end.
If you thought the first book was a nice idea that had run its course after 400-odd pages, I say think again. The Trench still has some surprises for you.
However I do have a couple of things to nick pick as well as a few
praises to address:
- Terry Tanaka
Personally I like how her character has grown and developed in the time
between the first book and this one where she is a much stronger character than
before and more willing to take action given the situations she is placed in
throughout The Trench. Even before the events of The Trench, Jonas & Terry
suffer great emotional trauma with the loss of their first child who died in the
womb at 8 months and this is used by both antagonists Benedict and Celeste
Singer to hurt her and the way Terry bounces back is nothing short of inspirational.
- Bin Laden
Surprised? I was too. Bin Laden is named in the book as one of Benedict’s
financial backers for the expedition into the Mariana Trench to collect rocks which
contain the rare gas Helium-3 in order to create fusion that can be weaponized.
His inclusion here to me seems like it was just thrown in at the last minute as
a means to make Benedict a more imposing and threatening antagonist.
- New creatures
This is not a bad thing because we now have a new threat which adds variety
instead of just having the Meg and human characters. This also adds an element
of mystery as to what else lives in the trench besides the Megalodons.
- Celeste Singer
I personally hated her so much. If you thought that Jonas’ wife from
the last book Maggie was bad then Celeste Singer makes her look like the innocent
girl next door. I can also extend this to Benedict who at times come off a bit
as a one dimensional character instead of being the multi-leveled personality
that he tries to present.
So in conclusion, The Trench overall I think this a great follow-up to Meg
A Novel of Deep Terror with more character development, action, emotional drama
and most surprising some elements of espionage worked into an already thrilling
story. I won't spoil the ending but I will say this book had me hooked just
like the first book. In fact after reading this book I straight away went to reading
the third in the series Primal Waters.
So if you've read Meg by this book now, if you haven't get both you
will not regret them.
The Trench is available in paperback, hardback, in all e-book formats,
audiobook from all good book shops.
Monday, 5 May 2014
Meg A Novel of Deep Terror Review
First published in 1997 and re-released in a revised and
expanded edition in 2005, Meg A Novel of Deep Terror is the first entry in
Steve Alten’s Meg series. The main core of the story presented revolves around
a disgraced former aquanaut named Jonas Taylor who was doing top secret dives
for the US Navy.
The book’s prologue starts in the Late Cretaceous period
where a herd of duckbilled dinosaurs called Shantungosaurus which are attacked
by a Tyrannosaurus on a shoreline while they are foraging for food. As the
Tyrannosaurus chases a pair that breaks away from the herd and flee into the
sea, it becomes entrapped in the muddy sea floor, where it is swiftly and
brutally killed by a Megalodon after the pair of Shantungosaurus escape back to
the beach.
Then the book goes ahead to the present day where our
protagonist Jonas Taylor is giving a lecture to a packed auditorium of over 600
people at the Scripps Institute about the Megalodon. Jonas continues his
presentation by showcasing a few Megalodon teeth and addressing theories about
the circumstances of the creature’s disappearance from the world’s oceans
ranging from falling temperatures to prey becoming smaller and faster making it
harder for Megalodon to feed. An elderly man then raises his hand to ask Jonas
what is his theory on how Megalodon disappeared to the majority of the
audience’s unanimous agreement and Jonas responds by referring to his thoughts
which differ to what many others in the same of study think.
As the lecture continues, Jonas’s wife Maggie and best
friend Bud Harris enter the auditorium and quietly take two empty seats due to
Jonas running behind schedule for an award ceremony that Maggie is due to
attend for a journalism piece on the Save the Whales campaign. After leaving
the auditorium and heading to the award ceremony venue, Jonas and Maggie argue
while Bud defuses the tension which temporally stops but builds up again during
the ceremony when Jonas has too much to drink and sees Bud dancing with Maggie
while groping her buttocks with some “help” from Maggie herself to which Jonas
punches Bud in response and leaving to go outside to clear his head.
While outside, Jonas is approached by Terry Tanaka who was
also at his lecture and offers him a ride home while asking him to come with
her to Monterey to meet with her father Masao Tanaka who is an old friend of
Jonas and needs his help in recovering a damaged U.N.I.S. (Unmanned Nautical Informational
Submersible) which is part of a joint project between Masao’s Tanaka Institute
and JAMSTEC (The Japanese Marine Sciences Technology Center) where the Tanaka
Institute is to provide JAMSTEC with 25 U.N.I.S. robots to monitor the seafloor
to detect seismic activity along the 125 mile stretch of the underwater canyon
known as the Mariana Trench in exchange for funding for Masao’s dream project
of a whale lagoon which would be connected to the ocean by means of steel doors
where whales could swim inside and out whenever they want and give birth and
raise their young.
Terry also tells Jonas that a large number of other U.N.I.S.
have ceased transmitting following the unit in a photo she had shown him
earlier in their conversion. Because of the U.N.I.S. going offline, JAMSTEC
cuts the funding of the whale lagoon which in turn forced Masao to send his
most experienced pilot which is his own son DJ Tanaka down to investigate and
recover one of the U.N.I.S. for examination.
Jonas then accompanies Terry the next morning to the Tanaka Institute
where Masao greets them and takes him into the projection room where footage of
a U.N.I.S. is being reviewed by Alphonse DeMarco, Masao’s chief engineer.
During part of the footage review, Jonas sees a fuzzy white triangular object
which is blown up and looks like a tooth and Masao knowing what happened to
Jonas seven years before gives Jonas the opportunity to return to the Mariana
Trench along with DJ to recover the object and confront his fears.
When I first picked up 'Meg' I must admit I had no idea what I was in for, but the cover looked thrilling enough to spark my interest. After reading it I think that Meg is a superb thriller from front cover to back cover. It was only one of a few books I can admit to not wanting to put down at any point.
The author Steve Alten has clearly done a lot of research
and it does show throughout the book especially during an exposition scene such
as Jonas’s paleontology lecture near the beginning of the book or the scenes
when Jonas is explaining to the others to catch the shark how the shark hunts
and how they are going to catch it works well but when Alten is using this
heavily scientific terminology in descriptive passages it just reads far too
chunkily. Thankfully this is not a consistent feature throughout the novel but
does bog down a few sections.
However there are some points and inconsistencies that I
feel I must address and these are:
- The front cover and prologue of the book show and describe a Megalodon killing and devouring a T-Rex
While the idea of a 65ft long shark attacking and killing
the tyrant lizard king does give us the readers a good sense of the creature’s
power and establishes its status as Lord & Master of the sea, it is wrong.
The earliest discovered Megalodon by means of carbon dating a specimen’s teeth
puts it at the late Oligocene or 28 million years ago while dinosaurs like
T-Rex went extinct at 65 million years ago leaving roughly 37 million years
apart making it impossible for these two creatures to ever meet.
- The characterization of the female characters
The female characters presented in the book are shown in a
somewhat misogynistic and sexist light. This is something I didn’t expect to
read in a contemporary novel like this and I personally think that Steve Alten
does not share this as his personal views on women but I also sense that he may
have had some difficulty writing female characters here but they do become
better and more interesting with each entry.
- Masao Tanaka
My nitpick here is less
to do with his characterization and more a flaw in his character back-story. From
the moment he is introduced comes across as a slightly stereotypical, aged
Japanese businessman, he speaks using good and fluent English but interspersed
with Japanese terminology such as referring to Jonas as "Taylor-san"
and when angry reverts back into full Japanese. He is by no means offensive and
is in fact one of Alten's better rounded characters. But it is later in the
book when we are told Masao's back story where things fall apart. We discover
that during the second World War Masao, then six years old, and his parents
were living in America and taken into a Japanese internment camp after the
attack on Pearl Harbor. In this camp his parents died, he was then adopted and
raised by an American couple in America. Surely a character that was raised in America
by American parents from the age of six years old would not come across as a
slightly stereotypical Japanese businessman, who speaks with Japanese anachronisms
in a way that suggests a Japanese accent.
- The incident onboard the Sea Cliff
But putting these minor nitpicks aside, Meg a Novel of Deep
Terror is overall a thrilling read and has great character development and the
journey into the Mariana Trench is written with absolute atmospheric genius,
the terrifying abyss closes in around our characters along with the fear of the
things that swim out in the blackness. The main action and attack sequences are
written with verve and frenetic attention to detail. But I think Alten's best
achievement in this book is the Megalodon itself, in it he has created a
creature that is singularly beautiful and elegant but yet horrifying at the
same time a thing that can really capture our most primal of fears.
The book itself is a
must for anyone remotely interested with the ocean and sharks and a definite
for any reader who wants a superb thriller. The last thirty or so pages of the
book are pure thrilling action which lead to an amazing climax. I totally
recommend this book, it is a great read and a true 'Page Turner'.
Meg A Novel of Deep Terror is available in paperback,
hardback, in all e-book formats, audiobook + CD.
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