Selected Product: | Plague Year Paperback Author: Jeff Carlson Publisher: Ace Books Release Date: July 2008 ISBN-10: 044101514X ISBN-13: 9780441015146 List Price: £7.99 Average Customer Rating: | | |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Plague Year by Jeff Carlson (ISBN-10: 044101514X, ISBN-13: 9780441015146). At this time we have not yet written a review for Plague Year by Jeff Carlson (ISBN-10: 044101514X, ISBN-13: 9780441015146). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com Plague Year | Customer Rating: | | I was not sure what to expect from this book, but overall I was a little disappointed. Post-apocalyptic novels tend to be one or the other in terms of focus, either focussing on human survival side of the story or the science fiction part and this book includes both. Whilst the technology side was fascinating I think the human story suffered a little as result and that it tried to cover both leaving both parts covered slightly inadeqautely. The nanotechnology was however a refreshing aspect instead of floods / killer flu's and atomic bombs that usually appear in post-apocalyptic novels. Overall I did enjoy book but I think it is better suited to science and tech minded people than people who like the drama and tradgedy of post-apocalyptic novels. | Not quite the full package. | Customer Rating: | | I had high hopes for Plague Year, the synopsis read well and it's an interesting twist on a familiar theme. Introducing nanotechnology and it's effects is a good starting point. But from there I'm afraid this book falls down. The concept is good but the characterisation is weak. We never really get engaged with anyone and consequently I read this not really caring what happened to any of the characters and only a passing interest into the outcome of the whole book. Where you want to have some depth, to sense of smell what's happening, never really develops. We skip from one scene to the next and maybe there lies the problem - it feels like it has been written as though there was a film in mind rather than as a book. In summary, a nice idea but a rather thin execution. | A new version of an old genre | Customer Rating: | To set the scene the world is infected by a plague of nanites which eat anything warm blooded that they come in contact with, but deactivate in areas where the air pressure is less than 70% that of sea level. This produces mountain top islands that are inhabited by those who have escaped the plague.
Plague Year is a novel variant on the old plague survivor genre that unlike many such stories is actually believable. On the negative side, Carlson's addiction to short sentences can irritating some times and the political parts of the story don't really work.
The book is strongest when it deals with how people cope with the situation, and weakest when it moves into politics and conspiracies but overall is a good read. | Exciting and stimulating | Customer Rating: | | I really enjoyed this book. It was a damn good read. It ended a little fast but that's fine, books 2 and 3 are on their way. I hope the author can develop the plot ideas he has about the USA post nano plague, they are good ones. | Harrowing SF | Customer Rating: | Post-apocalyptic tales usually fall into one of two camps: the plucky lone survivor living hand-to-mouth, or the happy-go-lucky hippy commune who discover modern society was overrated. In Plague Year, Jeff Carlson, avoids both these tired tropes and paints, to my mind, a realistic portrayal of people coping as best they can in terrible circumstances.
Perhaps coping is too generous a word for the day-to-day existence that a band of strangers eke out on a cold, barren mountaintop east of San Francisco. Survive might be a better word. For although there is empathy and a community of sorts, there is also the brutal calculus of existence: if he eats, I don't. Despite these bursts of selfishness, what comes across is how very human these characters are. They make hard choices, and they suffer for it.
The second thread of the novel follows an astronaut who is aboard an international space station and has witnessed the devastation that the machine plague has wrecked on the world below. Unlike the grim physical quest for survival on Earth's high ground, her battle is a psychological one. As a nano-tech expert she is frantic to aid the fight against the machine plague, but how she might do this is unclear. Her confined unease is well depicted and provides a good contrast to the heart-in-mouth adventures of those below.
A "page-turner" in the best sense of the word, Plague Year presents a well-thought out, politically viable apocalyptic scenario, and marries it with compelling characters who you care about. Highly recommended. |
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