Forty Years a Forester by Elers Koch
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
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pg13 Reader Reviews
book reviews, mostly.
books pulled from the shelves and new ones flying through the door. Enjoy!
Thursday, October 10, 2024
Monday, October 7, 2024
Friday, October 4, 2024
Review: Hum
Hum by Helen Phillips
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Book rating: 3.5
While this book takes place in a not so distant future, it speaks to today and where we might be headed. At the center of the story is May Webb, who we first encounter getting paid for a micro-plastic surgery that will alter her face in such a small way that will evade facial recognition. She and her family desperately need this money.
This future is populated by robots called Hum. They are helpful, do many things, such as the robot conducting the facial surgery. May splurges with the money to take her family on a vacation to stay in the botanical garden for a few nights. Something she feels she desperately needs, nature, a forest. We also sense May wants to find a deeper connection to her two kids, and hopes to get that with this vacation and to ensure that she takes their “bunnies” away from them. (This becomes a major plot point later.) These bunnies are devices attached to children wrists that seem like they are like phones. In this future people are very attached to their phones, much like today.
The writing was good, and found that the kids are very well portrayed. Maybe one of the better portrayals of children I’ve read in a while.
This book tries to address several topics some more subtly than others, such as rich being able to afford to turn off the constant bombardment of advertising; or how mothers are being taken to account for their children’s welfare more than fathers. There were other topics raised but not fully addressed, which leaves these open hanging issues…such as that facial surgery. This glossing over key elements of the book detracted from the overall quality of the book.
I listened to the audiobook, which was well done. For myself I felt this was a better way to read the book, but may not be for everyone. If you do like audiobooks, this may be the way to go for you.
View all my reviews
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Book rating: 3.5
While this book takes place in a not so distant future, it speaks to today and where we might be headed. At the center of the story is May Webb, who we first encounter getting paid for a micro-plastic surgery that will alter her face in such a small way that will evade facial recognition. She and her family desperately need this money.
This future is populated by robots called Hum. They are helpful, do many things, such as the robot conducting the facial surgery. May splurges with the money to take her family on a vacation to stay in the botanical garden for a few nights. Something she feels she desperately needs, nature, a forest. We also sense May wants to find a deeper connection to her two kids, and hopes to get that with this vacation and to ensure that she takes their “bunnies” away from them. (This becomes a major plot point later.) These bunnies are devices attached to children wrists that seem like they are like phones. In this future people are very attached to their phones, much like today.
The writing was good, and found that the kids are very well portrayed. Maybe one of the better portrayals of children I’ve read in a while.
This book tries to address several topics some more subtly than others, such as rich being able to afford to turn off the constant bombardment of advertising; or how mothers are being taken to account for their children’s welfare more than fathers. There were other topics raised but not fully addressed, which leaves these open hanging issues…such as that facial surgery. This glossing over key elements of the book detracted from the overall quality of the book.
I listened to the audiobook, which was well done. For myself I felt this was a better way to read the book, but may not be for everyone. If you do like audiobooks, this may be the way to go for you.
View all my reviews
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