Ready Player One | Book vs Movie Review


Copyright - Steven Spielberg

Ready Player One is a story about a young boy named Wade Watts and his search for an easter egg in a worldwide virtual reality game called the OASIS. Whoever discovers the easter egg, wins the game creator’s fortune and control over the OASIS.

When I first learned that Ready Player One was going to be a movie I cheered, and then I panicked. Ready Player One by Ernest Cline is one of my top 10 favorite books, mainly because it is an ode to all things nerdy and geeky.

After the first trailer was released a few months back, I saw there were going to be changes, and I was scared. However, it did not stop me from watching it on it's release date. 

The movie does a pretty swell job of keeping the general feel and gist of the book and its story. It is an ode to geekdom and all things nerdy - this being said…if you are not well versed in video games, comics, old cult movies or anything of that sort…you might be lost and might not enjoy the movie. Mostly because all the references will be lost to you (the same goes for the book).  

The movie was modernized in its geekdom - featuring games from the 2000s such as Overwatch. This was one of its major changes, and I was okay with it, because it had to appeal to a large modern audience. 

Overall I enjoyed the movie and liked catching all the references (even if I am pretty sure I did not catch them all).

Recently, this story has received a lot of backlash for being unrealistic or not being great literature or having shitty female characters or bad diversity or whatever - I feel that the movie did the book justice (even with the changes that I will go into later on). It told the story of a teenage boy (probably 17 - 20), who believes the Oasis is all that matters and that is why he wants to protect it, only to learn that there is more to life than living in that virtual reality. While fighting an evil corporation who wants to ruin the OASIS for everyone else (because greedy companies want to profit off free things, like always).

And the female character I saw people complain about in the book for being poorly written, actually was given a major plot point in the movie that was originally part of Wade’s arc. She also had a bigger role in the film other than being Wade’s love interest. That was pretty rad.

Now to the real book vs movie comparison. So if you have not read or seen Ready Player One…BEWARE OF SPOILERS THAT ARE COMING.

First major change is that we don’t know Wade’s age and we don’t know if he is in school. In the book he is stuck on the planet where all the schools are present and kids receive their education. This was important because Wade is poor, and could not afford paying the teleportation fee to go to various parts of the same planet let alone other planets. By being stuck in this planet he was able to figure out the first clue and find the first dungeon in the school planet. The dungeon was from the first edition Dungeons & Dragons.

The first two challenges were completely different book to movie, not a big deal. I guess racing and being in a horror movie is more exciting for the audience rather than going through a dungeon and playing an arcade game.

Another major change was how Wade got the extra life coin - which saved him when the big baddy decided to destroy the whole planet and zero everyone out. In the book, Wade completes a Pacman game with a perfect score (thinking it is the second clue) only to receive a quarter. In the movie it is given to him by a mechanical butler when Wade outsmarts it. (My brother told me that no one would want to watch anyone try to get a perfect score in Pacman…which is a fair point)

Also, the High Five (Parzival, Aech, Art3mis, Daito and Shoto) all lived in Columbus, Ohio rather than across the world. Which was convenient for the story I suppose. Daito never got murdered by the IOI which is great because he is pretty great during his on screen time. Also in the movie, Shoto is an 11-year-old Chinese boy - which was the cutest thing ever.

There were other changes done in the movie such as meeting Og Morrow at the very end after they won the game, but honestly that wasn’t a big deal…since they all lived in Columbus, Ohio and didn’t need any private jets to be united.

Even with all the changes, I was not angry or upset. I really enjoyed the movie and accepted the changes (unlike the Percy Jackson movies). It was visually pleasing movie celebrating all the things my dad, my brother, and I enjoy. It was a massive mash up done in a creative way - kinda like Who Framed Rodger Rabbit.

If you are well versed in video games, comics, cult movies or anything of that sort I think you’d enjoy the movie (and the book - even though it is more 70s oriented ). If you are not…well you probably won’t enjoy it as much. 

And if you are looking for something similar to Ready Player One (at least in book form) I recommend Warcross by Marie Lu.

Playwright Turned Novelist Elena Hartwell | Author Interview



On April 1, 2018, Camel Press will release Three Strikes, You’re Dead by Elena Hartwell, the third book in the Eddie Shoes Mystery series, set inWashington State. Private investigator Eddie Shoes heads to a resort outside Leavenworth, Washington, for a mother-daughter getaway weekend. Eddie’s mother, Chava, wants to celebrate her new job at a casino by footing the bill for the two of them, and who is Eddie to say no?

On the first morning, Eddie goes on an easy solo hike, and a few hours later, stumbles upon a makeshift campsite and a gravely injured man. A forest fire breaks out and she struggles to save him before the flames overcome them both. The man hands her a valuable rosary and tells her his daughter is missing and begs for her help. He dies before he can tell her more information. Is Eddie now working for a dead man? Barely escaping the fire, Eddie wakes in the hospital to find both her parents have arrived on the scene. Will Eddie’s card-counting mother and mob-connected father help or hinder the investigation? The police search in vain for a body. How will Eddie find the missing girl with only Eddie’s memory of the man’s face and a photo of his daughter to go on? Says Hartwell, “In book three, I wanted to explore the other side of Eddie’s family history. Readers often ask about her father, Eduardo, so I decided to give him a little more time in the spotlight. This story also expands on my interest in the experiences of people who come to this country to build new lives, both legally and illegally. Of course, I couldn’t leave Chava out, so she's in there too. A triangle is always more interesting than a duo. I hope readers enjoy the twists in the plot and seeing the relationships evolve as much as I did.”

About The Author

Elena Hartwell’s​ writing career began in the theater, where she also worked as a director, designer, producer, and educator. Productions of her scripts have been performed around the U.S. and abroad. She lives in North Bend, Washington, with her husband. For more information go to www.elenahartwell.com.


Exclusive Author Q&A


Q - How did the idea of the third book come around? Did you know what you wanted to do since book one?


I decided I wanted Eddie and Chava to travel for the third book while I was finishing book two. Bellingham, Washington, statistically has one murder a year, and the books are only a couple months apart, so I didn’t want the bodies piling up like Cabot Cove on a busy weekend. 

Sending them on vacation felt like a good way to have them stumble over a body in a different jurisdiction. The events were a surprise, but I had known since the first book that I would continue exploring the relationships between Eddie, Chava, and Eduardo. It was a lot of fun to get to include Eddie’s friend Debbie Buse and, of course, Franklin, in the action, despite the fact it’s set out of town.

Q - Which character do you think is most like you?


This is tricky because Eddie and Chava are both a lot like me, but at different times in my life. The funny part to me is that Chava, who is the mom, is more like I was a younger person, and Eddie, despite being younger, is more like me now. I was a bit of a wild child as a teenager (stop laughing at the understatement, Mom), which is closer to Chava’s persona. 

I think all characters share aspects of a writer’s personality. Especially the characters who feel like real people. When a character feels flat to me, I often think that’s because the writer didn’t incorporate anything of themselves in the writing. This includes the “bad guys,” because even people who do bad things have complex internal landscapes. At minimum, it’s how we understand other people, which in some sense, is a reflection of us. For example, I would never kill another person … but if I did …

Q - What made you decide to start writing mysteries?


I worked as a playwright for a lot of years, but mystery was always the genre I read. Mysteries don’t work particularly well onstage. They make for great TV and movies, but it’s tricky to put convincing mysteries onstage unless it’s an old-fashioned, locked room murder. It can be done, but it wasn’t what I wrote for the stage. 

I also always knew I wanted to be a novelist. Because it’s the genre I read the most, it was what I wanted to write. I’m not sure why I didn’t start writing novels earlier in my career. I was so focused on the stage—I worked as a director, designer, and educator—it took up all my time. 

But, I think I had the belief in the back of my mind I wasn’t capable of writing an entire novel. I went to graduate school and wrote a dissertation for my PhD, which is book length, so I think that might have given me the proof I needed that I can write something of that magnitude. Then I worked in theater a few more years until I finally woke up one day and thought, if not now, when? I wrote a few early books, my fourth was published, and the rest, as they say, is history.

Q - What is the biggest difference between writing plays and novels?


Volume! A play is typically two hours of stage time. That’s in the neighborhood of 120 pages. And that’s not very many words on the page either. A novel, on the other hand, runs 65-85 thousand words, or 300, densely written pages. 

With a play, it’s all about dialogue. There are actions, of course, but the majority of the story is told through what people say. Novels include the internal state of the characters and descriptions of locations. With plays, the actor finds the internal state and shows it to the audience. In the theater, the set designer and the lighting designer and the sound designer create the phyiscal aspects based on the script. One of the hardest things for me to learn making the shift was how to write solid descriptions. 

I had an editor tell me once, years ago, “I’ve never seen this before. You write great atmosphere, but I don’t know what anything looks like.” That has stayed with me, so when I get compliments on descriptions of place in my novels, that’s especially meaningful to me.

Q - What has been your overall influence in telling Eddie’s story since book one?


This is a great question. I’m influenced by the era I grew up in. The 70s and 80s produced a generation like no other (I know, that’s true for every generation). But we were the last group that didn’t have computers. We could play outside without helicopter parents. We weren’t scheduled for every hour of the day. 

Our television detectives were low-key, without the speed and degree of violence we see today. James Rockford was just as likely to talk his way out of a situation than he was to go in somewhere with guns blazing. Sue Grafton’s Kinsey Millhone is still back in the years when I came of age. School shootings were unheard of. Meth and opioids weren’t an epidemic yet. 

Eddie is a bit of a throwback. She doesn’t love the latest and greatest gadget. She’s not someone who wants to spend her time on social media. She likes a simple life. Her mom, her dog, her friends, in person. 

To me, despite the fact I have to deal with 21st Century technology in the books, she’s an echo of simpler times. But she also deals with very current social issues, so she’s the culmination of the world I grew up in and the world I live in now.

Q - What is your go to music playlist and snacks when you’re getting in the zone to write?


I need quiet – so there’s no music, but oh the snacks, the snacks … so important! First off there’s coffee. I have my coffee—cream, no sugar—before anything else. Then there’s popcorn. I love to snack on popcorn. We don’t currently have a microwave (remember that Luddite thing I mentioned?) so I often get SkinnyPop or Smartfood (love the white cheddar!). I also like a little bit of chocolate. I lean toward dark chocolate, but this time of year I’m all about the Cadbury mini-eggs.

Q - What was the biggest challenge of writing a mother/daughter duo in a mystery novel.


This was actually pure joy for me. I love the dynamic between the two of them. I’m sure I’ve been influenced by the Golden Girls, short funny mom, tall, pragmatic daughter, but it’s also just a delight to put not one, but two strong women forward. My mom and I have a great relationship, so I have a wonderful model of the good parts of that dynamic. The arguments are all made up!

What is more of a challenge, albeit an interesting one, is that Eddie has a Latino father and a Jewish mother, so I have a lot of research to do.

First off, her mother Chava is currently investigating their Jewish heritage. So I get to do that right alongside her. I’ve learned about certain holidays and foods. It also forced me to really think about Chava’s family history. Her father survived the camps in Nazi Germany, and came to the US. Chava’s mother was Ashkenazi, her father Sephardic. All that background was fascinating for me. Eduardo’s backstory has not been revealed with as much depth, but I’ve got research going there too. Trying to get details right about different cultures is challenging because you want to honor them by getting them correct.

Q - What is your earliest memory of art?


A production of A Christmas Carol at a local theater when I was a kid. I’d been exposed to art a lot before that, museums, literature, dance, but that production stands out to me as the first time I was both wowed by an artistic experience and aware of how much it stayed with me. I had to be older to realize some of the other things I already loved, music, books, were art.

Q - A quote or statement you try to live by?


“Don’t confront me with my failures, I had not forgotten them” – It’s a line from the song “These Days” by Jackson Browne. What it means to me is two-fold. First, we all make mistakes in life, things that haunt us, that’s part of the human experience. Second, we don’t always have to jump on other people about their mistakes. We can take a step back and see if they are making a change in their life. It’s not our responsibility to “fix” people. We can help if asked, or call a person out on something if they are behaving badly, but we shouldn’t assume other people aren’t aware of their own faults or need us to remind them.

Q - If your book were to be picked up for TV or a film, who would you cast to be Eddie Shoes?


This is such a challenging question! She has the humor (and height) of Allison Janney, but she’s half Latina and in her thirties. It would be important to me that she was played by a person with Eddie’s ethnic background. Stephanie Beatriz might be great, but she’s only 5’7. They would have to cast someone really short to play Chava! I’m totally open to suggestions … Hollywood? Is that you calling?

Check out her books at www.elenahartwell.com

A Wrinkle in Time | Book vs Movie


Photo Credit: Disney Enterprise Inc.


I recently read A Wrinkle in Time because I was kinda hyped up for the movie. With it being a book turned movie, I wanted to see how the book to screen adaptation went....and quite frankly, I am impressed.

While the movie was not a perfect replica of the book, it came pretty damn close. There are only a some minor and one big change (that honestly wasn't that big of a deal). Before I go into detail, I want to warn the people who have not read or seen the movie -- the rest of this post will contain spoilers, so if you don't want the story to be ruined for you please read this after you have read or watched the movie!

The movie starts with a bit of a prologue where we are introduced to Mr. Murphy (Daddy Chris Pines), Meg ( Lyric Wilson ) and Mrs. Murphy ( Gugu Mbatha-Raw ), and we are introduced from the beginning that Mr. & Mrs. Murphy are big science wiz and are going to adopt a baby, Charles Wallace ( Deric McCabe ).

Then older Meg (Storm Reid) is introduce and the movie follows the book pretty well. Only minor change is that the twins, Sandy and Dennys, don't exist and Meg's bully has a name: Veronica (Rowan Blanchard). We are able to see Meg struggle at school and be teased because she is still not over her dad's disappearance.  Charles Wallace is also in school, and is too smart for his age just like in the book.

The only other small difference in the first half of the movie is that Mrs. Whatisit is introduced later by Charles Wallace rather than on the famous, "Dark and stormy night." Which is totally fine, as it still made the plot move forward.

The movie is true to character's personalities, especially the three kids. However, unlike the book, Meg, Charles Wallace and Calvin end up in Camozotz because of Meg's refusal to return to Earth without her dad. The Mrs' tesser is changed in course, and the kids are in Camozotz against their will. Unable to tesser them out the Mrs give just Meg their gifts and lets them go on the mission to rescue Mr. Murphy.

The movie added more to book in world building and the oddness of Camozotz. Also it was more dramatized which is fair since movies are different than books. Unlike the first half of the movie, which was very faithful to the book, in the second half we begin to see bigger changes.

For starters, we don't see the little boy bouncing the ball in the wrong rhythm (which is a minor thing sure). Meg, Charles Wallace and Calvin meet Mr. Red in a beach instead of the Central Intelligence straight away. So we don't see the forceful uniformity the center creates. At the beach Charles Wallace eats his sand sandwich and is quickly taken over by the IT...rather than fighting it and then letting himself get taken over due to his pride.

Once Charles Wallace becomes part of IT we are officially in the weird space of the Central Intelligence where he lets Meg find Mr. Murphy (rather than fighting her). Once Mr. Murphy is free, Charles Wallace starts taking them to The Brain. However, instead of meeting The Brain and having to unfollow the rhythm of the world...Calvin and Meg get taken over pretty quickly and Mr. Murphy tries to tesser Meg and Calvin away.

BUT, instead of tessering to the planet of Ixchel where Meg has to heal due to touching The Black Thing...Meg stays behind to save Charles Wallace. While this is kinda a big plot change, it did not hurt the film which is fair -- in Ixchel Meg learns how to save her brother and is sent back to be a warrior by the Mrs.

I understand that going to Ixchel would have just made the film longer and not all too necessary, because while in the room with The Brain -- Meg thinks of her faults and all the love in her, and figures out how to save Charles Wallace.

Rather than a screaming match like in the book, the movie gets a bit brutal and Charles Wallace uses the powers of IT to beat up his sister into giving in.

But obviously, Meg's love for Charles Wallace and his love to his sister beats the darkness and they are able to get away and bring Mr. Murphy home.

YAY HAPPINESS.

Overall, I am very pleased with the movie. The special effects and CGI were so beautiful too. I applaud the cast and crew of A Wrinkle in Time, and all the artists who worked on the film. Acting wise...I wasn't very impressed with Storm Reid, compared to her co-stars Levi Miller and Deric McCabe, who were fantastic for child actors. Reid had her good and bad scenes, but I see a lot of room for growth and improvement as an actor. (but what do I know haha)

If A Wrinkle in Time was part of your childhood I think you won't be disappointed with the movie adaptation. Go watch it!!

Sabriel by Garth Nix | Book Review



For many years Sabriel has lived outside the walls of the Old Kingdom, away from the random power of Free Magic, and away from the Dead who won't stay dead. But now her father, the Mage Abhorsen, is missing, and to find him Sabriel must cross back into that treacherous world - and face the power of her own extraordinary destiny.

Does the walker choose the path, or the path the walker?

--

Before receiving this book as a Christmas I was unaware this book even existed, and I am quite upset. Why doesn't this book have a big following like some other books? It deserves it, because it is marvelous.

"Yes," said Abhorsen. "I am a necromancer, but not of the common kind. where others of the art raise the dead, I lay them back to rest. And those that will not rest, I bind-or try to. I am Abhorsen . . ."

He looked at the baby again, and added, almost with a note of surprise, "Father of Sabriel."

When follow the story of Sabriel, an 18-year-old girl who lives in a world where magic and science combine, one night while at school she learns that her father is in danger so she leaves the comfort of her to go rescue her only family. She receives her father's magical items, a saber and a set of seven bells, which aid in keeping the Dead dead. Along the way she learns more about who her father was and it means to be the special necromancer called Abhorsen.

Sabriel through out the stories learns from her foolish mistakes, and does her best to not get her pride in the way when she has to make dire decisions where lives are at stake. It is a bit refreshing find a character who makes mistakes, is aware of their mistakes, admits their mistakes, and remembers the original mistake when a similar situation rises. Most characters, like most people do not admit their mistakes and while they may learn from it admitting one is wrong is not frequently seen or read.

Garth Nix writing is fast-paced, lush and hypnotic. He describes people, places and scenery poetically and thoroughly and he does not spend two pages doing in doing. We are given a complete picture with all the five senses and it only took a few paragraphs.

Nix's world building is interesting, for he sets the foundation of his Old Kingdom world without it being a massive information dump. The details seep through the narrative passively, because Sabriel has grown up in this land and nothing to her nothing is new, but we as readers everything is mysterious and we only learn bits and pieces along the way making the world actually feel like a magical unexplored world (leaving a number of things with no real explanations at times). The magic system in the Old Kingdom is unlike anything I have read before (and I read a lot of fantasy), Nix blend and mixes magic and science, not as enemies, but as equals. Science has strengths and weaknesses in the world just as magic has its own strengths and weaknesses. There was never a time where one was superior than the other, which was so strange and new.


“Let this be my final lesson. Everyone and everything has a time to die.”

My Rating: 5/5


February Wrap-up & March Preview


February has been a bit of a slow reading month for me since I spent majority of my free time watching Critical Role or TV shows.

However I read three books:

Oak and Mistletoe by J.Z.N McCauley (My Rating: 2.5/5)

A Druid Curse, A Prophesied Love, A Consuming Vengeance…
Catherine Green, along with her twin sister and older brother, travels to Ireland on a college graduation trip. Her vacation takes a permanent turn when she lands her dream job at an art and history museum on her beloved Emerald Isle. She meets a handsome stranger named Bowen, an expert of sorts on local ancient studies. Though their first meetings are turbulent at best, Catherine finds herself drawn to him.


Unaware that she is the key to breaking a hidden curse, Catherine unleashes the evil madman Conall and his druid followers, imprisoned since ancient times. Tragedy and loss ensue, sprouting within Catherine the deep seeds of rage that thrust her onto the damaging path of vengeance. Confused by the enigma that is Bowen, his mixed signals, and her own feelings, she is swept away with him on an unexpected journey surrounded by myth and long-forgotten knowledge. In order to stop the evil plans of Conall and his reunified army, Catherine must entwine her fate with peril. Her survival is trivial to her as long as Conall dies. She’ll do whatever it takes.


Sabriel by Garth Nix (My Rating: 5/5)

For many years Sabriel has lived outside the walls of the Old Kingdom, away from the random power of Free Magic, and away from the Dead who won't stay dead. But now her father, the Mage Abhorsen, is missing, and to find him Sabriel must cross back into that treacherous world - and face the power of her own extraordinary destiny.
A Wrinkle In Time (My Rating: 4/5)

Fifty years ago, Madeleine L'Engle introduced the world to A Wrinkle in Time and the wonderful and unforgettable characters Meg and Charles Wallace Murry, and their friend Calvin O'Keefe. When the children learn that Mr. Murry has been captured by the Dark Thing, they time travel to Camazotz, where they must face the leader IT in the ultimate battle between good and evil—a journey that threatens their lives and our universe. A Newbery Award winner, A Wrinkle in Time is an iconic novel that continues to inspire millions of fans around the world. This special edition has been redesigned and includes an introduction by Katherine Paterson, an afterword by Madeleine L'Engle's granddaughter Charlotte Jones Voiklis that includes photographs and memorabilia, the author's Newbery Medal acceptance speech, and other bonus materials

For the month of March I hope to read a bit more, but we shall see what will happen.

March To Be Read:

The Hobbit by J.R.R. Tolkien
Starswept by Mary Fan
Winter Glass by Lexi Hillyer
Obdisio by Amie Kaufman and Jay Krisstoff


Elementals: Ice Wolves by Amie Kaufman | Book Review


Elementals: Ice Wolves by Amie Kaufman


Everyone in Vallen knows that ice wolves and scorch dragons are sworn enemies who live deeply separate lives.

So when twelve-year-old orphan Anders takes one elemental form and his twin sister, Rayna, takes another, he wonders whether they are even related. Still, whether or not they’re family, Rayna is Anders’s only true friend. She’s nothing like the brutal, cruel dragons who claimed her as one of their own and stole her away.

In order to rescue her, Anders must enlist at the foreboding Ulfar Academy, a school for young wolves that values loyalty to the pack above all else. But for Anders, loyalty is more complicated than obedience, and friendship is the most powerful shapeshifting force of all.


I loved Kaufman’s sci-fi book, Illuminae, and when I was given the opportunity to pick up her book at a book festival, I was quite excited!

I had very little knowledge on what the book was about other than it being a Middle Grade novel filled with Viking like magic. I went into the book blindly, which was quite nice to do since everything was a surprise. 

We follow the story of Anders, who is an orphan surviving the streets alongside his twin sister Rayna. Due to a series of unfortunate events, Rayna and Anders get separated and Anders enrolls to an academy for people who are able to shift into wolves (actual wolves not the werewolves thing). Anders does everything he can to get his sister back and learns some mysteries along the way.

The best part of the book was the diverse cast. There were characters of all shapes, sexualities, and color. The main character is a young boy with brown skin and black curly hair. He has a non-binary friend who uses “they” pronouns and a bad ass fighting teacher who protected a section of the city all by herself with her wife. It was nice to have representation be so normalized, having no one in the story question it and just accepted it.

The story focuses on the importance of friendship and family, like most middle grade novels tend to these days (Something I feel YA should write about too). 

Even though this is considered a middle grade novel, it is a novel that any age group can enjoy. I personally found enjoyment in it, and Kaufman is still able to build a mystery in her lore that will have the older audience trying to piece things together just as the intended young readers.

I believe if you enjoyed books such as Percy Jackson by Rick Riordan, Magisterium by Holly Black & Cassandra Clare or Artemis Fowl by Eoin Colfer you will defiantly enjoy Ice Wolves.

My Rating: 5/5

January Wrap-Up



I felt that January was a slow reading month for me, mostly because two of the books I read were pretty bad/boring but I had to read them for some reviews I had to do. (One for a literary magazine and a book tour).

Hinder and There Your Heart Lies almost put me in a massive reading slump, but thankfully Ice Wolves saved the day.

While it wasn't the best reading month, it did bring new books that I purchased at my local second-hand book store, Volume One Books. (Okay it is not local it is like a 50 minute drive, but it's still pretty worthy to be local).



Here to a better reading month.

What did you guys read in January, let me know!