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Tom Fletcher (1)

Autor(a) de The Leaping

Para outros autores com o nome Tom Fletcher, veja a página de desambiguação.

7+ Works 117 Membros 7 Reviews

Séries

Obras de Tom Fletcher

The Leaping (2010) 62 cópias
Gleam (The Factory Trilogy) (2014) 19 cópias
The Thing on the Shore (2011) 18 cópias
The Safe Children (2009) 5 cópias
Field 5 cópias
Ravenglass Eye (2012) 5 cópias
The Home 3 cópias

Associated Works

Black Wings of Cthulhu 2 (1601) — Contribuinte — 139 cópias
The Spectral Book of Horror Stories (2014) — Contribuinte — 15 cópias
The Obverse Book of Ghosts (2010) — Contribuinte — 6 cópias

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Sexo
male

Membros

Resenhas

Review from Tenacious Reader http://www.tenaciousreader.com/2014/11/12/gleam-by-tom-fletcher/:

3.5/5 stars

The cover may be absolutely gorgeous, but be warned, this is one strange world. Within the Gleam, there is a black Pyramid in which people are safe from the external threats. They are shown preserved samples of the creatures that lurk outside their walls, in what they call the Discard. They are told stories of the horrors that await anyone that ventures outside the safety of the Pyramid. But Alan (also known as Wild Alan), knows a different side of the life outside the Pyramid. Unlike others, he was actually born in the Discard, he spent his childhood in what sounds to be a pleasant trading town situated between the Pyramid and the rest of the Discard. But, given this is a dark dystopian type of book, all good things must come to an end. Tragedy strikes, and Alan find himself taken into the Pyramid.

Years later, after Alan has grown and has a wife and child, Alan once again finds himself in the Discard, dependent on his abilities to sing and entertain to provide him with shelter and food. And his willingness to sleep with just about anything to moves to give him warmth and companionship at night. I couldn’t help but be reminded of Kvothe given these two traits, but Alan is by no means Kvothe. They both just happen to sing and sleep around. Alan is driven by his desire to make right for Billy, his son he left behind. As part of this, he is tasked with an impossible journey. One that will take him to part of the Discard that even those in the Discard fear. And what kind of journey would it be without companions? Alan winds up with a group of four other people on this mission.

Their journeys take them through this strange and bizarre world. A world that has, amongst other mysteries, a terrifying, blood thirsty creature with razor sharp claws that also cries and/or giggles like an infant. There are gigantic snails that some adventurous folks have even taken to saddling and riding as a means of transportation. There is a large trade in mushrooms of all kinds, known for varying types of side effects when taken for recreational use. Deformities are also common in areas, people with multiple mouths, glass hands, missing sections of torso. Oh and the ailments. Vomiting frogs is the most memorable. So yes, prepare yourself for a level of strangeness.

I try to avoid spoilers, but found I can’t fully write my review for this without touching on my reaction to the ending. Without any specifics I will say I am not a fan of books that end with a sudden reveal of information that happened prior to our story began. A critical turn of events that can explain much of what had seemed more of a mystery throughout the book. I would rather have known going in, and just had it been a little less of a puzzle. Maybe it is this way by design. Maybe its an indication of Alan finally coming to terms with the whole truth of why things happened. But as a reader, my reaction was a bit less favorable because of it. But, I am guessing many readers won’t have this hang up.

Overall, this was a fun a different read. The world is quite unpredictable and imaginative. Despite his flaws, despite his constant anger, I liked Alan, I was rooting for him to make it in this odd and threatening place, I wanted him to find happiness and a way to save his son and wife. This book is dark and bizarre, so I don’t think its going to be for everyone. But, it is also fascinating and captivating, so if you enjoy that sort of thing, then it’s definitely worth the read.

… (mais)
 
Marcado
tenaciousreader | outras 2 resenhas | Oct 6, 2015 |
Review from Tenacious Reader http://www.tenaciousreader.com/2014/11/12/gleam-by-tom-fletcher/:

The cover may be absolutely gorgeous, but be warned, this is one strange world. Within the Gleam, there is a black Pyramid in which people are safe from the external threats. They are shown preserved samples of the creatures that lurk outside their walls, in what they call the Discard. They are told stories of the horrors that await anyone that ventures outside the safety of the Pyramid. But Alan (also known as Wild Alan), knows a different side of the life outside the Pyramid. Unlike others, he was actually born in the Discard, he spent his childhood in what sounds to be a pleasant trading town situated between the Pyramid and the rest of the Discard. But, given this is a dark dystopian type of book, all good things must come to an end. Tragedy strikes, and Alan find himself taken into the Pyramid.

Years later, after Alan has grown and has a wife and child, Alan once again finds himself in the Discard, dependent on his abilities to sing and entertain to provide him with shelter and food. And his willingness to sleep with just about anything to moves to give him warmth and companionship at night. I couldn’t help but be reminded of Kvothe given these two traits, but Alan is by no means Kvothe. They both just happen to sing and sleep around. Alan is driven by his desire to make right for Billy, his son he left behind. As part of this, he is tasked with an impossible journey. One that will take him to part of the Discard that even those in the Discard fear. And what kind of journey would it be without companions? Alan winds up with a group of four other people on this mission.

Their journeys take them through this strange and bizarre world. A world that has, amongst other mysteries, a terrifying, blood thirsty creature with razor sharp claws that also cries and/or giggles like an infant. There are gigantic snails that some adventurous folks have even taken to saddling and riding as a means of transportation. There is a large trade in mushrooms of all kinds, known for varying types of side effects when taken for recreational use. Deformities are also common in areas, people with multiple mouths, glass hands, missing sections of torso. Oh and the ailments. Vomiting frogs is the most memorable. So yes, prepare yourself for a level of strangeness.

I try to avoid spoilers, but found I can’t fully write my review for this without touching on my reaction to the ending. Without any specifics I will say I am not a fan of books that end with a sudden reveal of information that happened prior to our story began. A critical turn of events that can explain much of what had seemed more of a mystery throughout the book. I would rather have known going in, and just had it been a little less of a puzzle. Maybe it is this way by design. Maybe its an indication of Alan finally coming to terms with the whole truth of why things happened. But as a reader, my reaction was a bit less favorable because of it. But, I am guessing many readers won’t have this hang up.

Overall, this was a fun a different read. The world is quite unpredictable and imaginative. Despite his flaws, despite his constant anger, I liked Alan, I was rooting for him to make it in this odd and threatening place, I wanted him to find happiness and a way to save his son and wife. This book is dark and bizarre, so I don’t think its going to be for everyone. But, it is also fascinating and captivating, so if you enjoy that sort of thing, then it’s definitely worth the read.
… (mais)
½
 
Marcado
tenaciousreader | outras 2 resenhas | Dec 30, 2014 |
This is such a weird book. I'm not quite sure what to make of it, beyond an instinctive liking. The fractured language, the way the world is presented - everthing just works for me.I'm not so sure it'd work for many other people though - after years and years of avid reading, much in the fantasy and horror genres, my tastes have become very specific. I guess that when you've read many thousands of books in your lifetime (I estimate around 10k plus from the age of 13) that you start craving books that at least try to do something interesting with language and plot, even if they don't entirely succeed. This tries, and I think it succeeds.… (mais)
 
Marcado
Violetthedwarf | outras 3 resenhas | Oct 23, 2014 |
This is such a weird book. I'm not quite sure what to make of it, beyond an instinctive liking. The fractured language, the way the world is presented - everthing just works for me.I'm not so sure it'd work for many other people though - after years and years of avid reading, much in the fantasy and horror genres, my tastes have become very specific. I guess that when you've read many thousands of books in your lifetime (I estimate around 10k plus from the age of 13) that you start craving books that at least try to do something interesting with language and plot, even if they don't entirely succeed. This tries, and I think it succeeds.… (mais)
 
Marcado
Violetthedwarf | outras 3 resenhas | Oct 23, 2014 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
7
Also by
3
Membros
117
Popularidade
#168,597
Avaliação
½ 3.6
Resenhas
7
ISBNs
299
Idiomas
12

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