Showing posts with label Book Reviews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Book Reviews. Show all posts

Thursday, 12 April 2012

Improbable

Title : Improbable
Author : Adam Fawer
Review : 
This novel starts with the wildest game of Texas Hold’em and a most improbable event. Sitting in the basement of a Russian Mafia king pin, David Caine has been dealt a hand which includes two Aces – and there’s one ace on the table. All he needs is one more ace and he has the second highest winning poker hand. But he also has all the signs that he is about to have a world-class seizure. He just needs to hang in there long enough to win the pot. And luck is with him as he gets his ace. But wait, his opponent seems awfully sure of himself too. Is he bluffing? The only hand that can beat four aces is a royal straight flush. Caine, whom his former professor has nicknamed “Rainman,” can run the probability numbers on the whole card game in his head; he has an unusual knack though most poker players have some talent in this area. The stakes go higher and higher as Caine convinces himself that his opponent is only bluffing and he ups the ante. The odds are too improbable that his opponent has the higher hand.
Then just before he goes into full seizure, he realizes that he’s into the Russian Mafia for $7,000. His hand was not the sure bet that it should have been. The $400 in his savings account is hardly going to cover this debt. He's in real trouble. Caine wakes in the hospital with his twin brother, Joshua, patiently waiting for him. It turns out that he hasn’t seen Joshua in some time – Joshua has been away at a mental institute trying to get his schizophrenia under control. Well now, Joshua is home again and seemingly all right, if you discount that he tends to rhyme the last word of sentences, an odd tick apparently expressed by schizophrenics.
Meanwhile, Dr. Tversky is conducting some experiments on his student intern, Julia. She’s only too willing to help him; she is naively in love. It seems that the government also has an interest in Dr. Tversky’s work. Forsythe, the head of the government’s Science and Technology Research Center, has managed to secure Nava, a CIA Agent, to keep an eye on Dr. Tversky’s experiments. But Nava has her own problems. She sells top secret information to other governments but on her last deal, she inadvertently gives a bad disk to the Korean mafia and is unable to give back the cash from her offshore account. No problem, she’ll just steal the secret information again, or so she thinks. Not so easy, when she is suddenly transferred to work under Forsyth and all her security is revoked. So she needs another big secret, quickly. Turns out her new assignment is worth quite a bit more. Whatever these experiments are, the Koreans want the Alpha subject. So Nava plans on kidnapping the student intern and getting out of the country as soon as she hands her over to the Korean RDEI. But, this plan, too, goes afoul when the Alpha subject suddenly dies – but not before revealing future events to first Dr. Tversky and then to Nava – which lead both to pursuing David Caine.
It seems that Caine, unwittingly, is the Beta subject. And now Nava must steal him for the Koreans – and for Forsyth. Though the solution of how Nava gets around this problem might be obvious, everything else about this novel is a surprise. Add in the fact that Caine is now on a new seizure medication that has a slight chance of causing schizophrenia as a side effect. Given his twin brother’s condition and few other things that happen to him -- like predicting future events -- Caine is not at all convinced that everything that is happening is really, real. But he follows Jasper’s advice on how to deal with schizophrenia – “try to make smart decisions within whatever world you create. Eventually you will find your way back to reality.”
Despite all the action (of which there is plenty and all of it tight without a single loose end), there is a serious scientific hypothesis underneath the layers of the various subplots. This novel is about chance, fate and determinism; specifically centered on Marquis Pierre Simon de Lapace’s belief that cause-and-effect rules govern all and if one had sufficient intellect they would be able to know the future just as one knows the past. This intellect has become known as Laplace’s Demon. Moreover, the novel explores how “free will” plays in a deterministic theory (nicely done, I might add), which I believe is basically Chaos theory and tosses in a bit of quantum mechanics. By the end of the novel, Fawer has created a plausible setting for Laplace’s theory, which includes a case for schizophrenia being a symptom rather than a disorder and explaining the phenomenon of Déjà vu. And of course, as the title implies, there is a lot of talk about probability theory. In fact, there a number of mathematic formulas and examples that are very interesting, if not outright fun, which is surprising for those of us who have a deep rooted fear of this subject matter.
This is not "hard" science fiction like Gregory Benford writes. This is more on par with The DaVinci Code or any other thrillers that are destined for the big screen. Personally, I like Harper Collins description, "A Beautiful Mind meets Kill Bill." All the math and physics are given to us with concrete everyday examples and even though I can’t exactly recite any of the information I learned, at least while I was reading I felt quite a bit smarter than normal. I would hope that even a hardcore sci-fi fan would find this book rewarding, though, that is hard for me to judge.
Also of interest, is the back story behind this novel. Adam Fawer is the person who challenged Stephanie Williams to write a novel before she died of breast cancer, thus we have Stephanie to thank for finally helping Fawer to realize his first novel (of which I truly hope there are more to come) and to Fawer for inspiring Williams to write her one and only novel. Both are talented authors and we the reader or lucky for their friendship. If you had asked me, the fact that they both had good novels within them, I would have said that's improbable. But that would have been a gut level answer without the math.

Les Miserables


Title : Les Miséreables
Author : Victor Hugo
Review : 
Preview…Victor Hugo’s stunning masterpiece “Les Miserables.” I began this novel somewhat reluctantly, having had bad experiences with French literature in the past; reluctance quickly turned into a gripping anticipation as to what would happen next and a veneration for the author’s preponderance of lofty moral and social lessons weaved in and out of the plot line. Though it took me a good two months to work my way through the 1500+ pages of the unabridged tome, the experience was well worthwhile. Yes, reading this book is definitely a major time commitment, but if you can swing it, don’t pass up the opportunity to read
It is difficult to condense the wonders of “Les Miserables” into a single article — this story has it all: love, redemption, revolution, good versus evil and much more. We first meet the Bishop of Digne, who, with his spiritual profundity and ethereal grace, is able to resurrect the goodness in paroled criminal Jean Valjean. Valjean, having been imprisoned many years for stealing a loaf of bread to feed his impoverished brood of nieces and nephews, had a hardened heart. Having been wronged by society, he felt that he owed nothing to it. A chance encounter with the Bishop set him on a new path.
Jean Valjean, under a false name, rises to industrial power and eventually mayorship of a quaint town. In his new role, he meets Fantine, a woman spurned by her lover, enduring remedial labor and even prostitution in order to earn money to send to the aid of her daughter. Jean Valjean makes a promise to the ailing Fantine that he will find her daughter, Cosette, and take care of her.

Cosette, having been entrusted by Fantine to those she wrongly took to be good honest people, is little more than a servant girl to the Thenardiers. The couple had been charging Fantine with false expenses for Cosette’s care and pocketing the sum, while Cosette shivered in rags on the verge of starvation. Jean Valjean comes to Cosette’s rescue, offering the avaricious Thenardiers a large sum for her adoption.
This whole time, Jean Valjean is being relentlessly pursued by Police Inspector Javert. From the time that Javert uncovers Valjean’s false identity as mayor, Javert is never far off-track, keeping Valjean on his toes. And all of this described above only brushes the surface of “Les Mis” — this is only the first half of the story!
You may like this book if… you enjoy meeting very real characters, you like the contrast of noble and deplorable types, you enjoy learning history or philosophy alongside the main plot line, you like pouring over moral issues, you do not believe in the absoluteness of societal roles and labels, you believe that good things (or people) can come from bad situations, you want to read an enjoyable story coupled with layer-upon-layer of deeper themes, you like a little intrigue, a little mystery, you are fascinated by Waterloo, nuns, Argot or the 19th century Paris sewer system
You may not like this book if… you simply do not have the time to commit to such a long read—that’s really the only reason I can think of for not loving this book (if only I could give in 12 out of 10 stars).

Monday, 2 April 2012

The Alchemist

Title: The Alchemist
Author: Paulo Coelho
Review:
Paulo Coelho's The Alchemist is the story of Santiago, an Andalusian shepherd boy content to wander through the Spanish fields and towns with his faithful flcok until a recurring dream about finding his treasure at the Pyramids of Egypt rousts him from complacency. In trying to understand his dream, Santiago encounters a wise old man who calls himself Melchizedek, the King of Salem, who sets the boy off on a quest to discover his Personal Legend:

"It's what you have alwasys wanted to accomplish. Everyone, when they are young, knows what their Personal Legend is. At that point in their lives, everything is clear and everything is possible. They are not afraid to dream, and to yearn for everything they would like to see happen to them in their lives. But, as time passes, a mysterious force begins to convince them that it will be impossible for them to realize their Personal Legend."
Thus spurred on by the mysterious stranger, Santiago abandons his shepherd life to this adventure of discovery. He crosses from Spain into Tangiers and further, paying heed to the omens and surmounting obstacles along the way.

Paulo Coelho's story is a short (163 pages) and simple one, an inspirational parable about the importance of pursuing one's dreams. Originally published in 1988 in the Brazillian author's native Portugese, it has since been translated in close to 70 languages and has become one of the best-selling books in history. The Alchemist is a quick and enjoyable reminder for anyone who feels they have become distracted from pursuing their own Personal Legend.

Wednesday, 29 February 2012

The Da Vinci Code

Title : The Da Vinci Code
Author : Dan Brown
Publisher : Doubleday
Review :
Harvard University symbologist Robert Langdon is in Paris when he is awakened in the middle of the night by the police to come to the Louvre. Someone killed museum chief curator Jacques Saunier in the most secure section, Grand Gallery near the Mona Lisa. The culprit left behind enigmatic messages including bringing Langdon into the investigation.
The police syspect Langdon killed the curator, but cannot prove it. Meanwhile he joins with French cryptologist Sophie Neveuto in an effort to solve the puzzle of the message that both believe will lead to the identity of the killer. They begin to decode clues that when combined forms a map depicting the locale of the Holy Grail and proof of the existence of Jesus. However, several secret societies will use anything including murder to insure that the Grail remains hidden.
The sequel to the exciting tale ANGELS AND DEMONS, THE DA VINCI CODE is a fast-paced tale that will provide much pleasure to readers who enjoy religious thrillers. The police procedural takes a back seat to the engaging Langdon-Neveuto deciphering of the codes as the two characters are a delightful lead pair. Though the story line occasionally detours into religious history sermons, fans will appreciate this fine action-packed novel.