Immagine dell'autore.
23+ opere 268 membri 12 recensioni

Recensioni

Mostra 12 di 12
I liked it, but I felt like it could've had more. It's pretty short and when I read it (a couple years ago) it didn't take me long to finish.
I love how he combines music with elemental powers, but he doesn't explain much about the powers. And the ending could've been better if he'd explained some things.
 
Segnalato
DoomLuz | 5 altre recensioni | Jul 20, 2021 |
In some indeterminate future, Davi, of indeterminate gender, is entranced by the music of Django Conn. At a concert Davi becomes transported to another plane, both by Conn's music and seeing Anna Z, another concert-goer who is equally transported. When the two finally meet, Anna enlists Davi to help her escape from her brother who is violently obsessed with her. As the two navigate their relationship and search for safety, they share their common interest in the "alien drift," which was an abstraction I'm afraid I didn't really get. It seemed that there was so much to be inferred about astral powers that the plot was slowed down. However, I really liked that the book was comprised of 100 very short chapters, However, the love of music was very clear and will be engaging for like-minded readers.
 
Segnalato
sleahey | 3 altre recensioni | Apr 25, 2018 |
Teenage Davi, along with his sister, lives a rather strange existence on the seventh floor of the Angelus, a once grand hotel, founded by his great-grandfather. A huge fan of glam rock-god, Django Conn, at one of his concerts Davi catches a glimpse of a young girl who appears to be totally lost in the music, even transformed by it. She is completely focused on Django and her very being appears to flicker with the pulse-beat of the music. He is immediately drawn to her and feels an almost visceral compulsion to get to know her. Although he loses sight of her at the end of the concert the two do eventually meet up and it is not long before he is drawn into the mysterious world of Anna Z, with her passionate beliefs, her conspiracy theories, her belief in aliens. She believes that Django is the next stage in evolution: “homo lux” – humans made out of light and that so too are she and Davi. He is exhilarated by the new ideas she bombards him with and, in spite of warnings that she is not what she seems, that getting close to her will lead him into uncharted territory, he wants to be part of her vision for the future. He also becomes aware that she is desperate to escape from an abusive brother and so is determined to do all in his power to help to save her. Hopes for their salvation seem to be dependent on following Django on his tour of the continent, hoping to discover the secret of “Alien Drift”, a mysterious force which may hold the answers to the future of humanity.
Any story which involves sci-fi, magic realism, total immersion in the rather psychedelic world of rock music is one which would not attract my attention. However, knowing that “Meet Me in the Strange” is being published by Meerkat Press, a small publishing house which has recently introduced me to some remarkable authors, I felt confident that a treat was probably in store – a confidence which was amply rewarded! As soon as I started reading I felt drawn into the worlds of Davi and Anna Z and I couldn’t bear to put the book down until I had finished it. The story pulses with frantic, passionate, soul-felt emotion and psychic energy and is full of pain, innocence and, ultimately, hope.
Although the music described holds little personal appeal, the story powerfully evokes the power of music to move and infuse your very being and this was something I was very easily able to identify with. I also loved all the references to Frankenstein and Mary Shelley (who, like Anna Z ran away from home as a seventeen-year old virgin and then wrote her famous book!) and to the many reflections on beauty and horror. The short chapters captured the rather ethereal nature of the story and contributed to my feeling that I was joining these two young people on their journey of discovery. Whether their experiences were real or fantasy felt totally unimportant. What was important was their journey towards self-discovery and the many ways in which the author captured the passionate seriousness and single-mindedness of this age group.
I found this a very visual book (it lends itself to being made into a film!) and, for a hugely captivating few hours, felt drawn into a psychedelic fantasy world. Although it is a book which is aimed at the 12-18 age group I, several decades beyond this target group, thoroughly enjoyed being transported to a different realm! A final comment: I loved the cover, another brilliant illustration from the multi-talented Keith Rosson.

My thanks to Nudge/Library Thing for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.
 
Segnalato
linda.a. | 3 altre recensioni | Mar 20, 2018 |
Goodreads Synopsis:
Davi tries to help a new friend, Anna Z, escape a cruel and controlling brother, and the teens end up running away to follow the tour of their rock idol, the otherworldly Django Conn. The story is set in a weird and wonderful retro-futuristic city of glam-girls and glister-boys and a strange phenomenon that Anna Z calls the “Alien Drift.”

My Review:
I received a copy of Meet Me In The Strange from Netgalley in exchange for an honest review.

First off, I love the cover for this. Usually I don't read juvenile fiction, but I just thought that the description for this book was too interesting to pass up It begins with a concert, and a flickering out of place girl.

Davi is a young boy who lives in a dorm and spends a lot of his time listening to his favourite band. He meets a girl he really likes, and she's super weird compared to everyone else, including their first encounter where she seemed like she was flickering while she was listening to the band play at a show, but that couldn't be right could it? She's into all these conspiracies and aliens and he just loves listening to her talk. She believes the singer of their favourite band is actually an alien and Davi soon starts to believe that too. When he learns about her hidden past, it changes everything. This story is crazy and a smooth ride from start to finish.

Although the chapters are only a few pages long each, this book was an enjoyable read and I'm glad I got the chance to read it.

Here's a link to the book on Amazon.

https://www.amazon.ca/Meet-Me-in-the-Strange-ebook/dp/B075SXRX4L/ref=sr_1_1?ie=U...

Thanks for reading! Check out this review and more at my blog.
(Radioactivebookreviews.wordpress.com)
 
Segnalato
radioactivebookworm | 3 altre recensioni | Jan 29, 2018 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
Django Conn is a rock god with a massive teenage following, including Davi, a young man who has lived all his life in a high-end hotel, and Anna Z, a young woman who is on the run from….someone. Davi first sees Anna Z at a Django concert and he sees how she is utterly transformed by the music; obviously, she is someone he must get to know! When he does meet her, however, he is drawn into her mysterious world - and it becomes his mission in life to help her continue life in the Strange…. I received an ARC of this YA novel from LibraryThing’s Early Reviewers program, having requested it because it’s from Meerkat Press, a publisher whose other books I have enjoyed a lot. Alas, this is not one of those. Firstly, I find it difficult to see teens of today relating to a book that spends a lot of time talking about vinyl albums and other technologies set more or less in the 1970s, and secondly, more importantly, the female lead is essentially either described as being “owned” by a man or being “saved” from that man by the male lead. That is to say, Anna Z comes across as manic and somewhat crazy, while at the same time having essentially no agency in her own life. A misfire from Meerkat, I’m afraid.
 
Segnalato
thefirstalicat | 3 altre recensioni | Dec 13, 2017 |
I picked this book up off the shelf over a month ago at this point. When I finally started it I couldn't entirely remember why I picked it up , but I know that I am happy that I did. When Zee starts her new school she can't find anyone who looks interesting until she meets Relly. Relly has his own band and needs a bassist and he thinks Zee is the perfect fit. The four play ghost metal a sound so big you can hear the silence in it. Then Zee finds out that there is more to Relly, herself and their band than meets the eye.

The prose of this book was extremely lyrical and poetic. It just sounded gorgeous and I loved the different places that Zee went to come up with lyrics for the band. I just felt like the whole book had a gorgeous sound to it, which is always appropriate for a book about music.

I loved the twist in the book. I know it was unexpected but I thought that that was what made it work. This is one of the first paranormal books where a lot of explanation about what is going on why people have certain abilities was left out, but to be honest it didn't feel necessary. I didn't miss it the way I normally do. The book felt full all on it's own.

The music was enough for me. I really enjoyed it and honestly I am not entirely sure I can explain why.
 
Segnalato
Rosa.Mill | 5 altre recensioni | Nov 21, 2015 |
I picked this book up off the shelf over a month ago at this point. When I finally started it I couldn't entirely remember why I picked it up , but I know that I am happy that I did. When Zee starts her new school she can't find anyone who looks interesting until she meets Relly. Relly has his own band and needs a bassist and he thinks Zee is the perfect fit. The four play ghost metal a sound so big you can hear the silence in it. Then Zee finds out that there is more to Relly, herself and their band than meets the eye.

The prose of this book was extremely lyrical and poetic. It just sounded gorgeous and I loved the different places that Zee went to come up with lyrics for the band. I just felt like the whole book had a gorgeous sound to it, which is always appropriate for a book about music.

I loved the twist in the book. I know it was unexpected but I thought that that was what made it work. This is one of the first paranormal books where a lot of explanation about what is going on why people have certain abilities was left out, but to be honest it didn't feel necessary. I didn't miss it the way I normally do. The book felt full all on it's own.

The music was enough for me. I really enjoyed it and honestly I am not entirely sure I can explain why.
 
Segnalato
Rosa.Mill | 5 altre recensioni | Nov 21, 2015 |
I picked this book up off the shelf over a month ago at this point. When I finally started it I couldn't entirely remember why I picked it up , but I know that I am happy that I did. When Zee starts her new school she can't find anyone who looks interesting until she meets Relly. Relly has his own band and needs a bassist and he thinks Zee is the perfect fit. The four play ghost metal a sound so big you can hear the silence in it. Then Zee finds out that there is more to Relly, herself and their band than meets the eye.

The prose of this book was extremely lyrical and poetic. It just sounded gorgeous and I loved the different places that Zee went to come up with lyrics for the band. I just felt like the whole book had a gorgeous sound to it, which is always appropriate for a book about music.

I loved the twist in the book. I know it was unexpected but I thought that that was what made it work. This is one of the first paranormal books where a lot of explanation about what is going on why people have certain abilities was left out, but to be honest it didn't feel necessary. I didn't miss it the way I normally do. The book felt full all on it's own.

The music was enough for me. I really enjoyed it and honestly I am not entirely sure I can explain why.
 
Segnalato
Rosa.Mill | 5 altre recensioni | Nov 21, 2015 |
I picked this book up off the shelf over a month ago at this point. When I finally started it I couldn't entirely remember why I picked it up , but I know that I am happy that I did. When Zee starts her new school she can't find anyone who looks interesting until she meets Relly. Relly has his own band and needs a bassist and he thinks Zee is the perfect fit. The four play ghost metal a sound so big you can hear the silence in it. Then Zee finds out that there is more to Relly, herself and their band than meets the eye.

The prose of this book was extremely lyrical and poetic. It just sounded gorgeous and I loved the different places that Zee went to come up with lyrics for the band. I just felt like the whole book had a gorgeous sound to it, which is always appropriate for a book about music.

I loved the twist in the book. I know it was unexpected but I thought that that was what made it work. This is one of the first paranormal books where a lot of explanation about what is going on why people have certain abilities was left out, but to be honest it didn't feel necessary. I didn't miss it the way I normally do. The book felt full all on it's own.

The music was enough for me. I really enjoyed it and honestly I am not entirely sure I can explain why.
 
Segnalato
Rosa.Mill | 5 altre recensioni | Nov 21, 2015 |
The title is an accurate description of the book: it follows the introduction and rising popularity of opiate use (except for the actual 'birth' part, Th. Metzger concentrates mostly on the U.S.) and it's subsequent demonization (at least in the case of heroin). It's been awhile since I've read the book, so details are not fresh in my memory, but I can say that Metzger's writing is very educational without falling into a dry, depersonalized tone that so many other books take on when communicating large amounts of information. It's a very interesting read for anyone interested in U.S. drug culture* and it's orgins.

*In this case heroin culture, although there are obvious parallels in the stories of all illicit drugs.½
 
Segnalato
dugenstyle | May 5, 2011 |
This was a slim little volume of writings…which could have handled a few hundred more pages.

The writing was simple and effective and the story line was fairly well planned out, but there were a lot of gaps where you simply had to go on faith that that’s the way the novel needed to progress and all things happen for a reason. Sorry, I need a little more than that.

In short, a talented, young, teenage stonecutter’s apprentice has developed exceptional skills in the art of tombstone construction. When these talents are identified by a mysterious stranger, the young stonecutter is summoned to a far off estate for a special project where not all is as it seems. Struggling between a duty he doesn’t fully understand and providing assistance not welcome by all, the rest of the novel proceeds along its path.

But who is the mysterious man? Why does he act the way he does? Why is so little told about the project? Why on earth would his master agree to let him go? Is he a guest or a prisoner? What’s the deal with the girl? What is wrong with the others at the estate? None of these questions are ever answered – and the result isn’t an exalted text which requires pensive thought and philosophical analysis. It simply feels like the author forgot to mention them. Or he was running out of paper.

What was there, I liked. What I could connect within my mind was good. But what was left off would have served the author well.½
4 vota
Segnalato
pbadeer | May 21, 2010 |
I read this because I took several classes from the author of this book (which is a pen name). I found it to have little plot development and I wish that the supernatural side of the story would have been explained more; I think it would have made it much more fun and enjoyable. This did not ruin my perception of the author however; I believe that someday I will read another one of his works to see if his style is any better.
 
Segnalato
ronnyk112 | 5 altre recensioni | Apr 25, 2009 |
Mostra 12 di 12