Showing posts with label Marie Lu. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marie Lu. Show all posts

Friday, 6 March 2020

Review - Wildcard



Wildcard
Title: Wildcard
Series: Warcross (Goodreads)
Author: Marie Lu 
Publisher: Penguin Books Ltd
Genre: Science Fiction, Romance
Age Group: YA
Source: Penguin Random House Pulp Shelf (this did not affect my opinion)


Review

Wildcard is the follow up to Marie Lu’s Warcross and it does not disappoint. I was just as thrilled and excited by Wildcard as I was by Warcross because the gaming action is still very much there but the stakes have been raised even higher for Emika and her friends. Wildcard still has the same light and easy writing tone that the first book had but the themes and issues of this book are much darker and could be triggering for some readers. As a result of the darker themes and issues I personally felt that they happened too suddenly in relation to the first book because this book looks at issues of suicide, murder, and drug addiction which arguably makes the book read like it shouldn’t belong to the first book at all. However, these issues though they may be challenging are important to discuss because they don’t just occur in literature but in our own world. If we avoid talking about difficult issues then the people facing them cannot or will not receive or ask for the help that they and their closest friends and family need. Though in relation to Wildcard these issues felt out of place for the previous book that did not deal with as such difficult issues.

Wildcard continues to be based in the setting of Japan and celebrates Japanese culture as there are references within the book to cosplaying as well as the continued focus on the gaming culture. Which is fantastic because it respectfully celebrates another culture and it exposes readers to a different culture rather than more popularly written ones such as America. There also continues to be subtle reference to other works of literature because during a game of chess between Hammie and Asher the game is described as such ‘It’s no static chessboard, either – the knights are real knights…the bishops replaced with fire-breathing dragons that now lunge their necks forward.’ When I read this scene I could only think about the influence of Harry Potter and the living chessboard that may have inspired Lu’s one.

In Warcross there was a LGBTQ+ relationship hinted at but in Wildcard this relationship is explicitly discussed and is important to some of the books other wider themes too. Roshan and Tremaine are literary representatives for the LGBTQ+ community and though there is not many romantic scenes between them the fact that there is not only a heterosexual relationship in this book is important. In relation to some of the books wider themes Roshan and Tremaine’s relationship links into the issue of social injustice and drug addiction. Most importantly, it is not because they are gay that their families would reject their relationship but because they are from different social backgrounds. We learn that Roshan comes from a wealthy family, ‘His mum is a prominent member of Britain’s parliament. His father owns one of the world’s largest shipping companies. His brother married some kind of duchess…’. Whereas Tremaine comes from a poor and troubled background, ‘my dad got shut away for shooting a store clerk…My mum tried selling me once, when she was high and ran out of money for another hit’ he even goes as far to state that ‘you try explaining that kind of upbringing to Roshan’s family. That their beloved boy is dating someone like me.’ For me the fact that it is not because they are gay but rather because they are from different social classes shows that family prejudice is not always because of issues with sexuality but difficulties in accepting other issues such as social class differences. 

Synopsis (From Goodreads)

Return to the immersive, action-packed world of Warcross in this thrilling sequel.

Emika Chen barely made it out of the Warcross Championships alive. Now she can no longer trust the one person she's always looked up to - Hideo Tanaka. His plan: to wipe out all crime on Earth by ending the free will of its citizens.

Emika is determined to put a stop to him, but she soon finds out that someone's put a bounty on her head, and her sole chance for survival lies with the ruthless Zero. But his protection comes at a price.


Caught in a web of betrayal, just how far will Emika go to take down the man she loves?



Key Quotes 

'She reaches behind her back and pulls another gun from her belt. She throws it at me without warning. […] "For chrissakes," I blurt out,  holding the gun in front of me with two fingers. "What the hell am i supposed to do with this?"
"Fire when needed?" she suggests.
'We believe that too much power in the hands of a single entity is always a dangerous thing. So we fight that, whenever and wherever we can.’
‘The way he’s responding reminds me of code stuck in an infinite loop, going round and round in useless circles, or politicians who know exactly how to evade a question they don’t want to answer. People who can turn a question on you to take the heat off themselves.’
‘We fight for survival with everything we’ve got, as if the oxygen mask and the seat belt…might be the thing that saves us. That’s the difference between the real and the virtual. Reality is where you can lose the ones you love. Reality is the place where you can feel the cracks in your heart.’ 

Similar reads 

See Warcross post

Afterthoughts

Prejudices are complicated and are not just limited to issues of sexuality but also includes prejudices against race, social class and gender.

The importance of family is still a huge concern in this book as it was in Warcross, how important do you think family is?

What would you recommend to others if they enjoyed this book?


Saturday, 29 February 2020

Review - Warcross

Warcross
Title: Warcross
Series: Warcross (Goodreads)
Author: Marie Lu 
Publisher: Penguin Books Ltd
Genre: Science Fiction, Romance
Age Group: YA
Source: Penguin Random House Pulp Shelf (this did not affect my opinion)

Review 

Warcross is gamer’s story with a twist of romance. Marie Lu’s Warcross brings together a mix of genres that leaves the reader with a thrill – but is it for the romance or the gaming? Personally, I think having a balance between the gaming and romance in the book was great because it doesn’t alienate readers because there is something for a number of different readers in this book (although I will note that the main focus of the story is definitely geared more towards the gaming side). Lu’s writing is light and airy and she incorporates a number of text message formats within the text to appeal to modern teen readers but importantly this only develops the story rather than hindering it. Though the tone of writing is light some of the themes and issues explored by Lu are much darker (especially in the sequel). However, I did really enjoy this book, I haven’t read much like it for some time, but I really did race through the story just out of pure enjoyment.

What I loved about Warcross was not only that it is a different genre to other recent books I’ve read, mainly fantasies like Sarah J. Maas’s series’, but because the setting is rather refreshing. Usually most young adult books are set in America, very rarely anywhere else, expect Warcross isn’t. Instead we are based in Japan and this was really exciting because as readers we get to engage with a different country and the possibilities this brings along with it such as allowing us to engage with cultural differences. In particular Japan is one of the major developers of the gaming industry so it makes sense why Lu would have wanted to base her story in the heart of Japan. With the major focus of Warcross being about gaming this also brought us as readers an exciting protagonist who challenges gender stereotypes. Emika, the protagonist, is a young woman who loves gaming and is a great literary representation of someone who doesn’t let her gender dictate what she can or can’t enjoy. More importantly, Emika is also a hacker and great with coding, something we usually associate with men being better at or generally having more enthusiasm for, but Emika proves that gender doesn’t have to define what your abilities allow you to achieve ‘I’m a good-great-hacker’ and she loves ‘Harry Potter and Warcross and League of Legends and computers’. However, Emika isn’t the only young woman to love gaming as one of her teammates and later her friend Hammie shows as she is another positive representation of someone who not only loves gaming but also has a love for chess. Without the representation of young woman like Emika and Hammie in books young woman in real life might feel isolated and like they don’t fit in because they don’t behave like ‘normal’ girls should or because they don’t see themselves represented enough of the time in other books.

Although the overriding theme of this book is about gaming and competing in the Warcross game there are other important issues that are explored in this book. Some of the other issues include social injustices, LGBTQ+ representation, and the importance of asking for help. In particular something Hammie says to Emika is one of the more outstanding concerns of this book, the issue of struggling to ask for help. The reason why this resonates with me is because in real life so many of us struggle with actually asking for help when we need it and we shouldn’t have to struggle when we have people around us who want to help. I leave you with Hammie’s words ‘You remind of myself from years ago… I always offered help- but I refused to accept any. My mother scolded me about that. Do you know what she told me? When you refuse to ask for help, it tells others that they also shouldn’t ask for help from you. That you look down on them for needing your help. That you like feeling superior to them. It’s an insult, Emi, to your friend and peers… Let us in’.


Warcross uncovered

Synopisis (From Goodreads)

When a game called Warcross takes the world by storm, one girl hacks her way into its dangerous depths.

For the millions who log in every day, Warcross isn't just a game - it's a way of life. Struggling to make ends meet, teenage hacker Emika Chen works as a bounty hunter, tracking down players who bet on the game illegally. Needing to make some quick cash, Emika takes a risk and hacks into the opening game of the international Warcross Championships - only to accidentally glitch herself into the action and become an overnight sensation.

Convinced she's going to be arrested, Emika is shocked when she gets a call from the game's creator, the elusive young billionaire Hideo Tanaka, with an irresistible offer. He needs a spy on the inside of this year's tournament in order to uncover a security problem . . . and he wants Emika for the job. Emika's whisked off to Tokyo and thrust into a world of fame and fortune that she's only dreamed of. But soon her investigation uncovers a sinister plot, with major consequences for the entire Warcross empire.

Key Quotes 

‘What must it be like to have a perfect life? To be a superstar beloved by all? To be able to pay your bills on time and buy whatever you want?’ 
‘It is hard to describe loss to someone who has never experienced it, impossible to explain all the ways it changes you.’ 
'Everything's science fiction until someone makes it science fact' 
‘Most people never really observe their surroundings; ask anyone what the person sitting nearby was wearing, and chances are good that they couldn’t tell you.’ 

Similar reads

Ender's Game, Mind Games, Ready Player One, Snow Crash

Afterthoughts

Has there been a time when you've needed help and not asked for it, what would you do differentlty to help yourself next time, now knowing that help is available.

Are you into gaming? Do you feel like you don't fit into the 'normal' idea of what it means to be a boy or girl?


What other recommendations do you have for readers that want something similar to Warcross?