Sabtu, 11 September 2010

[T351.Ebook] Ebook The Last Human, by Ink Pieper

Ebook The Last Human, by Ink Pieper

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The Last Human, by Ink Pieper

The Last Human, by Ink Pieper



The Last Human, by Ink Pieper

Ebook The Last Human, by Ink Pieper

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The Last Human, by Ink Pieper

As the world collapses upon itself due to humanity's horrific decisions, a newly parentless teen is forced to fight for his freedom, his love, and his life in order to maintain his humanity. See the decaying world through Clay's eyes as he's taken from his home, shipped to a facility that batters his mind and body, and tortured by the very people originally enlisted to protect us. The world has eroded. Countries are grasping for power. America has decided to sacrifice its people in order to maintain its grasp on what power it still holds. Buildings are erected to imprison their own. Trains are full of the dying. And unlike in stories, there is no savior on the way.

  • Sales Rank: #2295368 in Books
  • Published on: 2014-03-03
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 9.00" h x .49" w x 6.00" l, .65 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 216 pages

Most helpful customer reviews

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
A Lily in the Clay...
By Tobi Martins
Hi I got this book from Story Cartel in exchange for an honest review. I really appreciate the opportunity to do what I do though I apologise if this is a bit late. So here goes…..
Good
To the author thank you for writing this book. It’s because of books like this that I read, if you ever print it, please let me know immediately, I’d be more than happy to buy it. I found this book had a gripping way of portraying and conveying deep and even painful ideas. Very effective at changing perspective on the world.
The author was good at portraying darkness and evil in the world without relishing in it. It showed just enough to make one realise there is pain beyond imagination without violating the reader.
The book made good use of magical realism. Just enough to get points across but not too much to alienate the reader from the characters which is very important. Makes the story feel closer to a memoir with subjective perspective playing a natural role.
The main character’s constant directness is at first a little irritating. As the book goes along the objectivity becomes endearing though and ultimately invaluable in helping the reader connect with the characters. Truth is key.
The story has wrenching twists to it, not just in plot but in how well it portrays the characters’ relations. It connects well enough with the reader for these situations to be thought provoking. It’s also very good at stepping beyond the fourth wall from the making one ask questions about how we value life.

Bad
- Although it’s not really a fault to the story line there is a philosophical contention in the story. Whilst the characters clearly saw depravity around them they were to some level just as depraved. I mean Lily shot men in cold blood out of sheer anger. Mike killed our of precaution at times with seemingly no remorse. As humans they were flawed. It may just be a thought but perhaps being human isn’t to be good. Perhaps to be human is to be flawed.

Overall
Once again thank you to the author for writing this. It had a profound effect on me. The character’s appreciation of the small things we take for granted spoke deeply to me. This tells a story of average but sincere hope in what should otherwise be a desperate world. Nevertheless the story is extremely realistic about our flaws as people and as a world. I’ve made it a point to read this book at least once a year. Personally all I can say is, to Clay and Lily, I won’t forget your story and what you had to say.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
Highly Recommend, especially to 17-25 year olds
By Greg W
Dystopian novels are not normally a genre that I read, but I read The Last Human based on a friend's suggestion, and I am glad I did because I enjoyed it a lot more than I thought I would. The story is written almost in the guise of a memoir, with the narrator providing an introduction and explanation of the status of the world, followed by a flashback reflection of the narrator’s experience during the world’s demise, concluded by the narrator providing a warning to future civilizations to learn from and not repeat our mistakes. The narrator’s flashback reflection primarily deals with the struggle to survive, and the struggle to find purpose worth surviving for, in a seemingly not so distant future America that has quickly fallen from the America as we know it. I particularly liked that there was a fairly high plausibility of way the world as we know it met its demise. We travel with Clay, the main character/narrator, as he faces abduction by shadowy military members, lab-rat type treatment at a government testing facility, multiple escapes and pursuits, struggles to survive in the aftermath of devastation, and the struggle to connect to other humans. The story moves quickly for the most part, and I had no trouble connecting to Clay or the other characters he meets along the way, so by the middle/end it was definitely difficult to put down. There is a twist towards the end that I did not see coming but thought worked well.

As far as the writing goes, this is not classic literature, but I don’t believe it is intended to be; so readers should not pick up this book expecting Shakespeare or Dickens. The book is intended for a young adult audience, and it is written in a manner that is tailored to that audience and that I think meets its target. As ~30 year old male, I had no trouble picturing my 18 year old self right next to Clay on his journey.There are a lot of colloquialisms, and a lot of the dialogue (both spoken and the narrator’s thoughts) is written using phonetic spelling so that the characters’ language and slang really seems to come alive. The author is definitely talented and surprisingly manages to interweave some humor amongst the darkness that persists throughout. There is a lot of content that may be considered explicit (violence, language, alcohol use, sexual encounters), but that is part of what makes the story seem so real. I’m not sure the story explicitly gives Clay’s age, but I get the impression he has recently finished high school and is likely ~18 years old. When I think back to when I was 18, the language is nothing that I did not use or hear regularly, and the sex and drinking weren’t things I didn’t do or at least think about doing, so the ‘explicit’ content does not seem out of place or excessive. It is one of the things that added to the plausible feel that was so key to my enjoyment of the story.

The one thing that really holds this story back for me is that it seems to be poorly edited and a bit rushed. There are numerous typos that seem to be the type of thing that spell checker won’t pick up because they are actual words, but not used correctly (e.g. hear/ear, ‘til/till, ‘cause/cause, etc). I purchased a paperback copy, and it did not have page numbers. While I enjoyed the book way more than I expected to, these rough edges made me wonder how much better it might have been if the author had found a more skilled editor to really polish it up. With that missing polish this would have been a 5 star for me, but since it is missing and I can’t give partial stars, I give the Last Human a 4/5 rating.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
Good prose, needs more of a story
By Chimera Reviews
The Last Human was a decent read, but I feel it wasn't really ready for publication. It could have used a(nother) pass through an editor/proofreader. There was a lot of missing punctuation (especially periods), as well as enough typos to make me take notice, like compound words that should have been hyphenated but were written as two separate words instead.

The writing itself was pretty good. It really takes you pretty deep into the mind of the character. There were times where it could have been more realistic, and I don't mean the story itself, but the character's behavior. For instance, in Chapter 2, Clay is remembering a conversation he had with his parents before they were taken. They had been talking about government control and power, and Clay asks, "What about religion?" completely out of the blue. Then he asks about corporations. When parents are discussing an oppressive government, no 14 year old is going to ask these questions. It felt contrived and preachy. The author just wanted to get these views to the reader.

The story moved along, but at the same time, didn't really go anywhere. The characters were just kind of traveling from one place to the next in the general direction of east. It was hard to root for someone who didn't really want anything. The ending was the same. Satisfactory in that it didn't piss me off, but didn't blow my mind either.

I enjoyed the prose and some of the humor. I just wish there had been more of a story here.

* I received a free review copy of this book from Story Cartel in exchange for my honest review *

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