Tuesday, February 24, 2009

First on the reading pile

I've decided that it's time to revisit a few books from my extensive collection to re read them and see if there was anything I missed and also use them as a good excuse to write a slightly different blog post from normal. Plus I suppose I ought start re reading some of the books from my collection otherwise they just become rather unusal paper weights/ dust collectors. First up from the Shelves is Kethani.
It takes an alien race to show us what humanity truly is. This is the irony faced by a group of friends whose lives are changed forever when the mysterious alien race known as the Kéthani come to Earth bearing a dubious but amazing gift: immortality

Or so sayeth the book blurb. Kethani to me really stands out among the multitude of 'first contact/aliens visit the earth' novels mainly due to it's scope. It doesn't try to focus on the real world ramifications it instead focuses in on a tight group of friends and follows them over the course of Decades. Plus these friends meet in a yorkshire pub which you don't often see in Sci fi.

One day the Kethani arrive, with mutiple silver towers appearing all over the earth. They bring with them the gift of immortality a small implant which is placed under the skin of your temple. When you die you are taken to a tower, sent to the Kethani homeworld then return months later, rejuivinated and immortal. But what price does this gift bring? What happens to a world where you can live forever? Are the Kethani all they appear? and do you really come back as the same person who left?

Sensibily the novel doesn't answer all the questions that you want answered which I think makes this novel that much better as in real life you rarely get all the answers, plus not answering the questions leaves you hungry for more.

The novel consists of several smaller stories each focussing on a different friend and shows what happens to religion, morals and science in a world where death is no longer the end of your life on earth. The focus on each of these friends is also good as they are simple ordinary people, not scientists or soldiers, who you can emphasise with and you can almost see yourself in their places facing the problems they face.

I think a really great novel is one that makes you think and keeps you thinking long after you've put it down and Kethani certainly fits that bill.
I would highly recommend it and it will definatly be keeping it's place on my book shelves

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

hey saxon! how are you. good book review, sounds like it would make a good movie.

Hey, dont know if you know or not, but did you hear Matt Knapp is now getting married!!! Well, her certainly makes them wait!!

Hes got 3 kids and been with his misses for years and years and years, and FINALY got engaged just the other day. so, you might think it would be a short engagement, but no, they are looking at september 2010!!!

its so funny how I was reading on your blog about "rushing" to get married and good old knappy is taking his time! Good on him

anyway, i didnt know if you saw his facebook page or not, but i thought i might pass the message on.


I recon you should go to that BYU thing that you wrote about because it said on wikipedia that it has a very high rate of marriages, but you cant always trust wikipedia though!!!!!

Saxon said...

yes I did hear. I saw his facebook profile.

no comment on the 'rushing' part. I'd probably only get myself into trouble with someone if I did :-)

No it does have a high rate. Apparently in the local ward they halways have a part of the metting to check to see whose got engaged this week :-)