Sunday, December 30, 2012

2012

The Year was 2012 (AD).

Was.  Soon it won’t be.  Soon it will be 2013, and its time to see go back and judge 2012.

2012 started with me in tears.  2011 ended with me breaking up with my GF, and returning to being her best friend.  But at the beginning of 2012, I realized I was still pining to get her back, and I had to get that out.  I spent the first 2 days of 2012 listening to Modest Mouse, The Cranberries, Alanis Morissette, and writing perhaps one of the most personal scripts I’ve ever written.  As one friend on FB put it, “I’m surprised you didn’t kill yourself.”  Well, the goal was to kill part of myself, or to get it all out of my system.

It worked.  One of my 2012 resolutions was to get over her, and return to being her best friend...and I’m going to say I accomplished that well.  2012 might have started with me still longing for her, but it ended with me feeling like Family.  It ended with me celebrating Christmas with her and her family, and then her with my family.  Throughout the year there were some fights, some low and high points, but at the end of the year she is my best friend, and I’m thankful we worked through the problems that have arisen. This is most definitely a positive for the year, as there were many times things could have gone wrong.  While I’m sure more problems will arise as time goes on, I am confident we’ll fight through those, too.

I also rekindled some old friendships, too.  My move to Portland has allowed me to spend more time with one of my high school best friends here.  Ironically, moving away from Eugene made me realize I was leaving friends down there, and since then my Eugene friends and I have been talking more.  Surprisingly, an old work colleague and I got re-acquainted as well.  We hang out quite regularly, and she’s become my movie buddy.  How could this be a negative? It’s not.

Despite my attempts, I didn’t really make any new friends.  I put myself out there to meet new people, and while I got many new acquaintances, I didn’t get any new friends.  A few people that were also regulars at such and such bar, some of the comedy crew, but not any people I’ll be calling to hang out with.  If they are there, awesome...if not, *shrug*.  So I’m not really heartbroken about this, and won’t count it as a negative.

Same is true with my attempts at dating.  I got to go on quite a few dates with a variety of women.  One is in line for “rudest” end of date I’ve ever had, and another is in line for “craziest.”  There were also lots of mediocre ones inbetween.  One girl I saw regularly for a period of time, but it became obvious early on that we desired different things in the long run and that we wouldn’t ever work out as a couple.  I feel some remorse that nothing really worked out for me this year, but at the same time... I’m glad I’m not settling.  As one friend, who had years of bad dates before she met someone whom she fell head-in-over-heels love with said, its worth waiting for someone good.  It’s a minor negative.

I was in the ring for comedy for a bit there.  One of my resolutions was to really try for it.  For awhile there, I was going 3-4 nights a week.  I got up on Helium, and I was getting to the stage I felt like I could do a paid set.  For that reason, I’ll say I accomplished my goal.  Problem is, it was really taxing on me, both financially and on me as a person.  I’m an introvert, and I felt like I had little energy for anything else.  That’d be great if I felt like I was growing as a person, but I wasn’t.  Comedy is competitive, and I’m a person who does things because I enjoy them.  I like being that person, and comedy was changing me away from that.  There were other problems as well, but thats the main thing.  I might do more in the future, but it will be because its fun for me, and not because I want to make a career of it like so many of my fellow comedians.  While I lean towards a positive, I’m going to count this as a neutral aspect in my life.

I also moved a lot this year.  I lived in three different houses, which I guess when compared to some friends who were homeless for awhile, I should be thankful for.  The first place I loved, but due to unforeseen circumstances, I had to move out earlier than expected.  The next place I found seemed like it was the perfect place.  While the place itself was great, the next 6 months with my roommate made my life miserable.  Near the end, I didn’t leave my room unless I had to because I hated the encounters that occurred.  A quick summation would be “Bad times.”

But after that, I moved into my current apartment.  My current place is less of a financial strain, but more importantly, I have a much improved roommate.  We get along, have great conversations, play the same video games, and overall its a good experience.  I am reluctant to call any place “Home,” and I haven’t had a “home” for years, but I am very comfortable here, and look forward to staying here.  So, despite the “Bad times,” I would consider my living situation as an overall positive.

I had a lot of bad things this year, too.  Opposite of my relationship, I started this year in the job I loved.  I was Quality Assurance as well as a Price-Shopper.  I listened to people’s phone calls, and gave managerial feedback.  I also looked up the rates of our competitors, and made price suggestions for us.  I never dealt with customers.  Hell, the only time in my job I talked to someone is during my monthly reviews with my manager.  During this time, I was able to watch TV while at work and marathoned all of Doctor Who, Torchwood, How I met Your Mother, Babylon 5, and other amazing TV shows.  It was low stress, but I still busted my butt and got a lot of work done that I was still getting high praises from my boss.  Then my manager changed, and all of a sudden my job was thrown into turmoil.  In just a few months with my new manager, I lost my job.

By that, I don’t mean I was fired.  I mean, the heads of the company didn’t like the direction my department was taking (*cough new manager cough*), and decided to get rid of the department in its entirety.  I chose to stay in the company, where over the next few months my duties seemed to change on a regular basis until they finally settled me into a job that has been qualified as “The most stressful, and hardest job” by many of my peers.  I started the year bragging how much I loved my job and appreciated (and felt appreciated by) the company I work for, to feeling completely used and mistreated by my company while having a stressful job.  There are some silver linings in the future, but that won’t happen until 2013.  I’m trying to make the most of what I got, and be happy with what I have (a decent paying job that also gives me benefits), but this is most definitely a large negative.

It did motivate me to look for a new job, which was one of my resolution.  Another one of my resolutions was to do more video work.  I started the year off strong with my search, found nothing, learned how much I liked my job, and became complacent.  With the change, I started looking again.  I went all out.  I used my contacts, I called random people, I asked acquaintances who might know a guy who might know a guy who could have worked on Leverage.  I applied to every film and video job I could find.  So far, I’ve only heard one response, and it doesn’t sound very positive.

During the year, I’ve also been doing volunteer work on a project.  This project has been the project from hell, and I’ve more than once almost tore my hair out because of it.   My part of the project will be finished on December 31st, thank god.  Beyond that, I didn’t get to even volunteer on any other projects, despite what I feel were pretty heavy efforts on my part.  I pushed myself to meet new people and apply myself, to e-mail stranger and reach out.  Nothing.  Hope is awesome when you feel yourself getting somewhere.  But for me, it was crushing.  I almost got more responses when the economy was dead then now.  Film resolution and find a new job resolution are both big fails, and a negative for the year.


Things also died on me this year.  My great-uncle, who was always a hoot to hang out with, saw his health drastically fall and then he died.  We weren’t close, but I always saw him on Thanksgiving, and one or two other times throughout the year.  Thanksgiving will come into a play again here soon.  I also lost not 1, but both of my dogs.  First Lily went blind, and over an excruciating amount of time, her health dropped slowly until finally she had to be put down.  Before we even started recovering emotionally from her loss, her sister Taz, a dog I’ve loved since we raised her as a puppy, got sick.  Her health plummeted.   We thought she was going to recover, and then over Thanksgiving she took another nosedive.  She died shortly after.  There are no positives that can be seen here.

My parents did adopt a new puppy this month.  Ziva, another boxer.  Absolutely cute and wonderful and playful.  I have lots of pictures with her which are absolutely amazing.  But, she is my parents dog, and I’ll get to see her maybe once a month.  I look forward to the next time I get to play with her.  It doesn’t make up for the loss of Taz or Lily though.  People nor pets can be replaced... but it is nice to have her, and I am in love with my little Calamity Jane.

Backing up a little...Thanksgiving.   I’ve talked about it a lot before, and a lot of this will be repeat.  
My Thanksgivings have always been large family events.  This year it was just my parents.  Watching my father and mother “communicate” was heartbreaking, having a dog dying was heartbreaking, and having such a small family was heartbreaking.  I knew that I had lost what I had once considered family.  The word that could be used for this is...heartbreaking.  I am grateful that my best friend was going through a similar life dilemma, and that she was there for me, and that over Christmas I got to experience a large family with hers.  It really helped restore something in me.

Let’s end on two upswings.  One of my resolutions was to get myself in better shape, and do more races, and finish them.  I competed in 3 races this year, the Prefontaine, the Dirty Dash, and the Pumpkin Half Marathon.  I completed the Dirty Dash, that was no problem, but I didn’t “finish” either of the other two.  Despite that, I still feel accomplished.  I ran at least 5 miles of the Pre, but was injured and had to walk 1 mile. Even with injury, I still got an amazing time of almost 10 minute miles.  The race did leave me unable to run for about a month, just enough time to “train” for 2 weeks before the Pumpkin Half.   I ran at least 10 miles of that, maybe even 12!  For having been injured for so long before the race, I feel incredibly accomplished for both.  I am already signed up for three races next year, and have plans to do even more.  Who knows, maybe this year I’ll finally beat my best friend in one of these races!

A big positive, and my major resolution for the year, was to start my comic book.  I found an artist early on, and have been working with him since then.  By the end of September I had pages, by December I was doing minor advertisement, and the very beginning of 2013 I’ll be doing more work.  I’ve been getting lots of feedback, both positive and negative, and I really look forward to seeing it grow.  It took longer to start then I desired, but it has started, and it is rolling right along.

Over-all, I’ll say this year ended on Neutral grounds. It’s very mood dependent, but in a rational mind I think things evened out.  I think the events of this year leaned negative, but my life over-all is better than it was in 2011.  If it weren’t for some very possible, and real changes, coming in 2013 (a big change in my current job, a possible paying job in video, my comic book growing, and some new dating possibilities) I’d be leaning more towards negative... but already 2013 looks like its going to bring good things to me due to my diligence, and possible suffering, through 2012.

Coming soon to a blog near you:  My 2013 Resolution list.

Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Hipster Puppies

Hipster Puppies

So last night I was at a Holiday party.  I was sitting in the middle of the couch, which meant I had a conversation going on to the left of me, a conversation going on to the right of me, people conversing on the other side of the couch, and I was completely overwhelmed and unable to focus on any of it.  Luckily for me, on the coffee table my friend had placed a copy of “Hipster Puppies.”





This book was perfect for me.  After have finishing my my 2 Towns Ciderhouse hard cider (I had the Incider, which was delicious), I wasn’t in for any heavy reading, and a book that has nothing but pictures of cute dogs dressed up funny with quick quips about hipsters was amazing.  I was able to finish the whole book in one sitting!  I mean, really, that should sell the book right there.


The downfall of this book is that I kept randomly bursting into a-little-too-loud laughter (that might be the fault of the cider) and caught everyone’s attention.  As I wasn’t participating in any of the garbled noise going on around me, I’m sure my outburst was definitely at the wrong time.  But the books saving grace, coupled with me living in a hipster Mecca, is that I could then pass the book to my friend, she’d read it aloud and show everyone the accompanying picture, and everyone would laugh.  It was like, for a moment, I was the life of the party!  Except, you know, it wasn’t my book and my friend is the one who read it, but still I contributed to the party for a moment!  Then everyone could return back to their conversation as if my interruption never occurred, but deep down inside, I knew they were all thinking “I can’t wait until that weird guy on the couch bursts into laughter again so I can look at another picture of a dog.”


My favorite line was something to the effect like “Daisy sometimes gets ‘irony’ mixed up with ‘being a complete asshole.’”  As I was surrounded by writers and other artists who know what the word irony actually means, this one got quite a laugh and everyone had to pass the book around and read it before giving a chuckle and handing it to the next person.  It took awhile for the book to get back to me, which gave me enough time to grab more hard cider. I think it was called Gnarly Tree Cider, and it was the Crisp Apple. As the name sounds, it was a crisper Cider.

That was my holiday read.  The rest of my summation of holiday parties is that Yule Logs are delicious, but impossible to serve without destroying it, and that gravity is not a gentlemen and will slam a door closed on your friends mom.  Stay tuned, because my next read will be “Bonk: The Curious Coupling of Science and Sex,” or as I like to call it “Bonk: How I answer phones and try not to say “Clitoris” or “Vaginal wall” while on the phone with a customer.”

Friday, December 14, 2012

The Mass Effect Series: Books vs. Video Games

Only one video game has brought me to tears, and that game was Final Fantasy X.  Tonight, a second game brought me to tears, and that would be Mass Effect 3.

Some people dismiss video games as mindless entertainment.  As just shoot-em sprees that dumb down the population.  Some would argue the same of movies.  Some would argue the same for everything not a book; and I’m sure some could argue the same for books.  They are all different ways of expressing and displaying a story.  Yes, if you look at a game like Castle Wolfenstein, where the plot is “fuck! Nazis are attacking! Kill them all!,” or its offspring Doom (either the movie or the game), where the plot is fuck! Aliens are attacking! Kill them all!,” to Love and Peace, yeah video games are mindless entertainment.  But compare a Final Fantasy to a romance smut novel, and its the book that is the mindless entertainment.   All forms have their great pieces of artistry, and all forms have their cheap entertainment.  There have been movies that have redefined how people look at science fiction, and books that cause no original thought.  There are video games which are only about blood, and video games that have compelling story lines where you only play through the action to get to the next bit of the story.

From here on out, I may be spoiling major parts of the game.  I am not reviewing these games as video games, but under the concept that video-games can provide just as amount story, emotional attachment, and the reader can learn just as much as from a book.  That video games can be just as good of a tool to tell a story as a book.

The Mass Effect series has a huge amount of story through it.  The base concept is one I’ve talked about before with Babylon 5, and the council science fiction.  There are a bunch of alien races that all have united, and the three strongest of the races rule on a council that rule over the laws of the galaxy.  Space travel is done through a series of “Mass Effect” relays.  While the game never mentions the Higgs-Boson, the concept is that we find ancient alien technology that allows the races to create “Mass Effect” fields.  These fields reduce an objects mass, allowing for faster than light travel, and with that comes space travel.  This is one of the theoretical applications of the Higgs-boson.  Humans are one of the most recent races to be allowed onto the Citadel, which is a giant base station that serves as the hub for galactic life.  It also an alien relic.  While I don’t necessarily like the relic bit, it is important to the overall story.

The base storyline is that an entity from dark space is coming to destroy all sentient life in the galaxy.  The first game you learn about these Reapers, and that they come whenever sentient life reaches a certain level of intelligence, and then these races are exterminated.  The reapers have done this for many “Cycles,” for longer than the known history of the galaxy.  In the first game, you stop the Reaper known as Sovereign from taking over, and so reinforcements are sent.  In the sequel, another reaper known as Harbinger is sent to assess the situation.  In this game, we learn about what monstrosities the reapers commit upon the sentient races, and get more of an idea of what the reapers desire.  You manage to stop Harbinger and his race of Collector’s, but that does not mean you won.  The third game is all out war, against these giant monstrosities, which not only outnumber the collected races, but also have technology well beyond our own.  They come straight for all the major races homeworlds.  Being a human, you get to be on Earth when they strike.   The rest of the game is you attempting to align the races as well as make a super weapon to fight back against the reapers.  The entire game you get to listen to battle reports on Earth, and well...Earth is losing.  In the end, victory is achieved, but not without making some very difficult choices.

The series of games allows you to make decisions as you go through.  Are you going to be the paragon, the renegade, or something between.  The choices you make affect you throughout the series.  An example is that in the first game, you find a captured Rachni Queen that you can either kill or save.  The rachni were an insect like race where the queen is the only one needed to rebuild the hive.  There is a huge backstory on the Rachni that you can choose to learn about, but basically they nearly annihilated all life before they were beat back and supposedly every single one was killed.  Human scientists found one remaining egg, which turned to a queen, and they started cloning the Rachni for their own purposes.  If you save the Queen, you run into her in the third game, and she desires to help you.  If you killed her though, the reapers make a clone-like race which are hell bent on seeing you fail.  You didn’t know what the consequence would be, and either could be hard.  Not all the “Good” decisions are the ones with positive outcomes either, and some evil decisions turn out to be one that needed to be made at the time, and save you a lot of time and hardship by the finale.

As the game goes through, you build a team to go with you.  While this team changes somewhat between the games (only three characters are playable through all three games saying you download all the additional content), all the characters and decisions from the first follow you through to the finale (if they survived!).  The team grows alongside you, even in each individual game.  For example, one of the lead characters is Liara.  In the first game she is a fledgling archaeologist looking into the preceding race known as the Protheans.  She is young for her race, and naive, and you save her from a simple trap.  She grows, develops, and by the end of the third game she is the leader of an intelligence organization where she is laying the traps.  Many of the characters go through similar changes.

She is also a possible love interest.  In the game, you get to choose to be male or female, and from that you develop relations with your crews.  If you do the right things, some of these relations can lead to sex, or even love.  Some of it is in your hands, some of it is based on your choices.  Through the series, the game allows for lesbian couplings, and the third allows for a gay coupling as well.  It treats each coupling the same, there is no more of a big deal talked about the gay man and his losing of his husband than there is of the wife who lost her husband, or the soldier who lost his wife to the reapers.  Your character gets to experience love, and lost, and you can choose to listen to the developing tales of others love lives.  In the second game, as the game plays through you can walk through the ship and listen to the crew.  One crew member’s families were stuck on a planet expected to be attacked by the collectors, who leave no survivors.  You get to listen to a replay of a tape of his son’s birthday party.  You get to hear that the planet was being evacuated.  You listen to him losing contact with his family.  We hear that the collectors did attack the planet.  And you overhear from the character, crying at his table, what happened.  If that doesn’t evoke any emotion, if you’re not interested in what happened to his family...I don’t know what to say in that case.

The part that made me cry is that I played as the male Shepard, and romanced the character named Tali.  Tali is a Quarian, and the backstory of them is they created a synthetic race known as the Geth to help them.  What they noticed though is that their Virtual Intelligence (VIs) were becoming Artificial Intelligence (AI), and were becoming smarter and smarter.  Before things got out of control, the Quarians tried to kill off the Geth.  This caused the Geth to rebel, and the Quarians fled their homeworld.  Much like Battlestar Galactica, all the quarians live on a fleet of ships, called the flotilla, that fly through space as they plot to retake their homeworld.  They wear body suits that regulate their bodies, and after a few generations of this, all their natural immunities have gone away, and now they are forced to be in their suits at almost all times, or potentially get fatally sick.  You also learn that the Quarians live somewhat like the Amish in that when the Quarians reach a specific age they are cast out to learn about outside society, and they can (and more often than not) choose to return to the flotilla with a gift to help the fleet.

In the first game, you meet Tali during her pilgrimage, so she is young and learning the galaxy, although not quite as naive as Liara starts.  While you don’t get to romance her in this game, a close friendship is obviously struck.  In the sequel, you save her from an attack, and some flirting begins (paraphrased:  “are you flirting with me?” “Now why would I do that?  I mean, you’ve only been my knight in shining armor twice now, and what girl wouldn’t fall in love with that.  I mean, did I just say that...I’m going to go back to working on the engine...”).  You are there when her father dies, you are there to clear her name when the Quarians suspect her of sabotage, and you watch her grow from these experiences, and your character can grow as well.  Despite the riskiness of the whole act, Tali finds a way to quarantine a room so that she can remove her suit and couple with Shepard.  She appears halfways through the third game, and is still much in love with you, but the weight of the Quarian world is on her shoulder.  Still, in this game the words of “love” are exchanged between the two of you multiple times, as well as some great emotionally bonding scenes, including one silly one where Tali gets drunk by drinking through an “emergency induction port” (aka: a straw).  You help liberate her homeworld, and for the first time she gets to be home.  Shepard points out that she now has a home, and she hugs him and tells him “I already have a home.”  These particular words have great significance to me, but still I think it demonstrates the emotional connection that has grown.

So why did it make me cry?  We get all this connection, all this closeness, and the game ends with your character losing a war.  You are running to your final objective when a reaper lands to attack you and your team (note: full reapers are taller than skyscrapers).  It grievously injures your party, and Tali can’t go on.  You carry her to the evac ship, and she cries out “Shepard, don’t leave me behind!”  And the way she says it...  I just watched the clip again, and the water works almost started again.  Especially considering that the game continues, and the choice I made sacrificed Shepard... and Tali is left alone.

But a good book is more than just the emotional connection. It should explore themes and ideas.  As discussed above, it already covers some science fiction, and when I use those words I meant theoretical application of actual science.  Another science fiction theme is Synthetic, or AI, versus Organic.  Throughout the entire series there is a lot of AIs, good and evil and inbetween.  As mentioned with the Quarians, the Geth took over the Quarian homeworld in a war, and throughout the first game and the majority of the second game, the Geth are your major adversary as they worship the Reapers as the ultimate form of synthetics.   Of course, there are also the Reapers, which are AIs bent on repeatedly destroying all organics.  But then you meet EDI, which is the AI that helps coordinate your ship, the Normandy, and at one point you have to “Unshackle” her, letting her be a full AI without restrictions.  In the third game, she acquires a synthetic body, and becomes one of your key team members.  Throughout the game, while she has lots of questions about humans, she eventually falls in love with the pilot, Jeff “Joker” Moreau (played by Seth Green) and decides to become more and more human, and is most definitely a positive AI.  There is also Legion, a collection of Geth programs (Geth are not their physical bodies, but the individual programs), and while he does not regret the war on Quarians, he does want peace between his race and the Quarians.

Despite the good AI, characters repeatedly mention that AIs and humans are always destined to war with each other.  The reason I like the best is given by Javik in the middle of the third, which is: Organics do not know their purpose, nor whom their creator is, so they can make their own purpose and can imagine an infallible God.  Synthetics are created with a purpose that they know, and they also know who their creators are and more importantly that their creators are fallible.  These fundamental differences are what will always lead Synthetics and AIs to war.  You further learn its the reasons the Reapers exist; to “preserve,” in a very sick way, both organic and synthetic races of the cycle before the war between AI and Organic continues.

With that also comes the question of doing what needs to be done.  You have to make many hard choices throughout the game.  The very concept of the reapers is, while a monstrous solution, is a solution that prevents all organics from being destroyed and allows evolution to continue again.  The game isn’t saying there is no right nor wrong, but that not all choices are so clear cut.  The Rachni queen is an example, releasing her could release a race that once almost destroyed all the galactic races, but killing it is genocide.  Another significant choice is that there is a major mass relay near the Batarian homeworld.  The specific Mass Relay is the ones the Reapers use to get into the galaxy.  Destroying it will greatly slow down the oncoming Reapers, but in doing so you will destroy the homeworld of the Batarians.  Now, Batarians are a race who view slavery as a cultural right, so they are total assholes... but you are destroying their homeworld!  Do you make the choice to destroy the relay and kill millions, to potentially save billions?  

One great writer, Isaac Asimov, spent much of his career writing about the potential problems with AI, alongside many other authors who have explored similar scenarios.  This video game gives the same inspective depth as other books.  The story is there, and displayed through dialogue.  The major difference is that you have some choice how you respond to what a character says, and that you are watching and listening to a character on your screen as opposed to reading it.  Countless books, especially post-WWII era, have explored the idea of doing what must be done.  This game was able to explore those concepts, but in a different fashion.  The game put us in the shoes to make the decisions, and it teaches the lesson.  While similar to some books, its a different tool to teach the same lesson.

The game does have lots of violence in it.  Much of the game is running around with your team killing Geth, Cerberus agents, Reapers and their minions, and doing lots of little side missions, some of galactic importance and others are settling personal vendettas for individual characters.  But, between the gameplay is an in depth story line.  A friend of mine hates playing video games, but the story was so interesting that she asked to be invited to listen to the plot points, or would sit beside me reading a book and paying attention when I got to dialogue.  It, like many other video games, has spawned a series of books, comic books, and a potential movie.  It’s not the mass violence that has attracted people to create these other pieces of art, but the rich and beautiful world and the in depth storyline that not only provides in character growth, but can gleam new thoughts upon the gamer / reader / viewer.

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Mocking Jay

Mocking Jay

The trilogy’s final is here and read, and this time read through a glowing screen.  I didn’t know anyone who physically owned the finale of Suzanne Collins young adult series The Hunger Games, but I did have a friend who owned it on their Amazon kindle.  Amazon has a feature where you can lend your digital books to your friends for a 2 week period of time.  Despite having the feature, I don’t think Amazon actually wants people to use it as it was not a simple process to either send the book, nor to receive and read it.

When the process of getting the actual book onto my device was done, reading the book off my phone (an Android Razr HD using the Amazon Kindle App) was easy.  While I know lots of people with kindles or other e-book reading devices, I rarely hear anything good about digital reading.  Generally the complaints are Giles-esque, missing something superficial like the smell of the book.  I did miss the feel of a page in my hand, or mass flipping pages to see when the next chapter begins so I know how many pages I have to go through.  But I miss them because that’s what I’ve been doing all my life; reading is associated with these antiquated notions, and its not necessarily that one is superior to the other.  The print on my phone was the perfect size, and while each page was smaller, that was actually a benefit to me considering I read while at work and am frequently interrupted, and a smaller page makes it easier for me to find my place.  Staring at a screen can cause eye-strain (when staring at a screen, you blink less which can cause your eyes to feel strained), but it never affected me in that way.  A big benefit to me is that I don’t own a night light, or a desk lamp, or any small lighting device near my bed.  If I want to read in bed, I have to get up, cross my room, and turn the light on, and repeat the process when I’m done.  Reading from a device means the light from the device is all I needed.  Now, when I go camping again, this will eat a lot of batteries, and if the battery dies I lose out on reading.  But, when I’m around town or in an area where I know I have easy access to a plug-in, its much easier to carry my cell-phone, which is always in my pocket, then it is to carry an extra book.  After reading it, I don’t have a preference for future books.

But I did more than just read on my Kindle, I actually did read a book.  A book which will now be spoilered if you continue.  

The series of the books is classified as “Young Adult,” and I might not understand what that means.  Part of the problem is that by the time I turned 13, I had already read many Stephen King books, including The Stand, which includes not only gruesome deaths, but plenty of sex.  My idea of what a “Young Adult” may read is a little warped.  Still, this book felt a lot more “adult” than its predecessors.  There were people melting, heads getting bitten off, people being set on fire, and a much deeper plot.  Comparing the last Harry Potter to the first, there was growth... but that was 7 books over 10 years, and the audience reading the book grew up alongside the characters during that time.  The Hunger Games was 3 books in under 2 years; the audience had not grown nearly as much, and the character of the book had barely grown as well.  As a 28 year old male reading the books, I was happy to see it go from what felt childish to me (read my review of The Hunger Games), to almost a mature book that just focuses on the life of a 17 year old, but it was still shocking.

For the final time, the book focuses on Katniss Everdeen.  A 17 year old female who tries to be self reliant, but is actually pretty paranoid and reads way too much into everything everyone says.  This book at least gives her more reason to actually be paranoid.  She has multiple characters that tell her she is just being used; she is also being manipulated from afar by President Snow.  She still in love with two different men, and she doesn’t want to admit it, and her little heart strings are pulled through out the book.  Oh yeah, and she’s the figurehead of a war after her home city has been firebombed to nothing.  She does not mature throughout this book.  In fact, she goes a little bit more crazy.  Its not entirely unexpected, considering everything she’s been forced to handle and that through the large majority of the time period that the book covers, she is so heavily drugged and removed from society that the world doesn’t even make sense.  I still would have preferred a character that matured over time, or more of a denouement.  Instead, the book goes through preparing for the war, winning the war, to her assassinating the president, to “and everything was happily ever after.”  Seriously, the book just feels like it ends.  The epilogue doesn’t count, in fact, I’m going to rant about that later.  But first...

The driving factor in this book isn’t my interest in Katniss anymore.  The first book I was right there with Katniss, rooting for Katniss, and totally rooting for her as a friend (partially because she was very similar to one of my friends in real life).  There’s this book I once read where its all told through a rat’s perspective.  The rat isn’t anthropomorphised (yes, I did spell that correctly on the first try) or anything like that, its just a rat running through this apartment complex and sees things.  You don’t care about the rat, you’re not supposed to.  The rat is just a tool on how to witness the various characters and the plot that unfolds.  Katniss is almost that rat.  I care about what’s going on with the war, I care what’s going on with Finnick and his wife, I care about what Gale and Beetee are planning, and most of all, I care about the incredibly tortured Peeta.  The difference between Katniss and the rat is I care about these characters because of how they relate and interact with her, but not because of her herself.  I care about Peeta because he’s constantly tried to protect her through the books; I care about the war because we saw the aftermath of the firebombing of District 12 through Katniss’ eyes.  But in the end, I read because I want to see how the world turns out, and not because I’m invested in Katniss any longer.  That care and concern for Katniss left me in book 2.  She was no longer my friend, but that crazy chick that is always around you, and you gave her advice and she doesn’t take it and keeps going crazy over the same bullshit.  Which is just too bad, I liked her so much in the first one.

Something I enjoyed about this book is that it was no longer a black and white story line. It was no longer “Capitol evil, 13 good.”.  Yes, The Capitol is evil, but how clean is 13?  They are still strong and controlling, and human life is still only a number of calculations.   We see how people get pushed to that edge to act like the capitol.  There is a vote as to whether or not a Hunger Games should be held.  Yes, we see 13 cross this line, but more importantly, we see Gale go well beyond that line.  Gale’s plan to take The Nut specifically, but also his emotional trap that is later used to kill Prim.  I can’t blame Gale for his crossing the line, I understand why he has snapped.  

The question of what side is good is further pushed by Peeta, and his repeated question “Real or Not Real.”  It shows up most at the end, when the war is too far along to stop.  But its important to have in your mind.  Who is trying to kill Katniss more, Snow or Coin?  We question who Katniss’ friends are, we question who her enemies are, and as soon as we get an answer, we might have to ask again.  At the end, the only question I felt answered is Peeta and Haymitch, which are the two characters that I never actually questioned.  Katniss’ point of view tried to make me question their intents, but to me I didn’t.  They had long ago proven their worth and love.

The book ends with with Peeta asking Katniss if she loves him, Real or Not Real.  That’s the ending I like.  While it left a lot of strings open, it allowed me to dream the future they might have.  Then there’s an epilogue.  An epilogue where Katniss and Peeta made the decision to breed.  Hate.  The way it is described sounds like Peeta pressured her into it. Even after 20 years, I don’t envision Katniss giving in to pressure about something like that.   Now, Katniss’ original argument against having children was she didn’t want to watch them go through the reaping for The Hunger Games.  Yet, somehow I feel that “because my husband was driven insane and used to go on murderous rampages, and he’s the sane one in the family” is a better reason not to reproduce.  At the end of the second book, I had made a wish that Katniss ended with neither Peeta or Gale.  Through the adventures in the third book, I am okay with her being with Peeta.  He’s the character who got her only real change to occur, which was to stick through it with another person, and not just judge them on how well they serve her.

Despite my dislike for the end, and my apathy towards Katniss’ character, I liked the book much more than I liked the second book, Catching Fire.  If Katniss had been more of a relatable character to me, I may have even liked this book more than the first, Hunger Games, as it had a much better plot line, even if the book left so many threads open.  It was still a quick and easy read, but the content was much more mature.  As with the second one, I really look forward to seeing how this is done on the big screen.  The sequel, currently slated to be released November 2013, and this movie will both probably get rid of much of the middle, and focus on the “games” part of the book.  Where all the action takes place; but the action that they have to show is going to be outright riveting.  I will definitely be paying to see it.