Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Erebos by Ursula Poznanski


While I was reading this book, I made a decision: NO MMORPGS. I can totally see after reading this book how someone could be sucked into an alternate reality world like Erebos. Of course, Erebos is no ordinary RPG, but still any MMORPG gives you the ability to basically recreate yourself. In Erebos, you can become a new species, choose a new name, get a new skill set and turn yourself into the best warrior out there. That is, you can do all these things if you obey the messenger's orders, and the messenger wants you to do things in the real world. Outside of the game. And the game is always watching...

Erebos by Ursula Poznanski
Nick is a normal, basketball-playing, completely-average student when he begins to notice strange things happening to his best friend. His buddy isn't coming to basketball practice anymore, he won't answer Nick's calls, and he's actually talking to some of the kids that he and Nick consider nerds. Other people in the school are acting weird, too, and Nick is eventually invited to join the thing that's sucked them all in: Erebos, an extremely addictive computer game that seems better than real life. Soon the game is all that matters, and as it pushes Nick to do things in the real world, he begins to question just how far he'll go for a level up. Running errands? Taking pictures? Spying? Or something more sinister?

The difference between the bland, boring real world versus the vibrant, tantalizing unreality of the world of Erebos is highlighted in the novel. Even as a reader, I wanted to get through the parts in the real world and back to the parts about Erebos. I’m not sure if that’s a good thing or a bad thing about the book since I wasn't fully engaged with the whole story, but maybe it's a good thing since it did make me more sympathetic toward Nick.

Nick was a decent protagonist; I wouldn't say that he was particularly memorable but he was solid and had a very male voice. Sometimes a male protagonist can sound sort of not very guyish, but Poznanski does a great job with Nick. Victor rocked as a character, and I loved his little quirks, his obsessions and his mannerisms. He was fantastic, and ultimately my favorite character in the book. The other characters were somewhat flat and a little forgettable, even the main love interest.

The ending was a bit of a let-down and a somewhat predictable, but overall, this is a pretty enjoyable book. Gamers especially might like it since a lot of gaming goes in in the novel, and you could also consider giving it to a gamer who gets a little too entranced by the game world!

I would like to thank NetGalley.com and Annick Press for letting me read the galley for this book!

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