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Read Stranger (2003)

Stranger (2003)

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Rating
3.75 of 5 Votes: 5
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ISBN
0843950765 (ISBN13: 9780843950762)
Language
English
Publisher
leisure books

Stranger (2003) - Plot & Excerpts

At first I was like meh. It took me a minute to get past some parts in the beginning--occasionally this author tends to be a tad too obvious at times. I guess I'll get my criticisms out of the way first1) One of my pet peeves with apocalyptic books is that they ALWAYS start off like 6 months to a year after everything goes to hell. I'm always wildly curious to find out how things start from the moment zombies rise up, or in this case, the entire population of South & Central America flood the United States and go on killing rampage. (Points for that being different there). I know flashbacks and newspaper clips and talks around the campfire are good fodder, but I wish more varied it up and went with Day One or something (The Cell did, which is why I like that book so much)2) It would be not a good thing if an entire continent went completely insane and rampaged through America...however, I read some crazy statistic recently that we have so many bullets in the US that the entire population would have to shoot a round a second all year long before we ran out of just what was purchased in 2009. So I really don't think the nation would totally crumple and cease to exist in 4 days. This annoys me in almost every book (except for Brian Keene's books, and in his books all the ammo in the world wouldn't help). 3) I have a problem also in these kind of books how EVERYONE is evil. I think if you managed to make it out of say a situation where prions infect everyone's brains and make them into monsters and you have hives and creepy stuff floating in rooms filled with goo, that would be a bonding experiece. Thankfully the hero of the story meets up with good folks midway through and I know it's stock in horror books--who is the real monster, them or us deal? Maybe if the book was longer and devoted more time to the town that managed to quarantine itself from the prion/bread bandits/hornets I would have accepted it better. Book could have been longer and I wouldn't have complained (so that's a point in its favor). But once I got past the first 30 pages or so, I was completely engrossed in this book. I don't think anyone does suspense quite like this author. Just when you think it can't get any worse, they suddenly spy thousands of zombies coming at them, or a woman with a new born baby wandering the wrong way towards the monsters, or someone breaks their leg, or the room starts running out of air, etc. But it never got ridiculous to me, so giant points to the author for that.

back in 1995, Simon Clark wrote a nifty post-apocalyptic novel called Blood Crazy, featuring the adventures of a young man in England as he meets other survivors and evades groups of murderous not-quite-zombies. I loved it. seven years later, Clark wrote Stranger, an irritating post-apocalyptic novel featuring the adventures of a young man in America as he meets other survivors and evades groups of murderous not-quite-zombies. well I suppose it is true that every writer revisits the themes and stories that define them as a writer, so I wasn't particularly annoyed at seeing the old story given new clothes. nor did I mind its lack of focus; that worked perfectly fine in Blood Crazy and I don't think its presence in Stranger is all that problematic. there's an excitement in randomness and not quite knowing where a story will be going, even if that unpredictability is due to lack of focus. what frustrated me about the novel was that it felt like it was written during one long weekend. a clumsy novel.perhaps the switch to America served Clark badly. he has no grasp of how Americans talk. for example, few 10-year olds casually use the word "lovely" and use of the word "niggardly" is fairly rare (for obvious reasons). but I don't think it was just the problems with American vernacular because there was so much that was off throughout the entire novel in how the characters thought, spoke, and related to each other. people laughing at jokes that made no sense. a monstrous villain's oddly-timed rant about how he was bullied as a teen. the hero wondering about "mating" with a romantic interest and later flirting with her by saying she has to live so she can give him children. huh? an execution about a third of the way through the book bothered me not just because of its ridiculous brutality but because it was a genuinely ridiculous way to kill a person.fortunately the novel wasn't a waste of time. I did like the oddly erratic approach to storytelling and Clark knows a thing or two about pacing. a book that features a youthful hero who flies into an uncontrollable murderous haze whenever someone infected is near him made for some surprising scenes. and Clark still has some creative juices. I would say that a room-sized jell-o mold apparently made of blood and other fluids and that contains malevolent floating body parts is certainly creative.

What do You think about Stranger (2003)?

Like "Blood Crazy," the other Simon Clark book I've read, this has an interesting premise ruined by lame execution and writing. In brief: America (and the world) are invaded by a horde of immigrants from South America, who (surprise!) are infected by a sort of time-delay plague which causes them to become crazed murderers, which (surprise!) then turns out to be just Phase One of an even weirder and grosser transformation.It sounds cool, but when you actually read it, it's a drag and doesn't make much sense. Like "Blood Crazy", in terms of mood, this isn't so much a horror novel as a postapocalyptic survival novel. (In other words, it's more about survival and heroism than about being scary.) Also as in "Blood Crazy", cruelly cynical scenes of human-on-human violence (particularly in the first 1/3rd in the paranoid survivalist town of Sullivan) outnumber scenes of human-vs-the-infected, or zombies or hornets or whatever they're called. The main character's 'condition' (his ability to detect the infected, followed by the uncontrollable urge to kill them) is an interesting antiheroic superpower, but ultimately the author doesn't use it very much. The dialogue and the first-person narration is frequently cheesy and/or overexplains what the characters are thinking and feeling; it's dumb writing. (Incidentally, Clark also mostly ignores, or is uninterested in, the racial implications of an army of crazed Latino immigrants invading & massacring North America. In one paragraph he offhandedly mentions "There was a race issue to all this"; no shit, Sherlock. But after that paragraph it's never mentioned again, nor are there any non-insane Latino characters, unless the hero with his vaguely Latino name counts, but "Greg Valdiva"'s ethnicity is never specified.) Most annoyingly, unlike "Blood Crazy", where Clark overexplains the apocalypse and eventually makes it ridiculous, here he errs in the opposite direction and never explains what's going on -- for instance (view spoiler)[how the 'hornets' create or relate to the 'hives', how the 'hives' function, exactly what the hell the 'hives' produce, the origin of the whole plague, etc. (hide spoiler)]
—Jason Bradley Thompson

Stranger, as of May 2011, is probably my second-least-favorite novel of all time. It holds the silver medal and will remain forever in the shadow of Sephera Giron’s Borrowed Flesh. My least favorite book ever isn’t a novel but a collection by John Shirley, but that isn’t important. I hated Stranger. As usual, I went into it with no knowledge of what it was about. I only knew it was horror and that is what I love. This is another apocalyptic, human race on the brink of extinction, people quaranteening areas and fighting for survival and Greg Valdiva is the Stranger who will save it all. That’s my horrible take on the book anyway. I didn’t really get much of it. The clearest memory I have is of Greg and a girl (can’t even remember her name) popping popcorn together. That is the only scene that made an impression and stuck with me and I don’t even know why. Perhaps this book was a victim of outside sources ruining it for me or distracting me, but I don’t think so. I read all 418 pages and was overjoyed to finish and move onto something different, and hopefully better.
—Adam Wilson

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