913 and counting …

Finished InterWorld by Neil Gaiman and Michael Reaves.

This is a young adult book that focuses on Joey Harker. Joey’s always had a bad sense of direction — he’s the kind of kid who can get lost in his own house. But one day, Joey steps into a mist and into another world — literally. Joey discovers that he’s a Walker, or someone who can move through various dimensions/planes/worlds. Not only that, there are other Walkers, who are all different versions of Joey from alternate worlds. Male, female, winged, big, small, mechanical. You name it, there’s a version of Joey. Or Jo or Jay or … you get the idea.

The Walkers are engaged in an epic battle with two rival companies who are intent on conquering worlds. The Walkers’ goal is to keep the balance between the big bad company that uses magic and the one that relies on science. And since Joey is a powerful Walker, everyone wants to get their hands on him …

I’ll be honest with you guys — this book made my head hurt. It’s basically a science fiction time/space travel book about a group of kid commandoes. Think A Wrinkle in Time crossed with The Matrix (when Walkers get captured they get boiled down to power the bad guys’ machinery). I’m not a big fan of sci-fi to start with, and the book features a lot of terms/ideas that just weren’t explained that well, like the In-Between and multi-dimensional life forms.

The story itself is your standard fantasy genre arc — young, unremarkable boy discovers he has a great power/destiny and goes off to fight the good fight. Joey was an okay character, but I liked his soap bubble pet Hue better than I did him.

Overall, there was just nothing in here that I haven’t seen before, and the lack of explanation bothered me. On the bright side, the book makes me want to go back and re-read A Wrinkle in Time. Still, I have to give this one a thumbs down.

Up next: Texas Rain by Jodi Thomas.

Books in my TBR pile: About 13.

2 Responses to “913 and counting …”

  1. Brian says:

    I heard an interview with Gaimen a few weeks ago on The Bob Edwards Show. His new book “The Graveyard Book” sounded really good, plus I think that the interview itself was great. Hearing him read from his book was so cool. If your books ever come out as an audio book would you like to do the voice work?

    If you haven’t picked it up, you might want to get Kevin Smith’s new Batman Comic. It is going to be a three issue limited series and is going to feature Onomatopoeia, who appeared in the Green Arrow Comic that you read.

  2. Jennifer Estep says:

    I read a wire story about the Gaiman book. It does look interesting, and I plan on getting it at some point to read.

    I think doing the audio of my books would be really cool, but I don’t know if it would happen or not — I do have a bit of Southern drawl/twang, and I don’t know how that would translate. The powers that be would probably want someone with a more neutral accented voice, if that makes sense.

    The Green Arrow comic by Smith was okay, but I thought how he brought back GA was kind of lame. (Bits of DNA on Superman’s suit? Really? Doesn’t Superman do laundry?)

    No more comics for me right now. I’ve got a stack of Buffys and Angels to read. Although I’m really debating buying Watchmen to see what all the fuss is about …

Back to Top