Ushan Edirisinghe Edirisinghe itibaren 840 50 Rind, İsveç
It was really hard for me to rate this book. I really enjoyed How to Build a Robot Army and I really enjoyed Robopocalypse. the problem was that it's living in the shadow of another book. The entire time I was reading Robopocalypse I couldn't stop thinking about World War Z. They're both told in the same fashion with a main character/narrator and frame story and entries in an oral history style. The problem was that while Robopocalypse was interesting, well thought out and had good recurring characters it just wasn't as emotionally compelling as WWZ. WWZ consistently moved me. It scared me and amazed me and made me proud/ashamed of humanity. Robopocalypse almost never had that kind of impact on me. The only aspect that really struck a chord with me was the tone of hope that echoed through the entire book. That being said the book was very interesting and well written. It was compelling and unique. If anyone is qualified to talk about a robot uprising it's Daniel H. Wilson. For that reason I wish I has read Robopocalypse in a vacuum. It would have been a 4 or maybe a 4.5 but with WWZ so deeply ingrained in my imagination that just never happened.
Written for young readers. A quick review of the election of Abraham Lincoln as President.
I thought this book had the flavor of Hunger Games. I really enjoyed it. I didn't realize that the author is planning a sequeal. It's end seemed complete. It was refreshing.