Showing posts with label Nick Cutter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nick Cutter. Show all posts

Thursday, January 30, 2014

Books I'm Excited For: February 2014

There are a lot of books that are coming out in February that I want to read. It started to seem like every time I found an interesting book, it was coming out in February. So I'm going to just jump right in!

I'm also trying a new format for this feature- If you want to know more about a book, click on the book itself and it will take you to its Goodreads page. This way, you can add it to your own shelf, read the descriptions and other's reviews. I will list below if I have received any from NetGalley, or if I have reviewed them.



cress by marissa meyer   The Martian by Andy Weir   When Audrey Met Alice by Rebecca Behrens   Sitcom by SaulAusterlitz   photo Runner_PatrickLee_zps82a6a991.jpg   Runner by Patrick Lee   Faking Normal by Courtney C. Stevens   Glitter and Glue by Kelly Corrigan Concealed in Death by J.D. Robb   After I'm Gone by Laura Lippman   Better Off Friends by Elizabeth Eulberg   The Troop by Nick Cutter

I received the following books from NetGalley to review: When Audrey Met Alice, Sitcom, Runner, Better Off Friends, and The Troop.
I've already read The Troop and my review was posted here.

Hopefully you guys like this format, because I really think I do!
There are so many awesome books coming out next month! I'd love to see your reviews if you do one on one of these books, so be sure and link me below! And feel free to add me on Goodreads!



FTC: Some of the books mentioned above have been provided to me by NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. All thoughts and opinions are my own, and I am not in any way affiliated with any of the authors mentioned.

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Book Review: The Troop by Nick Cutter

 photo thetroop_nickcutter_zps4a162886.jpg

(I received this book to review from NetGalley)

Description from Good Reads
Lord of the Flies meets The Ruins in this frightening novel written in the bestselling traditions of Stephen King and Scott Smith. 

Boy Scouts live by the motto “Be Prepared.” However, nothing can prepare this group of young boys and their scoutmaster for what they encounter on a small, deserted island, as they settle down for a weekend of campfires, merit badges, and survival lessons.

Everything changes when a haggard stranger in tattered clothing appears out of nowhere and collapses on the campers’ doorstep. Before the night is through, this stranger will end up infecting one of the troop’s own with a bioengineered horror that’s straight out of their worst nightmares. Now stranded on the island with no communication to the outside world, the troop learns to battle much more than the elements, as they are pitted against something nature never intended…and eventually each other.

“Lean and crisp and over-the-top....Disquieting, disturbing,” says Scott Smith, author of The Ruins and A Simple PlanThe Troop is a visceral burn of a read that combines boldly drawn characters with a fantastically rendered narrative—a terrifying story you’ll never forget.


My Review

About 20% of the way into reading this book, I tweeted the following out:
I did end up finishing this book. It was itchy, and uncomfortable, but I finished it. 



The Troop is about a group of boy scouts and their troop leader, over the course of a weekend, where they went for survival training. And, funny enough, that is exactly what they get when Tim, the scout master, finds a man extremely ill, malnourished, and dying. Scoutmaster Tim is also a doctor, and knows immediately there is something wrong with this stranger. He is gaunt, his skin is practically melting off of him, and he's sick. Very, very sick. He's also eating everything in sight. Including a couch cushion. 


We quickly discover what the disease is- worms. But these aren't just your normal, every day worms. No, these are scientifically engineered worms. That were made by a doctor in a lab. 

The perspective of the book stays in third person, but goes back and forth between the scouts on the island, and reports of what happened in the lab where the worms were created, and various news reports and interviews about what happened on the island.

This book is extremely descriptive, which is great. However, it makes for an extremely uncomfortable read. Ever wondered what it would be like to be infested with worms that want nothing more than to possess you? You're going to find out. Want to get inside the head of a psychopathic little kid? You're going to get that, too. Want to know what it's like to be so sick you are outside of yourself in a way that practically forbids your body from acknowledging it?
I think you see where I'm going with this!

Speaking of psychopathic children- if violence towards children bothers you, even if it's self-inflicted or from other children, you are not going to like this book. If you hate violence in general, stear clear. Not everyone that starts on the island makes it off, so try not to get too attached.
This books also has several instances of violence towards animals (both self-inflicted and otherwise), and that was harder for me to read in some ways than the violence towards the scouts.

I gave this book four stars on Good Reads, but really I'm about at a four and a half. I really, really enjoyed this book, even though it made me uncomfortable. However, I will have a hard time recommending it to just anyone (it would have to be someone that I know is a fan of the genre, and not someone that justs reads Romance, for example), and I don't see myself wanting to read it again.
I'll just keep it tucked away in my brain, where it will probably fester and create nightmares. Of which I had two while reading this book.


This book will be available for purchase on February 25th, 2014. You can preorder it for Kindle here, or hardcover here.


FTC: This book was provided to me by NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. All thoughts and opinions are my own.
Amazon affiliate links are used in this post. Please see my disclosure policy for more information.