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Guillermo del Toro: The fall (2010, William Morrow)

English language

Published Oct. 10, 2010 by William Morrow.

ISBN:
978-0-06-155822-1
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OCLC Number:
316832942

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4 stars (21 reviews)

1 edition

reviewed The fall by Guillermo del Toro (The strain trilogy -- bk. 2)

Review of 'The fall' on 'Storygraph'

3 stars

Has its moments, but is not what I'd call good. Oscillates between interesting and hilariously confounding. It should have been longer, like the other books in the trilogy, just so the authors could explain more about the major plot devices and develop the characters more. A lack of explanation on both counts detracted from the experience and left me guessing. The Strain was by no means the most cleverly-written book, but The Fall reads even worse, like it's just a filler between two other books the authors actually wanted to write.

However, The Fall still provides interesting source material for the FX TV adaptation. I could easily see the events of this book filling two seasons instead of just one on account of the amount of stuff which happens in the book and is never given enough time for explanation there.

reviewed The fall by Guillermo del Toro (The strain trilogy -- bk. 2)

Review of 'The fall' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

The Fall is book 2 of Guillermo del Toro (yes, the acclaimed film director) and Chuck Hogan's "The Strain" trilogy, about an apocryphal swarm of vampires getting unleashed by a Master. The first book, [b:The Strain|6065215|The Strain (The Strain Trilogy, #1)|Guillermo del Toro|http://d.gr-assets.com/books/1326225354s/6065215.jpg|6241525], was a good, creepy read, with a modern take on the vampiric strain and The Fall continues with the story.

Slowly, people are beginning to realize that, yes, there are vampires. And the human race is in the middle of war between the Old Masters and a new, upstart, Master, who wants to rule the world and just use humans as a feeding farm. Eph Goodweather, who used to head up the Centers for Disease Control but is now a pariah, is battling the plague, while fending off his vampire ex-wife who is trying to get their son.

He is helped in this battle by Holocaust survivor …

reviewed The fall by Guillermo del Toro (The strain trilogy -- bk. 2)

Review of 'The fall' on 'Storygraph'

2 stars

In my brief review of the first book of the Strain Trilogy, [b:The Strain|6065215|The Strain (The Strain, #1)|Guillermo Del Toro|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1255573295s/6065215.jpg|6241525], I wrote "I thought at first that the story was being stretched too thin, that too many ancillary characters were getting too much screen time, but everything comes together in satisfactory fashion by the end of the book." The second book of the trilogy, [b:The Fall|6723348|The Fall (The Strain, #2)|Guillermo Del Toro|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1277534846s/6723348.jpg|6919505], suffers from the same problem of stretching the story too thin over a number of characters, but unlike The Strain, The Fall isn't able to pull everything together by the end. And as the story expands to include less interesting and more stereotypical characters, the three main characters of the story become less believable and more like cliched action heros. For most of hte novel, they essentially become a trio of Bruce Willis in Die Hard or …

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Subjects

  • Vampires -- Fiction