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Annihilation (Southern Reach, #1)
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Buddy Reads > Annihilation by Jeff VanderMeer

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message 1: by Lori (new)

Lori (loriann25) | 19 comments Hello has anyone else read Annihilation by Jeff VanderMeer??
I recently finished it and I'm not sure if I want to keep reading the series or not, I just wonder if the series gets better??


message 2: by [deleted user] (new)

Lori wrote: "Hello has anyone else read Annihilation by Jeff VanderMeer??"

I read it last month, and didn't really care for it, but as a rule I don't really like horror, So not so surprising. I know a couple of other people here read it, and Ben in particular liked it a lot. (There also seems to be a strong critical consensus in its favor.)

My cavils were: The plot was basically weird, inexplicable & menacing things happen and then the story ended. Secondly, I thought the characters, including the narrator, clearly had more information about this mysterious Southern Reach and what's going on there: when it started, what public perception is, that sort of stuff... and yet it was deliberately withheld from the reader, I presume in order to make things weird.

I don't find randomness mysterious.


Andreas Dense, weird page turner in ego perspective. Exactly the right size, it felt more like an extended novella than one of those fat doorstoppers.
A bit of Lovecraft, a bit of Poe, some Grass, and some Little, Big in it.

I was happy to read it but I'm not curious enough to continue the trilogy.

More like 3.5 stars.


Brendan (mistershine) | 743 comments The sequels change perspective a bit, with Authority focusing on the Southern Reach bureaucracy instead of Area X. Personally I thought Annihilation was fantastic but if you weren't into it I wouldnt suggest forcing yourself through the rest of the series.


message 5: by Lori (last edited Mar 11, 2015 02:28PM) (new)

Lori (loriann25) | 19 comments Thanks for the help everyone I was curious enough to finish this book but I don't think I'm going to continue the series.


Andreas Just wanted to point out that this one won the Nebula award.


Kevin | 5 comments All three books are from different points of view, but the stories do mesh together as the series ends. If you didn't really like the first book I would have to say there are plenty of books out there so give this one a rest.


message 8: by RJ - Slayer of Trolls (last edited Aug 04, 2017 08:57AM) (new) - rated it 4 stars

RJ - Slayer of Trolls (hawk5391yahoocom) I liked it a lot, and I'm going to continue on with the rest of the series. There's an obvious Lovecraft influence there and I'd agree with G33z3r that it's more of a horror novel than a SF one. Interesting that Vandermeer never tells us not only the location of Area X but also never specifies the time period. Readers are tempted to assume the story is set in the future, but all the technology used is yesterday's technology and I recall a comment in the story that suggested that Area X had faded from most people's attention after the initial occurrence. (By the way, I imagined the setting to be north coastal Florida, which a lot of people say is really southern Georgia.)

The biggest downside to the book is the relatively slow pacing. Although it was only 195 pages it felt like a novella that had been stretched a bit to be sold as a novel. There are a lot of descriptive sequences that seem to drag on, and a lot of speculating and rehashing of prior events. Not a huge detraction for me though.


Rachel | 531 comments Also - it's going to be a movie!! I loved the series so I'm excited/hopeful about movie


Brendan (mistershine) | 743 comments I don't ever go out to the movies anymore but if anything will get me to drag myself out to the cinema, its a movie based on a Jeff Vandermeer book, assuming the reviews are decent.


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