SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion

This topic is about
Ready Player One
Group Reads Discussions 2011
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"Ready Player One" Game Over(Unmarked Spoilers)

I thought it was a fun romp through the 80s and 70s. I didn't think it was written well, though. There were elements of story telling that I didn't think were met. For example, there are signs of dystopia and a collapse of civilization. Wade hints at this all through the start of the novel, and then we see bits and pieces of this throughout the novel, but we don't see how that happened. We see a kid who has lived in abject poverty in the corner of a laundry room of a trailer.. and suddenly he's in an apartment of his own buying thousands of dollars worth of things?
There's a lot of things explained after the fact, too, like when he got himself indentured. We read about how these guys are busting down Wade's doors, and how he's arrested by "corporate police", and then carted off.
Only after he's in, there's all these deus ex machina statements that pop up:
* Oh, I had bought the passwords
* Oh, I had put my own card in debt
* Oh, I automatically scheduled a payment to put myself out of debt
* Oh, once I got out, I had ordered a new computer unit to be shipped to a mailbox, even though I never ever left my house or mentioned any other communication
When he's in indentured servitude, he hacks a computer.. and later in the pivotal battle scene, we find out about all the things he did in the past.
* OH, when I was in IOI Indentured , I set this up
* I also set that up.
Foreshadowing. We needed more foreshadowing.
But then again, it seems like this kid watched around fifteen straight months of movies and TV shows, and read nearly 10,000 works of literature, over the period of 4 years before the story starts.
And he can play a perfect game of pacman.
Now, all that aside, I had fun reading this. I really did. I just don't know if I really find the writing solid. The main character didn't have any visible flaws that cost him.

Once you walk away, you're left going, "Hey, a lot of this is just ridiculous with too much coincidence." I also didn't buy into the world Cline created. I had to think of it as an alternate reality from ours.
All that said, I don't hate the book. I enjoyed it for what it was, the literary equivalent of a Wham song.
wake me up, before you go-go...

I thought it was a fun romp through the 80s and 70s. I didn't think it was written well, though. There were elem..."
I agree with a lot of your points. I think we're going to see a sequel that deals more with the dystopia aspects.
They alluded to too many plotlines and didn't deal with them again for there not to be a followup. Saying things like ""[OASIS] had become a self-imposed prison for humanity," he wrote. "A pleasant place for the world to hide from its problems while human civilization slowly collapses, primarily due to neglect"" and then having Anorak show him the Big Red Button that can turn the whole thing off seemed like too much of a coincidence.
I was annoyed with the indentured section as well. I don't think there was anyway to know he got the IOI codes before he says it. Even knowing it was coming when I listened to the audiobook there were no clues beforehand.





Main problems with it:
- The whole world apparently lives in OASIS, but it certainly is a US-centric whole world.
- The voice was rather inconsistent in jumping between old and young.
- There's no sign that there's been any new creative endeavours since the 90s. Yeah, the book is all about nostalgia, but it feels like except for OASIS the world has frozen in time.
- It bugged me that the list of authors/film-makers specifically recommended were all male.

Main problems with ..."
Did we ever learn Diato and Shoto's age? I pictured them in their late 20s or early 30s because they talked about Hikikomori.
What female authors/filmmakers do you think should have been mentioned? Ursula K. Le Guin was the first one that came to my mind.

I figured Diato and Shoto were in their 20s. I don't know if I'd drop them in the category of 'friends' though.

"I think Art3mis may have saved this book for me, even if she is a clear (semi-)expy of Jordan from Real Genius. (I was thinking that even before the in-book lampshading, heh, and was amused to be right.) I was teetering on the edge of disgust/concern that this might be one of the things that doesn't acknowledge that, yeah, women can create cool things too."
And incidentally, Real Genius was directed by a woman, Martha Coolidge. Hence the comment about how Art3mis saved the book for me not just by existing but by what she was a homage to.
Very tangentially, apparently there is a remake of Real Genius in the works. My instant reaction was "oh no" but I have to admit, if it was done well it could be all right. But what are the odds of that?

Anyway, feel free to read my review: http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...
I'll take a look at the comments in this thread later. I'm interested to see what you all thought! But I really need to do some actual studying now xD

Real Genius has a few small issues, but there's no way to capture that particular lightning in a bottle a second time.
It's unfortunate that there are so few female directors and science fiction writers. In the 80s it was a "new boys club" with all the Spielberg and Lucas clones and proteges running around. Pretty much the only big-time female directors in the 80s were Penny Marshal, Amy Heckerling and Nora Ephron, and I don't imagine a geek like Halliday paying attention to their films.

It was definitely an addictive read though, I read the whole thing within 24 hours. It was a fun ride.

I'm a retired gamer, so I wondered how my reaction compared to someone who has never played a MMORG. Because I have to say, gamers like the Sixers are out there, and they do ruin it for everyone else -- kill-stealing, camping, farming bastages that they are.

Sometimes you don't want a steak, you just want a popcorny snack ;)


And yet the atmosphere was so well built up that I rated it five stars. Huh. I guess that says something about how great of a book it was as well!

BUT, that doesn't mean that fun stories have no place. Fun stories DO have a place, and this one did :D

This is an amazing analogy.
Amazing.
And hunger inducing.
damnit.
And hunger inducing.
damnit.


All-in-all, I was a lot less impressed with the book than many others. While most people seemed to see all these points and still rate it highly anyway because of the action and excitement, I was sort of underwhelmed by that, too. I even started skimming during the last section, including the fight with Sorrento, 'cause the outcome just seemed so obvious. It's a pretty straight adventure story - and while there's nothing necessarily wrong with that, the only spin to it was the nostalgia, which did little for me. The plot, the characters, and the world were all kind of thinly drawn, and I was pretty meh about the whole thing in the end.
Sorry, Ala.

I agree it was a simple mindless fun book. The ending was obvious from the first chapter since Wade flat out says something along the lines of "This is the story about how I found the easter egg".
There wasn't much chance for Sorento or any of the Sixors.

Sometimes it's nice to leave moral ambiguity and deep thinking behind, and just have fun.

Is there going to be a movie made from this book? Ernest Cline mentions something about that in the end notes.

So here's my review: This was a really fascinating book. During the first few chapters it had A LOT OF information about the 80's culture, which seemed surplus at times, but if you are really into this decade, you're getting used to it and come to like it too. After chapter fifteen, the plot thickens, interest skyrockets and from there on it is fun, fun, fun!!

I'm one of the people who totally enjoyed this read. I barely paused to think about the obvious foreshadowing or the world Wade lived in, I was completely taken in by the nostalgia and adventure. I kept talking up RPO while reading that my husband has decided to read it and he hasn't picked up a book ~5 years.
It will be really interesting to see how the book is interpreted for the movie, if there is one.

Amen, Sister. I'm semi-retired (maybe coming out of retirement briefly during the holidays).

http://www.snopes.com/photos/architec..."
That's more like a Frank Lloyd Wright Trailer Stack.

A movie made from this would be fun to watch.


Ok this was my second reading and I still love it, I know that it's a wish fulfillment fantasy, but after just reading the first 6 Elric novels I needed a dose of lighthearted adventure. While I'm a little older then intended audience, I had a blast in the 80's, first video-game system, first computer, first love, so nostalgia was certainly working in the authors favor. But for a first novel Cline did a remarkable job. An underdog hero with a cool friend and love interest and an evil corporation as the villain and all that eighty's trivia

For me to be "ok" with romantic interest is a tough bar in a book. Normally that is an instant turnoff for me, but I think it's done really well here, and the characters manage to keep their eyes on what's important.

I took it for what it was, a fun and geeky story. For me, the entertainment factor out-weighed the flaws.

I really had it inmy head that H and Artemis were gonna hook up for some reason...

Probably the finest moment of nostalgia was Hallaway's penultimate part of the third gate, re-enacting Monty Python's Holy Grail. Classic!

Do you think it will be as much fun to see it as to read it? So much was nostalgia from doing these things ourselves.
I have notes but my Kindle is charging. The whole book was so much fun.

Heathers - I watched this an absolutely incredible amount of times in high school.
The Greatest American Hero - I had completely forgotten about this show!
Qbert - they actually mentioned one of my favorite Atari games that never gets mentioned anywhere else.
Setec Astronomy - an anagram of Too Many Secrets, it's from the 1992 film Sneakers. Which I've seen many many times. It has a fantastic cast and it manages to be both geeky and funny, all while telling a solid story. Super cool.
Firefly - OMG, the Firefly universe in the OASIS!!! I am SO there!
I also liked the way that he likened descending the stacks from his trailer to Donkey Kong. I thought this book was an absolute blast. There were a lot of things I didn't get, I was born in '77 so I think I was old enough, I just tend to accept things as they are and not remember them later. But even when it was something that I couldn't remember, it still managed to be nostalgic in how things were described.
I liked the way that at the end of the quest the corporate jerks couldn't make it work because they couldn't really work together. It took a group of friends to make that happen. Sometimes I got a little mixed up on when they were in the OASIS and when they weren't. The OASIS was actually so realistic in everything that was happening that I would get confused. Plus, the way they would react to things inside the OASIS made it seem like it was as serious as real-world situations. For example, when Shoto's avatar was killed when he was going after the Godzilla robot, I was initially thinking that he had died just like his "brother". In the real world. And then he shows up again and I'm like "Wha...?".
This was a good find and I'm really glad I read it.
What did you think?
Good times and funfun?
So bad it needs a bugfix and a patch to make it
playablereadable?Meh?