logo
Wrong email address or username
Wrong email address or username
Incorrect verification code
back to top
Search tags: Army-Life
Load new posts () and activity
Like Reblog Comment
show activity (+)
review 2016-06-25 10:57
Bring out the Bug Killer
Starship Troopers - Robert A. Heinlein

Sometimes it is really hard to drag up out of one's deep memory the names of all the books that I have read. Granted, I could list all of the Little Golden Books that I read as a child, but somehow I think that defeats the purpose of listing all the books that one has read on Booklikes (though I just entered Little Red Caboose into Goodreads to find that it has a rating of 4/5 with something like 439 listings), though since finding them sitting on my brother's bookshelf I have ended up doing just that (along with the Dr Suess Books and the Mr Men books). Anyway, this digression has little to nothing to do with Starship Troopers, with the exception of my long term memory kicking me in the backside and reminding me that I read this book a while ago.

 

I had seen the movie Starship Troopers prior to reading this book, and Starship Troopers is still one of my favourite, no-thinking, sci-fi action movies, but the book does have a little to do with the film (beyond the title that is). The book is about militarism when one's country is under attack. Earth is being bombarded with meteorites from another system that are being directed by a race of insects. This is not a story about two space powers slugging it out in space with star destroyers, but rather a race of insects who are able to launch their progeny through space and invade planets that way.

 

The enemy is clearly an unthinking race of creatures (they are not sentient, but still incredibly dangerous) that simply seeks to go out and destroy everything in their path. They are insects in the purest form possible. I have read a lot of books where the insects are sentient, but alien, creatures, however that is not the case here. These insects are what you would expect from insects, though most biologists would scoff at the fact that these giant insects are chitinous, particularly since insects this size would not be able to lift the shell. However this is science-fiction, and in a lot of cases, the laws of science get thrown out the window when dealing with this genre (and who knows, we might actually find a race of giant, chitinous, insects on a low gravity world).

 

This is more a book about life in the military than having some detailed plot. Heinlein seems to work his books like this, though fortunately the ending of this book did not come out as being tacked on in the same way that the ending of Podkayne of Mars did, though like the previous book, Starship Troopers is more like a journal of life in the military.

 

Heinlein's military is harsh though. Some have suggested that it is nothing like the film, and I must admit that I agree having read this book (albeit a while ago). The one thing I noticed is that there are no support roles (such as cooks), the soldiers are responsible for everything. These days it is suggested that for every soldier out fighting you need at least two auxiliary personal to support them. Granted, the cook does not cook for just one person, but for a number, however when cooking for 50 men, the head cook will need a lot of other cooks to help him (or her as the case may be). However, in this army everybody fights, and everybody also does the chores that are required of them. This, to an extent, makes for a much more efficient (and cheaper) army.

 

The problem that I do have with this book is the fact that the movie keeps on getting in the way. The movie is not necessarily what one would expect of the movie though in that it does not follow a traditional plot. It is not until close to the end that we discover the purpose of the film, and the main character is not moving towards a specifically defined goal. However it does not mean that it is a bad book, because the book is more about how the character becomes a soldier, and you could say it is the same in the film.

Source: www.goodreads.com/review/show/276723356
Like Reblog Comment
review 2013-08-18 11:37
Asterix and Obelix in the Army
Asterix The Legionary - René Goscinny,Albert Uderzo

Poor Obelix, he meets a girl with whom he falls in love only to discover that she has been engaged to somebody else and he has been drafted into the Roman Army to go and fight Ceaser's civil war against Pompey. Well, any love sick individual would probably sit back, wait until he is killed, and then make his move, but not Asterix and Obelix – they are too noble and honourable to do that, so they do what any good and noble person would do in such a situation – they join the Roman army to go off and rescue him.

Like the Asterix books before this one, I was in in stitches, particularly with the Egyptian, who, throughout the entire album, believed he was on some tour. Also, despite the strict discipline that is expected of those in the army, Asterix and Obelix managed to pummel their way through training and get off to North Africa, on their own terms, to rescue Tragicomix from the civil war and bring him back to his fiancée.

The civil war aspect is rather amusing because the whole idea of the Roman army fighting the Roman army is quite farcical, especially how they actually don't know who is fighting whom because they are all wearing the same uniform. I suspect that in reality (and this is not reality – this is Asterix) one could easily define who the enemy was, but then if they had done that it would not have been so amusing.

The other rather amusing aspect was how they had Obelix burst into tears when he discovered that the love of his life (or the latest one) was engaged to be married, and then from that point on whenever somebody burst into tears it had to be because their heart had been broken. Obviously there was no connection with the original one, though I do think it was because Asterix and Obelix first indicated that this was why they had burst into tears, and thus the other legionaries, who had the good chance of landing up in Asterix and Obelix's cohort, had picked up off of them.

So, another Asterix album finished, and one that is still up there with the others. There are still quite a few more to go, and at this stage I am still waiting for another two compendiums to arrive from the United States (and I do hope they get here because I am really stressing out about these latest Amazon orders), so I will hopefully manage to get through all of them sometime soon.

Source: www.goodreads.com/review/show/697828346
More posts
Your Dashboard view:
Need help?