Showing posts with label Science Fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Science Fiction. Show all posts

July 24, 2014

Landline by Rainbow Rowell

Landline

ditulis oleh Rainbow Rowell
diterbitkan 8 Juli 2014 oleh St. Martin's Press
Contemporary/Drama/Adult Fiction
310 halaman
buku lain dari penulis: Eleanor & Park, Fangirl, Attachment

***

Georgie McCool knows her marriage is in trouble. That it’s been in trouble for a long time. She still loves her husband, Neal, and Neal still loves her, deeply — but that almost seems besides the point now.

Maybe that was always besides the point.

Two days before they’re supposed to visit Neal’s family in Omaha for Christmas, Georgie tells Neal that she can’t go. She’s a TV writer, and something’s come up on her show; she has to stay in Los Angeles. She knows that Neal will be upset with her — Neal is always a little upset with Georgie — but she doesn’t expect to him to pack up the kids and go home without her.

When her husband and the kids leave for the airport, Georgie wonders if she’s finally done it. If she’s ruined everything.

That night, Georgie discovers a way to communicate with Neal in the past. It’s not time travel, not exactly, but she feels like she’s been given an opportunity to fix her marriage before it starts . . .

Is that what she’s supposed to do?

Or would Georgie and Neal be better off if their marriage never happened?

“Someone had given Georgie a magic phone and all she'd wanted to do with it is stay up late talking to her old boyfriend. If they'd given her a proper time machine, she probably would have used it to cuddle with him. Let someone else kill Hitler.”

Salah satu dilema terbesar yang dihadapi perempuan dalam usia kerja biasanya adalah memutuskan untuk jadi stay at home mom atau working mom. Banyak perempuan nggak rela untuk sekadar mengurus anak-anak di rumah setelah bertahun-tahun mengejar gelar dari institusi pendidikan tinggi yang susah payah ia raih tanpa merasakan kesempatan memiliki karir yang bagus dan hebat seperti para laki-laki. Buat apa sekolah tinggi-tinggi kalau akhirnya hanya di rumah dan mengurus anak? Lalu ketika ia memutuskan bekerja, pertanyaan selanjutnya adalah tapi yang akan bertanggung jawab pada anak-anak, siapa? Ada pengorbanan yang harus direlakan dari kedua pilihan tersebut, entah kebahagiaan pribadi atau kedekatan dengan keluarga sendiri. Inilah yang dihadapi oleh Georgie McCool dalam Landline, buku terbaru dari Rainbow Rowell.

Liburan natal kali ini, Georgie dan keluarganya sudah berencana untuk pergi ke Omaha, rumah keluarga Neal (suami Georgie) berada. Georgie merasa liburan inilah salah satu cara yang akan dapat memperbaiki hubungan keluarga dan pernikahannya yang belakangan seolah di ujung tanduk. Tapi kemudian sebuah kesempatan besar yang tak bisa disia-siakan dari tempat kerja Georgie datang, dimana ia harus tetap pergi ke kantor untuk menyelesaikan skenario agar bisa dipresentasikan (Georgie bekerja sebagai penulis acara komedi di TV). Ketika memberitahukan hal ini pada Neal, Neal jelas kecewa, dan kemudian memutuskan bahwa Neal bersama kedua anak mereka, Noomi dan Alice, akan tetap pergi meskipun tanpa Georgie. Setelah itu, Neal seolah menjauh. Tak hanya sulit dihubungi, ia pun nggak pernah berusaha menelpon Georgie balik. Georgie yang larut dalam kekecewaan akhirnya memutuskan untuk tinggal sementara di rumah orangtuanya, sambil sesekali berusaha menghubungi Neal melalui telepon tua berwarna kuning yang ada di rumah lama tersebut. Tak disangka, Neal memang akhirnya menjawab telepon dari Georgie, tapi Neal ini bukan Neal suami Georgie yang sekarang, melainkan Neal versi empat belas tahun lalu, beberapa saat sebelum mereka menikah....

Lewat Landline, Rainbow Rowell mengukuhkan sekali lagi kemampuannya untuk menulis suatu kisah yang sangat menyentuh luar biasa melalui hal-hal sederhana. Melalui percakapan antara Georgie yang sekarang dan Neal dari masa lalu, pembaca dibawa hingga ke saat-saat awal pertemuan mereka berdua dulu. Iya, setengah dari Landline adalah flashbacks, dan bagian-bagian itu justru yang menurutku lebih menyenangkan daripada bagian-bagian cerita di masa sekarang. Georgie dan Neal tuh total opposites banget, dengan sifat Georgie yang easygoing sementara Neal orangnya tenang, pendiam, lebih nyaman berkutat dalam dunianya sendiri. Georgie aktif, populer, tipe perempuan yang selalu berani untuk take actions, dan selalu tau apa yang ia mau, beda dengan Neal yang keinginannya cenderung berubah-ubah. It's so lovely to read how these two different people get united in a relationship. Seperti layaknya pasangan-pasangan lain, mereka punya berbagai masalah internal, dari mulai hubungan Georgie yang terlalu dekat dengan partner kerja sekaligus sahabatnya dari dulu, Seth, lalu posisi Georgie yang biasa memegang kendali, hingga rasa bersalah menumpuk yang dirasakan Georgie ketika Neal akhirnya mengalah dengan memutuskan untuk tidak bekerja demi mengurus kedua anak mereka. Hal-hal ini tidak dikomunikasikan dengan baik sampai kemudian Neal dan anak-anak pergi ke Omaha dan Georgie tenggelam dalam asumsi dan rasa bersalah sendirian.

“You don't know when you're twenty-three.
You don't know what it really means to crawl into someone else's life and stay there. You can't see all the ways you're going to get tangled, how you're going to bond skin to skin. How the idea of separating will feel in five years, in ten - in fifteen. When Georgie thought about divorce now, she imagined lying side by side with Neal on two operating tables while a team of doctors tried to unthread their vascular systems.
She didn't know at twenty-three.”

Setelah menghabiskan beberapa kesempatan berbicara dengan Neal versi empat belas tahun lalu melalui sambungan telepon aneh itu, Georgie mulai bertanya-tanya, apakah memang keputusan mereka untuk menikah adalah yang terbaik? Bagaimana bila Georgie bisa membujuk Neal untuk tidak melamarnya pada waktu itu, mungkin saja Neal akan mendapatkan hidup yang lebih layak dan lebih menyenangkan daripada yang mereka alami saat ini? Bisakah hubungan mereka diperbaiki kembali?

Membaca tulisan Rainbow Rowell selalu terasa seperti kejadian tersebut bisa terjadi dalam kehidupan nyata, dan segala percakapannya benar-benar diucapkan oleh orang biasa. Nggak terasa berlebihan sih (just, adorably and irritatingly cheesy hehehe) tapi bener-bener bisa mainin emosi. Halaman-halamannya penuh dengan quotes-quotes yang bisa bikin uaahhhhh, meleleh sendiri. Nangis, Ta? IYA SEMPET NANGIS BANGET. Terus, entah kenapa deh cerita adult fictions karya Rowell pun lebih enak dibaca daripada kisah YA-nya? Neal dan Georgie terasa real, and it pleases me as a reader that despite all of the problems and threats to their marriage, the fact that Georgie and Neal are still very much in love with each other is something that can't be denied. Sepanjang baca Landline aku terus keingetan sama salah satu quote dari buku One Day karya David Nicholls yang diucapkan Emma ke Dexter: "I love you, Dex, so much, I just don't like you anymore."


Yang ini nih. HUHUHU sedih kalo inget endingnya :((

Landline memberi kita pelajaran bahwa dalam sebuah hubungan, komunikasi baik itu sesuatu yang harus dibangun dan diusahakan oleh pihak-pihak yang terlibat. Come to think of it, hal ini berlaku nggak hanya untuk hubungan pernikahan dan keluarga aja, tapi juga hubungan sesama manusia secara general. Kalau kita ketika punya masalah hanya berasumsi, merasa nggak enak, terus dipikirin tapi nggak pernah benar-benar diomongin dan diselesaikan ya masalah akan tetap ada. Rainbow juga kayak lagi ngasih tunjuk 'Nih, yang namanya hubungan sama pasangan, apalagi pernikahan dan punya keluarga bareng itu bukan sesuatu yang gampang. Dikira kalau udah nikah itu cuma senang-senang doang?' Makanya, nggak usah resah-resah lah yang masih single, atau yang nanti pas lebaran diuber-uber dengan pertanyaan 'Udah punya pacar belum? Kapan nikah? Kapan punya anak?' Yak kan pembahasan melebar kemana-mana =)) Selain masalah dalam keluarga inti Georgie dan Neal, Rainbow Rowell juga menyinggung hal-hal minor lain melalui hubungan Georgie dengan orangtua (Beda usia Georgie dan ayah tirinya cuma tiga tahun!) dan adiknya, Heather.

“Nobody's lives just fit together. Fitting together is something you work at. It's something you make happen - because you love each other.”

Untuk pembaca yang sebelumnya udah pernah nyicipin tulisan Rainbow Rowell, Landline ini harus dicoba juga! Terutama buat yang ngerasa Eleanor and Park atau Fangirl terlalu cheesy dan remaja banget. Menurutku pribadi, Landline ini entah gimana lebih enak dibaca dibanding Fangirl. Sementara kalau baca Attachment chick-flicknya kerasa banget, nah Landline agak serius sedikit lah daripada itu. Ada beberapa hal yang agak terasa 'gantung' sih dari Landline ini juga, diantaranya tentang unsur telepon absurd yang bisa time-travel itu dan penyelesaian akhir hubungan Georgie sama Neal (I want it to be muuuuch longer than that! Huhuhuhuhu), terus aku juga sempet skip beberapa bagian waktu Georgie di tempat kerja bareng Seth, borrrrring, tapi secara keseluruhan, membaca Landline buatku sangat-sangat nggak mengecewakan!


Review ini aku sertakan dalam Posting Bareng BBI Juli 2014 dengan tema Teen/Family Issue. :)


Yeay! Akhirnya nulis review lagi! Hihihi
Have fun and read some more, teman-teman,


November 24, 2013

These Broken Stars by Amie Kaufman and Meagan Spooner

These Broken Stars

written by Amie Kaufman & Meagan Spooner
(will be) published on December 10th 2013 by Disney Hyperion
Young Adult/Science-Fiction/Romance
#1 book of Starbound trilogy
384 pages
read in English (not translated yet)

***

It's a night like any other on board the Icarus. Then, catastrophe strikes: the massive luxury spaceliner is yanked out of hyperspace and plummets into the nearest planet. Lilac LaRoux and Tarver Merendsen survive. And they seem to be alone. 

Lilac is the daughter of the richest man in the universe. Tarver comes from nothing, a young war hero who learned long ago that girls like Lilac are more trouble than they’re worth. But with only each other to rely on, Lilac and Tarver must work together, making a tortuous journey across the eerie, deserted terrain to seek help. 

Then, against all odds, Lilac and Tarver find a strange blessing in the tragedy that has thrown them into each other’s arms. Without the hope of a future together in their own world, they begin to wonder—would they be better off staying here forever?

Everything changes when they uncover the truth behind the chilling whispers that haunt their every step. Lilac and Tarver may find a way off this planet. But they won't be the same people who landed on it.

The Icarus is falling. She’s like a great beast up in the sky, and I imagine her groaning as she wallows and turns, some part of her still fighting, engines firing in an attempt to escape gravity. For a few moments she seems to hang there, eclipsing one of the planet’s moons, pale in the afternoon sky.

Titanic in space was the line that was constantly repeated everytime someone promoted These Broken Stars, and it wasn't wrong at all. Yes, there are big similarities between the movie and this book, but there's also SO MUCH MORE. I'm not one who read a lot of sci-fi, but These Broken Stars is definitely what I want to read when I read a book from the sci-fi category. I enjoyed it even more than Across the Universe by Beth Revis, which happened to take place in outer space too (but for some reasons I just cannot bring myself to read the second or third book of the series). The collaboration between Amie and Meagan was done beautifully, and this is only the first book of a trilogy! Yay!

The first thing that attracted me to These Broken Stars was, of course, the cover. I'm always drawn to cover that contains space as the background. Then to the girl who was wearing a stunning green dress, with gorgeous hair... And the boy, with the dog tag dangling from his neck. This cover describes our main characters perfectly. Lilac did really wear a green dress when the Icarus crashes, and Tarver was a soldier in this book. Also, this might sounds lame, but I really, really fancy their names. Lilac. Tarver. Lilac and Tarver. Perfect for each other ;)

There was instant attraction (no, not insta-love) that appeared when Lilac and Tarver met for the first time, but because of her glum experience corcerning a boy in the past, Lilac was quick to send Tarver off. Tarver, who initially did not recognize who Lilac was (daughter of the richest man in the galaxy, mind you), felt rejected and humiliated. When the Icarus crashes, these two people weren't exactly on a good term with each other. Lots of bantering, bickering, and push-and-pull game happened on their first few days on the strange planet, but their chemistry was undeniable. I really enjoyed every dialogs between them, and I love how easy it was to differ Lilac's voice with Tarver's.

"Would you like a rest?
She considers the question, then nods, reaching up to tuck her hair back where it belongs. "Where will I sit?"


Sit? Why, on this comfortable chaise lounge I've carried for you in my pocket, Your Highness. So glad you asked.


I have to admit, the principessa-attitude of Lilac in the first few chapters was annoying, and this girl was so stubborn, but this stubborness later resulted in a totally new version of Lilac. It was lovely to see the transformation of Lilac throughout the story. She's real, quick to learn, and quick to adapt to the situation. Along with Tarver, who's perfectly fine doing the survival thingy since he's well trained as a soldier, they helped each other to survive and stay alive in that totally strange and lonely planet where Icarus landed. And who doesn't want to have a boy like Tarver? This guy had manners, a hard-working man, loved his family, realistic, good at surviving, and handsome! Seeing Lilac and Tarver's character development was one of my favorite things about These Broken Stars. Their love was a slow-burn, but it was beautifully built, so when the 'confession' finally happened, it felt so worth it to read all those awkward, don't-really-like-each-other-but-have-to-stay-together-in-order-to-live moments in the previous pages.

“I choose her. I choose whatever world has her in it.”

So, yeah. There were a lot to These Broken Stars other than the sci-fi and romance part. The story was also about survival, and there was a slight paranormal side too, which I found strange at first. Tarver thought Lilac was being crazy, as a result of shock that struck her when the tragedy occured, because she started seeing things, hearing whispers, and all. At about three-quarter of These Broken Stars, something unbelievable happened (it left me speechless for a moment there), and up until this moment I'm still confused about that 'energy-creating' part, but oh well, it doesn't really matter because in the end, the story wrapped up exactly in the way I wanted to be!

Furthermore, I love how both authors described the setting in the book. On the Icarus, I can easily painted the image that was described through our characters, the luxuriousness of the ship, the festivity of the party... The tense feeling when the escape pod, albeit imperfectly, managed to part from the Icarus, the loneliness and helplessness feeling when Lilac and Tarver crashed in an unknown land... The uncertainty about their chance at surviving without any other people to help them, and will they ever be found and could they go back to their family? These Broken Stars is definitely a book that would make you feel a lot of emotions in different ranges.

I would totally recommend everyone to read These Broken Stars, eventhough you're not a fan of sci-fi, or YA in particular. This is a very well-written book, the dual narration works for both characters, and the story will simply left you feeling dazzled and pleased. These Broken Stars have easily made it to my 'best books I read in 2013' list. Also, there's no sequel to Lilac and Tarver's story, so you don't need to worry about what's in the future for this lovely couple! The second and third book in the Starbound trilogy will be something like.. companions, so just like Stephanie Perkins' books, it will feature other couples, and each book could be read as a stand-alone! Make sure you read it :)

May 17, 2013

Origin by Jessica Khoury

Origin

Title: Origin
Author: Jessica Khoury
Publisher: Razorbill
Pages: 394 pg
Website: http://origin-book.com

***

Pia has grown up in a secret laboratory hidden deep in the Amazon rain forest. She was raised by a team of scientists who have created her to be the start of a new immortal race. But on the night of her seventeenth birthday, Pia discovers a hole in the electric fence that surrounds her sterile home--and sneaks outside the compound for the first time in her life.

Free in the jungle, Pia meets Eio, a boy from a nearby village. Together, they embark on a race against time to discover the truth about Pia's origin--a truth with deadly consequences that will change their lives forever.

"The jungle hides a girl who cannot die."

I love Origin! 
The story takes a special place in my heart merely because the setting: in a deep forest of Amazon. Just by imagining the setting is already enough to make my heart flutters with excitement :-D
But thankfully, it's also accompanied by a good, interesting plot.

For seventeen years Pia had been locked out in Little Cam, a big laboratory located in the Amazon jungle. The scientists have created Pia as perfect as a human could be: stunningly beautiful, intelligent, flawless memory, strengthened hearing, vision and all. Nothing can hurt or pierce her skin. And more importantly: Pia's immortal. She cannot die. And this is the actual goal of the Little Cam's project: to create a race of immortals.
Pia, being the first successful trial of immortal, is given a lot of knowledge as a scientist. Mention her a name of plant and she could tell you everything about it: its biological name, its family, kingdom, species, and all that. But she's isolated from the real world. She doesn't know any names of cities, places, how to get out of Little Cam, where it's located, or what's outside the Little Cam. Now already seventeen, she's of course has a lot of curiosities.
The plot thickens upon the arrival of Dr Harriett Field and Pia finding a hole in her room that could connects her to the outside. Guess what did she find on the first time she's there? Of course, a jungle boy. Eio, a boy from the Aio'ans that live in the Amazon. After that first time, just like any other teenagers her age, Pia tries to find a way to sneak out into the jungle everytime she can. This also involved some help from Dr Harriett (seriously, I love this quirky Dr Harriett!). From those 'outings', Pia discovers a lot of secrets. Secrets of Eio, of the Aio'ans, of the Little Cam projects, which somehow are connected together.
Soon Pia has an internal battle between herself: to believe the scientist in Little Cam, stay there and keep going on making the race of immortals, or to break out into the real world?

“No one should live forever," I whisper. "Isn't that how it goes? There must be a balance. No birth without death. No life without tears. What is taken from the world must be given back. No one should live forever, but should give his blood to the river when the time comes so that tomorrow another may live. And so it goes."