Original post: http://thereader101.blogspot.com/2014/11/literary-critic-disney-after-dark-by.html
Hello, I'm the Literary Critic. I read it so you don't have to. Can we
talk about Young Adult fiction for a moment? I mean, the genre is
basically a brand these days from John Green to The Hunger Games. And
while lots of YA is very good, there is also a butt load more that suck.
Now don't get me wrong, every genre includes sucky titles. But YA seems
particularly prone to the suckiest of them all. Why is this you might
ask? Well, I think there are an array of reasons beyond all of our
comprehension but the main reason that I've noticed is an author's
ability to write down to readers. They don't try to write a genuinely
good novel but write a silly story because it is assumed that kids and
teens will drink that crap up. And that is just not true. Sure there are
kids who enjoy the bad books but if they take an interest, how can we
fault them? But there are many kids who seek good literature and lean
toward adult novels to do so because the books in their age group have
no appeal and just aren't good. And that isn't how it should be. A book
should be good on it's own and not have to stoop down the story.
Oh, you think I'm wrong? You think these books don't exist? Well, they
do dammit! Have you ever read Bridge to Terabithia or The Secret Garden
or Sarah, Plain and Tall or Holes or The Lion, the Witch, and the
Wardrobe or Harry Potter or Skellig or Matilda or...I think you see my
point. So what do all of these books have in common? Well, they are good
pieces of literature. They appeal to children's imaginations yet the
writing holds up. The characters are developed and complex and the
author is taking a simple story and painting it as a beautiful artwork.
Yes, that is literature, and YA literature at that and it is so
damn good! But lots of YA doesn't fall into this category. Why? Because
lots of books seem to think that because they are in the children's or
YA category, they don't need to write credible scenarios or unique
characters. As long as there is an adventure, kids will eat it up. And
that is a big issue in my opinion. I take issue when adults say, "well
at least they're reading." Kids shouldn't be subjected to lazy writing.
They should get a book that took the time to really write a good book
and not just because it is for kids.
Now I know what you may be thinking. I'm a 24 year old woman. Why would I
be reading books below my age group? Well here is the problem: books
can be written toward an age group but should not be limited. This goes
for all art. Sure there are shows like Barney that aren't necessarily
good but that show is aimed to teach kids things like colors and rhymes
and numbers and has no real merit beyond that...and even the characters
on Barney are more unique than those in some YA books. But look at
another series called American Girl. Those books could easily be looked
at as marketing strategies to sell more dolls and make more money but if
you actually sit down and read the books, they are actually very well
done. Sure the writing isn't perfect but there are never any
inconsistencies, the characters are well developed and you learn a lot
about culture and history along the way. I read them last year and
really enjoyed them. Sure they had their problems but all books have
those. My point is, there is a difference between a children's book and a
childish book. The first being a genre and you can expect fantasy and
lots of hypothetical situations but altogether fun, the second being
poorly written and the author being outright lazy because of the genre.
So with that in mind, let's talk about the first book of seven (there
are seven books of this garbage??) in the Kingdom Keepers series titled Disney After Dark.
Okay so what is this book about? Well we begin with a boy named Finn.
He is the typical handsome white male who lives in Florida and is pretty
famous because of his role at the Disney Parks. Finn along with four
other kids, whose names I can't recall because they are all so boring
and generic, are DHI's which stands for Disney Host Interactive. The
kids are essentially actors and they have filmed scenes where they talk
about rides and the park. These holographic images are then digitally
projected in the parks for guests who need help. One night, something
acts up in the Disney servers and Finn's dream becomes a reality when he
finds himself at the park in his DHI form after he goes to bed and the
park is closed. There he meets Wayne, the obligatory wise old man, who
cryptically talks to Finn even though he has no reason to. We learn that
the parks are in trouble and that the DHI's are the only ones who can
save the parks, and apparently the world. That's right. The DHI's must
defeat Disney villains come to life because they want...what else? World
domination...because that isn't cliche. Anyway, Finn seeks help from a
girl in his school named Amanda who is keeping a secret of her own.
Oooooh, mysterious! With Amanda's help, the DHI's try to solve a mystery
that will bring peace back to the parks and let them sleep without
entering their DHI forms ever again.
The premise sounds a little rough but not too bad. I was interested when
I read the back cover of the book. The book had some good parts...or,
well a couple. Okay two or three. The concept of the DHI's is cool and
questioning technology and our relationship with it is awesome. At one
point Amanda sees a theme park goer walk through a DHI hologram and
comments that it is rude and I thought it was awesome that this book may
be asking the reader to question her logic. Like, is it actually rude
when the DHI's aren't actual beings but just projected images? But the
book never really got to that place again. And okay, parts of the ending
I didn't see coming. But this book still sucks. Boy does it deserve to
rot in a garbage dump. This book was so bad that I actually wanted to
kill myself. And let me mention that I hate suicide notions and never
make them...except this one time because it is necessary. I mean, I
really wonder if the author had a hat full of plots and just reached in
for an easy explanation or a random piece of generic dialogue or some
kind of crap to end the chapter. The entire book was so ridiculous and
contrived that this wouldn't surprise me.
Let's talk about the characters first because they were by far the worst
part of this book. First off, what utter vanilla characters we were
given. I like to think of all of them like balls of grape jelly...or,
whatever jelly you want to imagine. It doesn't matter to me. There is no
authenticity or character integrity to them. They just shape into the
form the author desires. If the author wants a suave character, he's got
it. If the author wants a fighter, he's got a fighter. But when you
remove the jelly from it's fighter or suave jar, it will never stand on
it's own. It will always fall flat. And that is essentially what these
characters are, flat. Between the rotten dialogue and horribly forced
interactions, one wonders how this book was even published in the first
place. I mean, what sort of person would allow this junk to
print?...Let's look at some direct quotes, shall we?
At the end of one of the chapter's, a woman isn't taking Finn seriously
because of his age. She notes he is 13 and Finn corrects her, "14. I
will be 14 next month." So wait, you are 13 then? Well isn't he a
smart character. When someone states his age he feels a need to correct
that person that they are right yet it is supposed to come across as
smart. Yeah...cause that isn't stupid. I mean, why would this piece of
dialogue be allowed in any text? I feel disgusted just featuring it in
my review. Here is another example of the stiff dialogue. Finn is
looking for clues with another DHI and says, "Hey guess what? We haven't
got a clue." The other DHI then responds in annoyance, "That's a sick
joke." Wait so, that was...a joke? Am I too old to get it? Or are these
kids smoking something?
But my favorite quotes by far were from conversations between Finn and
Amanda. I mean, these don't get any dumber. And it isn't just their
dialogue, it is the narration and the ridiculous story that they are
placed into. The story sets it up as if Finn and Amanda only know each
other from passing in the school halls or having a class or two
together. When Finn asks her for help...*POOF*...they are suddenly
destined to be a romantic item. Finn will be confused by Amanda's
girlish wit and Amanda will be jealous when Finn talks to any other
girl. How adorable. I love teenage romance. My favorite TV station is
ABC Family and the Lifetime Network. There is a part where the two are
riding bikes and the narration goes, "Amanda stayed in the lead on her
bike. Thankfully, she hadn't asked any questions, and he took this as a
sign they were becoming really good friends." A silent woman! Men love
these! Don't speak your mind girl, Finn likes it. It makes him feel much
more comfortable than having to explain himself to you. A passage like
this could be viewed as subtle and quite good but it just doesn't work
with these characters. They are the most vanilla of the bunch yet we
spend the most time with them! They also constantly contradict
themselves. In this passage Amanda isn't upset with Finn for not telling
her anything yet just a few chapters ago she was fuming at him for the
same thing. And Finn contradicts himself within a page and a half when
he states he respects the one DHI for being smart and then says how
annoying his smarts are. WHY DO THESE CHARACTERS HAVE NO
CONSISTENCY???!!!! WHERE IS THE DEPTH?? WE DON'T NEED MORE
STEREOTYPES!!!
Even the adults are black and white cliches. Take Finn's mother for
example. She is the mother that cries when her son goes anywhere with a
girl. Oh Finn got paired with a girl in science. I bet they will get married! My boy is growing up!
His mother also asks questions and grounds her son yet doesn't follow
up when necessary. Like the entire book is her grounding Finn but when
Finn starts breaking the most rules, she is out of the picture. She is
only included when it is convenient for the plot. How nice. But Finn's
mother isn't the only suspicious adult. All the adults are suspicious
and not in a credible way but again just for the sake of the plot. Even
when Finn asks an innocent question they are on to him like dogs
sniffing for drugs. Finn could have asked for a strawberry ice-cream
cone and they would reply, hey punk why don't you order vanilla to match your personality?
Oh, and I forgot to mention that Finn's lady friend is not only vanilla
but angelic. Yep, she is literally an angel. The book goes out of it's
way to establish that Amanda lives in an old church and tries to set up
beautiful imagery but I think it is safe to say the author just flew too
high without a parachute. I mean, what Ridley Pearson did to Amanda is
identical to what Stephenie Meyer did to Bella in Twilight. It
just isn't good writing and completely missed the mark. Speaking of
missing the mark, let's talk about the author setting up situations and
not tying them up at the end. I already talked about Finn's mom and her
lack of parental control when it is beneficial to Finn's plot. Let's
talk about a scene in one of the early chapters of the book. Finn and
Amanda visit the parks one day without permission (Finn needs to carry a
special pass with him when he visits the parks because he is a DHI) and
are chased by a bunch of security guards. Amanda angelically saves them
by finding a secret passage way and they narrowly escape the guards.
Once the guards that were chasing them walk away, Finn and Amanda walk
out into the open and suddenly everything is normal. I'm almost positive
they go and get ice-cream or something along those lines (I can't check
the source material because I threw that book away the moment I
finished the last sentence so I apologize for that). So...wait, isn't
Finn wanted still?...won't other security guards see him?...how can he
magically be wanted one minute but off free the next?....oh screw
continuity. Let's just let the kids have fun at Disney World even though
it contradicts the entire chapter we just read. No big deal.
This is one of the many plot holes in this book. Other plot holes
include the fact that Maleficent magically comes to life yet Finn and
the other DHI's actually see people dressed up in Mickey and Cinderella
garb. How does that work? Well...it doesn't quite frankly. The ending
was atrocious. The story essentially breaks the law of physics when Finn
can suddenly become a DHI anytime he wants and at the end of the book
he simple spins around and *POOF* the spell is broken. The story never
was set up to be a fantasy. It is set up as science fiction where a
person can enter another realm. How easy of the author to switch genres
for plot convenience. It is the sign of poor writing and poor plotting.
And I bet you thought this book couldn't get any worse, right? Well you
are dead wrong because it can! This author has no basic knowledge of
Disney history and Disney World. At one point he refers to the Hollywood
Studios nighttime spectacular as "Fantasmics" instead of "Fantasmic".
Good job buddy. You have absolutely no concept of your source material.
Always the sign of a good author.
This book is awful! And I know awful! I read Twilight. And this was
worse! I feel like the author is trying to get us to purposefully dumb
ourselves down. This Night at the Museum recreation is full of
contradictions, bland characters, over dramatized situations, and stab
you in the eye dialogue. The book should have a warning on the back that
the side effects of reading it include self harm, please keep all
readers away from sharp objects and prescription drugs. Between the
forced relationship between Finn and Amanda and the awful one liners, I
was lucky to not bring a gun to my head. This has to be one of the worst
books I've read in a long while and to think it is a series is mind
boggling. I wouldn't return to this series if my life depended on it!
The only part of this book I enjoyed was the first paragraph of a later
chapter on page 244 and it says, "The transportation and ticket center
hummed with conversations as a tangle of park visitors shuttled between
buses and monorails. Some families were ending their days just as others
were starting theirs. On a Monday afternoon, thick with humidity, the
tired and impatient mingled with the exhilarated and anxious. For some, a
day spent; for others, an evening full of promise. The humidity hung in
the air so heavily you could practically wear it like a coat." Okay,
why couldn't the entire book be like that one paragraph? It was a diamond in a whole lot of rough.
What do I think of this book? Well, it pretty much blows. It is the
worst bunch of words splattered on paper. I've never wanted to barf so
much in my life. This could be the book that would turn kids off to
books...like when you visit a fast food chain and vomit and vow to never
go there again. Well this is the vomit that scares a kid from reading
and makes them think it is stupid. There are some good moments...well
two to be exact, which is not enough to redeem this awful awful excuse
for a book. A stupid movie I could see. But a book? This is just
despicable. 1 out of 5 stars from me.
To whom it may concern: This review was a parody of two things, 75% Nostalgia Critic and 25% Literary Disco podcast. This review most definitely reflects my views though I expressed them in the form I was parodying.
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