Deadly Perversions 195
Deadly Perversions | |
author | Brett Arquette |
pages | 406 |
publisher | Lighthouse Press, Inc. |
rating | Excellent & Refreshing. Can't wait to read his next book |
reviewer | twos |
ISBN | 1932211004 |
summary | Deadly virus is spread internationally via the use of Cybersex software/hardware. |
This wild novel has a great caricature of Howard Stern and his crew. If you love Howard, he's in the book. If you hate him, Arquette kills him off in chapter 15 (and quite violently I may add). Lots of good computer stuff in it for bit-heads. Tons of Cybersex for chick-heads. It's written in a fascinating self-effacing style where there are just as many laughs to break up the tension as there are chills. I highly recommend this read for anyone under 40. Over that, (unless you're somewhat feral) I don't think you'll get it.
I can't think of a way to traditionally walk you through the book and summarize it, because there are simply too many subplots and wacky characters to do a scene-by-scene breakdown, so if that's what you're looking for it's best to read the back cover of the book.
I'd like to concentrate on Arquette's writing style, which is so unique that I feel there are many reasons this book will become a breakout cult classic bestseller.
First, the novel moves at the speed of light, short, quick, entertaining chapters that keeps you flipping pages trying to find a stopping point, but to no avail. I found I had read half of it before even realizing I had spent hours doing so.
Second - it's fun! How many books can you say were really fun to read, especially fiction thrillers that spend half the time describing characters that get violently killed off right after you get to know them. Arquette's book has zero fluff in it. He has traded in the violence for sex (one of the two are a must for any best selling novel), yet he wrote the book in a way where it doesn't take itself too seriously. I found myself laughing my ass off many times, wondering if this was a thriller or a comedy, but Arquette structured the chapters so the laughs come in just where they're needed, cutting some tension, allowing the reader to take a breath before being consumed in the plot, yet again.
Third - Arquette keeps you guessing. Just when you think you have it figured out, another twist pops up, another character is introduced, and another finding from the CDC comes out, which leads you off in another directly. If you've read the first 21 chapters off his website (for free) don't presume to think you've actually read any of the book or could guess the ending. Not possible unless you have a crystal ball running Linux.
Fourth - It's written in a style I've never read before. I can't compare Arquette to any other writer, which in itself is something of an accomplishment. There are so many authors whose work just blends in with others until their styles all seem the same. Arquette's style, however, is smart and blunt. Where other authors imply things, Arquette writes them in black and white. He takes on subject matter that other authors would just assume leave alone, yet does a wonderful job of spinning it so the characters actions seem perfect reasonable to the character himself.
And lastly, there is freshness in the author's soul, and he writes young, as if he's catering to an 18 through 39 demographic. Most best selling author's are over forty and really don't write their books for the 'instant gratification' world the younger generation is experiencing. For example, books such as Stephen King's bloated 900-page Dream Catcher would have been a tight and quick 400 page novel if Arquette had written it.
I also like Arquette's website and the fact that he's determined to let readers download and read roughly a third of each of his books, before you buy. Some authors let you read a few pages, maybe a few chapters, but Arquette believes if you are going to shell out $15 bucks for a book, you should be able to read enough of it to really know it's something you want to purchase. It will be interesting to see how long his editors let him get away with that, but I find it refreshing that he has that mindset.
You can purchase Deadly Perversions from bn.com. Slashdot welcomes readers' book reviews -- to see your own review here, read the book review guidelines, then visit the submission page.
killed by cybersex... (Score:3, Funny)
I thought hairy palms were the only risk I was taking.
I can imagine my colleagues screaming (Score:1, Funny)
Sounds a bit like Palahniuk (Score:3, Insightful)
> blends in with others until their styles all
> seem the same. Arquette's style, however, is
> smart and blunt
Smart and blunt? That how I would describe Chuck Palahniuk's (hope I didn't butcher that) style. If the name doesn't ring a bell, I have two words for you: Fight Club.
Re:Sounds a bit like Palahniuk (Score:1)
Don't talk about that!
Please don't take this the wrong way (Score:1, Interesting)
I mean, if you love something so much and if you know a ton about something, why aren't you actually doing it rather than writing little editorial pieces here and there or spending years on full-blown books that won't even get read by many people.
Maybe I just don't like the whole "critic" idea. But over the years I've found that you can't listen to critics because most of them don't even like themselves, so of course they won't like any work that you do, whether it's a new computer program, a movie, etc.
Re:Please don't take this the wrong way (Score:1)
Re:Please don't take this the wrong way (Score:1)
Yeah... If you're interested in computers you should sit in at home by your computer, or at work in your cubicle and work with it... Trying to share it with people you haven't met on slashdot just goes to show that you not REALLY interested in computer...
That would really make you a loser...
Re:Please don't take this the wrong way (Score:5, Insightful)
Thats ridiculous. Your argument could also be directed to science-fiction writers in general : "If you love science so much that you spend all day writing about it, why dont you do science?". Well, the answer is often that it is very rare that a good scientist can write about science well and it is also rare that a good writer can do good science. So why not have writers write about science?
This is such BS (Score:2)
Re:This is such BS (Score:2)
What do you expect in a sex-negative culture?
I haven't read it, but based on this review, the guy obviously believes (probably on a subconscious level) that sex is icky and bad, not pleasurable and good. Or at the very least he's playing off of peoples' fears in that regard.
Repeat after me: Sex is nice and pleasure is good for you. [sexuality.org]
Which isn't to say be careful in real life. But there's a huge difference between being careful and being sex-negative.
Re:This is such BS (Score:2)
<sarcasm>
You must be some kinda commie pinko satanic islamic atheist terorist, promoting a site like that.
God didn't intend for anyone to have sex unless that sex is sanctioned by the Church and the State through the sanctity of a marriage contract. It says so in Exodus and Leviticus and in the Epistles. This is why we need to make sex outside of marriage a capital crime, punishable by firing squad.
This is the new America under Christ and George W Bush. Get with the program.
<\sarcasm>
Re:This is such BS (Score:2)
Genesis 9:7 As for you, be fruitful and increase in number; multiply on the earth and increase upon it."
Genesis 2:24 For this reason a man will leave his father and mother and be united to his wife, and they will become one flesh.
1 Corinthians 7 Now for the matters you wrote about: It is good for a man not to marry.But since there is so much immorality, each man should have his own wife, and each woman her own husband. The husband should fulfill his marital duty to his wife, and likewise the wife to her husband. The wife's body does not belong to her alone but also to her husband. In the same way, the husband's body does not belong to him alone but also to his wife. Do not deprive each other except by mutual consent and for a time, so that you may devote yourselves to prayer. Then come together again so that Satan will not tempt you because of your lack of self-control.
Plus, the entire Song of Solomon.
This reading has been brought to you by bible banging troll busters of America.
Re:This is such BS (Score:2)
Of course, I'm looking at things from a slightly different viewpoint, perhaps, than Paul. "Love is the Law, Love under Will," and all that.
Re:This is such BS (Score:2)
Where are you? Afghanastan? Nigeria?
Come on over here to the USA, plenty of sex in our culture! I LOVE IT!
Re:This is such BS (Score:3, Informative)
Re:This is such BS (Score:2)
linux perversions (Score:5, Funny)
Re:linux perversions (Score:1)
Re:linux perversions (Score:2)
How does that work? you two go around pissing people off? =)
--
Since you asked (Score:1)
I respond: almost all early Stephen King novels.
Crystal Ball Linux? (Score:3, Funny)
Dude, this is slashdot. We got people here running Beowulf clusters of Crystal Balls bootin' Linux.
Re:Crystal Ball Linux? (Score:2)
Good review (Score:1)
It's nice to read an actual book review instead of the book reports usually posted on fiction.
That's nothing! (Score:1, Funny)
Get with the times, man! (Score:2)
RIAA? (Score:5, Funny)
Just Wait til the RIAA tries to implement this "copy protection scheme" MWHAHAHAHAHA.......
Inefficient (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Inefficient (Score:1)
Re:Inefficient (Score:2)
Re:Inefficient (Score:3, Insightful)
sounds trashy (Score:1, Troll)
Um, why do you read them, then?
Anyway, this book sounds awful.
1. Write novel about sex and computers.
2. Get it reviewed on Slashdot.
3. ???
4. PROFIT!!
I have better things to spend my money on.
Deadly Pervesions... (Score:1)
Re:Deadly Pervesions... (Score:2)
where have I heard that before (Score:5, Insightful)
hmmm...
oh yeah... Fear Dot Com
Re:where have I heard that before (Score:2)
www.feardotcom.com [feardotcom.com]
Re:where have I heard that before (Score:1)
i guarantee it is a better book than this one. i'll give you stock options in my dot-com if i am wrong.
Re:where have I heard that before (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:where have I heard that before (Score:2)
Smut (Score:3, Funny)
Have you seen some of the smut on the internet nowadays?
Re:Smut (Score:2)
aww I was gonna post that! (Score:2)
Does this new variation have the crazy skateboards and the franchises?
Earlier (Score:2)
Death after "viewing" sex tapes?
Brainstorm (1983) [imdb.com]
From the review ... (Score:5, Insightful)
Um
Re:From the review ... (Score:2)
He says he can't describe the book, so he doesn't. He says he can't describe the style of writing, so he doesn't. About the only thing he did say was that you need to be "feral" to understand it. I suppose that's some use of the word I'm not familiar with.
I'm still trying to figure out why he wrote a review, since he clearly couldn't be bothered with describing anything useful about the book.
Masturbatory reading (Score:2)
Re:Masturbatory reading (Score:1, Funny)
I guess I went the wrong way in life. Maybe I'll trade in my engineering degree, $72,000 salary, 2003 sports car, Nautilus exercise equipment, and shore house for your elite P2P skillz.
After all, girls much prefer dirty thieves over sexy geeks with money.
Pfft.
Re:Masturbatory reading (Score:3, Funny)
That's not true, girls love sexy geeks with money. They also love the Easter Bunny and Santa Claus.
Re:Masturbatory reading (warning.. way off topic) (Score:1)
Re:Masturbatory reading (warning.. way off topic) (Score:2)
Isn't that what the NAZIs said?
no, the problem with the Nazis was that they didn't have nightmares about the things they did...
Re:Masturbatory reading (ot) (Score:2)
Poof! Kills you in 72 hours (Score:2)
A better story exploring these ideas.. (Score:5, Insightful)
Besides, Neal Stephenson is cool, we all know that.
By the way, where the hell is Neal Stephenson? (Score:1)
Re:By the way, where the hell is Neal Stephenson? (Score:2, Interesting)
William Gibson has a new novel Pattern Recognition [amazon.com] coming out Real Soon Now.
Re:A better story exploring these ideas.. (Score:2, Insightful)
But really; don't you think the plot to a lot of great, famous books and movies is a tad absurd? Take Lord of the Rings, for examplen (yeah, just saw TTT, on the brain). It's something with unexplained, unfathomable events that we would never believe to be true. However, because of the brilliant execution, we accept the story and are dazzled by what happens.
If you want something a little closer to reality, look at the Spiderman movie. This kid is bitten by a spider, gets super strong, and can shoot web from his WRISTS?? Why not from his ass, why not from is feet, or skull, or whatever? It doesn't make any sense! BUT, the execution is excellent, and it turns out to be a great story not because of the superpowers, but because of the characters and execution.
So it doesn't matter if the premise is generally stupid, as long as we enjoy the book as a whole.
And yes, Stephenson is the bomb.
Re:A better story exploring these ideas.. (Score:2)
Because if the guy could shoot stuff out of his ass like that, he wouldn't be Spiderman, he'd be Goatseman, and... well, if he was Goatseman, do we really want to know Goatseman gets into anyone's ass? :)
Human Virus Over the Internet? (Score:1)
Ooo, sure to win a Nebula (Score:1)
Too many repressed harmonal urges, not enough sexual encounters.
That is this author, in a nutshell.
Snowcrash rip off (Score:1)
Ummm....isn't this similar to Snowcrash?
bad premise (Score:2)
If people acted out more perversions in cyberspace instead of the real world, we'd all be better off.
So, only people your age are cool? (Score:2)
Re:So, only people your age are cool? (Score:2)
THE BOOK YOU WON'T SEE ON OPRAH (Score:1)
Smaple chapter downloads (Score:1)
Re:I tried reading the free sample... (Score:2)
It took me a few seconds to understand that sentence. What a wordsmith
It reminded me of some particularly bad Half-Life fan fiction I read once, where the main character fell out of a window and fell several storys [sic] to the ground.
It's not the storys that kill you - it's all the chapters on the ground!
Tim
chick-heads? (Score:2)
Or if you're gay, forget I said anything.
Re:chick-heads? (Score:2)
Hey!
What do you have against asexual people? I've been involuntarily asexual for almost two years now, and I like women just fine (they don't like me back, but that's ok). Sheesh. Let's not lump all of us unfortunate asexuals in with the "he-man women hater's club" types, people... Let's try to remember that even a poor, miserable asexual can like women just as much as the horniest jock.
(this has been a public service announcement -- support your local asexual co-op! They need a break!)
Re:chick-heads? (Score:2)
Ah, but you misapprehend my situation. My ex girlfriend was completely bent. Also, she had been a gymnast growing up, so she was very physically strong and was only an inch or so shorter than me. ALSO, she knew perfectly well that I'd never, ever hit her, even in retaliation, so that gave her a tactical advantage. Basically, if she ever got P.O.ed enough, she could have really opened up a can of whoop ass.
I finally told her I didn't want to go out with her anymore, and wasn't going to have sex with her anymore, and by the way, she can sleep on the couch and I'll give her a lift in the morning. She LOST IT. Went completely ballistic. She leaped up and down, nearly caving in my living room, scared the piss out of me and then, broke my favorite art deco lamp. Just threw it on the ground and busted it.
So, it's been nearly two years because although I find the CONCEPT of sex interesting, the actual IMPLEMENTATION is something I leave to others. I figure, who knows what kind of nut I'll end up with next? Look what happened to that poor Bobbitt guy. I find women kind of alarming these days.
I think my problem is, I'm attracted to tall, physically tough women who could potentially kick my ass. However, I'm also concerned that they might actually DECIDE to kick my ass. Plus, actual sex seems like an awful lot of physical effort for not much of a payoff... I generally just watch it on video and drink a soda.
So, am I asexual? Or just not getting laid?
Re:chick-heads? (Score:2)
I spent a year after a breakup without wanting to fool with the whole dating thing. I know where you're coming from. but dude.. not trying to be a smartass here but you need some therapy. That's some scary shit.
Re:chick-heads? (Score:2)
I get that a lot.
Actually, I've thought about therapy, but like sex, I find it better in concept than implementation. You know, psychologists have the ability to involuntarily commit you if they think you're crazy enough? It only takes a few sessions for them to build up a thick enough folder to send you to the Funny Farm (TM). Man, that'd be all I'd need. I mean, the electroshock looks interesting, and the drugs are free and legal, but having to wear pyjamas all day and no computer access? No, no no, that just won't work for me.
Besides, being a little crazy is fun. I don't want some psyche mechanic stealing my crazy! I worked long and hard to construct my madness and they'll pry it from my cold, dead head before I give it up.
Having said that, I think you might have a point; my ex was a little alarming, and my current dating situation could be viewed by an outsider as a little weird. But it's cool -- I've got a Playstation II and I'm getting an XBox for Christmas! With a setup like that, who needs sex?
Sounds like the end for Herb Zipper... (Score:1)
It's a miracle he made it this long.
this reminds me of that crappy 'tekwar' series (Score:4, Interesting)
The show sucked regardless (perhaps even more than this book apparently does), but with that line it surpassed my tolerance threshold and I summarilly shut it off (and have studiously avoided it since). What utter crap
Please.
Its hard enough to educate people that computer viruses aren't real viruses, that memory (RAM) is volitile storage lost upon shutdown, while the hard drive ("memory" as it is called by some) is persistent, etc. etc.
We are already dealing with an abysmal state of computer literacy
The very, very worst of what science fiction can be (in stark contrast to Greg Egan's works, which educate as well as entertain, and often expand your imagination in the process, and to plenty of other speculative works that don't educate, but do entertain and at least don't misinform and cloud real issues in the process).
Thanks, but I'll give this one a miss.
sorry (Score:1)
He takes on subject matter that other authors would just assume leave alone
i think that should read, "just as soon leave alone."
This isn't a believable virus (Score:1)
Now, this virus in the book is way too deadly. Are we supposed to believe that a virus with a lethality rate of 3 days is going to be spread around the population like mad? Fat chance! People don't have sex that often in a 3 day time period (not even cybersex) so it wouldn't be able to spread effectively. And anyway, if somehow a large outbreak did manage to occur, everyone would just stop having sex for 3 days out of fear and then the virus would totally eliminate itself from the Earth.
This concepts in this book aren't believable. I won't be buying it.
Re:This isn't a believable virus (Score:1)
Re:This isn't a believable virus (Score:2)
I agree though that an electronically transmitted virus would spread very quickly, however only to people who indulge in cybrsex.
Re:This isn't a believable virus (Score:2)
"A biological virus can only be introduced to one's body via some sort of transmitting vector like a mosquito, a tiny droplet of inhaled liquid, or a pecker."
"A biological virus can only be introduced to a human body if it is in a physical form capable of being introduced. This means an actual physical viral structure, in some form that can be insinutated into the body."
"Because a biological virus must be insinuated into the body in physical form to infect it, the virus cannot be transmitted electronically. Electronic transmissions can only convey concepts, not physical things (like a virus). Even if you built a cybersex suit with vibrating attachments for tickling unmentionables, the only thing you could transmit would be the control instructions for the device." (Let's say this one twice.)
FINALLY,
"Even if you built a cybersex device which directly stimulated the brain, at best you would be stimulating the parts of the brain which correlate to sensual stimuli, like vision, smell, touch, taste and hearing. Thus, you could possibly use the imagery you're transmitting to SCARE someone to death, or freak them out, or even hypnotize them, but you could not give them a virus."
Ok, gang? Let's all just swiiiiiiing our focus back to reality here. The premise of the book is dumb. I, for one, am pretty turned off every time I hear someone try to say you can catch a virus from your computer -- it makes me feel like I'm the only techie that took Biology in high school, which cannot be true (can it?). If modern American society is so techno-illiterate that they'll buy THIS kind of thing, we're fucking doomed.
Say it ain't so!
Re:This isn't a believable virus (Score:2)
well, while we're suspending disbelief, then we might as well suspend disbelief in a variety of other things.... so the parent post is moot anyway... who cares if it would spread too fast? we're talking fiction here, anyway!
Cybersex? (Score:2)
Remember. (Score:1)
I need the eBook version! (Score:2)
I will be too old to understand this book by the end of the week! Need to download and complete it quick
72hrs or 7 days. Your choice. (Score:2)
Big deal. I know of a VHS tape [ring-themovie.com] that will kill you in 7 days
Uh-oh. (Score:5, Insightful)
Uh-oh. Either:
the reviewer doesn't read a lot, or
Arquette has figurted out something that Dante, Shakespeare, Milton, and Pynchon missed, or
Arquette's writing is a bad attempt a creating a 'new style', apparently ("Where other authors imply things, Arquette writes them in black and white") short on subtlety and long on pure exposition: "See Dick. See Jane. See Dick run."
Re:Uh-oh. (Score:3, Funny)
You did read the review, right? "See Dick. See Jane. See Jane fuck Dick. See Dick die three days later. Poor Dick."
Re:Uh-oh. (Score:2)
Err, well, as far as I know, nether Dante, Shakespeare, nor Milton ever wrote a single line of prose in their lives, so I wouldn't expect them to figure out anything about novel writing.
Plus, Dante wasn't even an english writer. Styles are a product of the language they're written in. On that vein, I remember a quote about Pope's translation of the Illiad (which is second only to Milton's poem as far as english epics go). Thomas Bentley said to him, "It's a very pretty poem, Mr. Pope, but you musn't call it Homer."
I know I'm being a little pedantic, I think we all get your point. I do not doubt that this "Arquette" guy is a total dumbass, but you could have been more accurate by mentioning real english novelists, such as Melville, Dickens, Twain, Crane or, um ... I guess Pynchon ... sorta.
Re:Uh-oh. (Score:2)
Yeah, you're right, I'm a total dumbass rube. No doubt Dante, Shakespeare, and Milton would all be horrible at writing novels: they had no experience at all in exposition, character development, or plotting. They couldn't tell stories at all; all they did was, like, rhyme and stuff. Filthy hacks.
And style never crosses language barriers, taht's why that Pole Conrad's stories all sucked in English. And I'd hate to have to read Dante, in like, translation or sum'thin'.
Thanks for impressing us more with your erudition, and less with your ability to think an argument through.
I am not a demographic (Score:5, Insightful)
To summarize the review:
Perhaps the reviewer doesn't realize that some people in the 18-39 demographic are still able to enjoy books that aren't written to the same spec as the latest mindless blow-em-up action flick. Some of us even read books that don't have pictures in them, on occasion. There are even a few of us who read books that have no lines matching "[Cc]yber" or "[Tt]echno".
By the way, I get REALLY PISSED OFF when I'm reading a book and notice that the author is making an obvious overture to a particular demographic instead of following the internal logic of the book. So nyah.
I'm not the only under-40 person who loves to read intelligent, well-written books, am I?
Re:I am not a demographic (Score:2)
Guess that make me a feral...
"Most best selling author’s are over forty" (Score:4, Funny)
I win! (Score:2)
Thank God! (Score:2)
Wow... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Wow... (Score:2)
Re:Ivan Jerconov ... puhh-leaseee (Score:2)
His mom is cool (Score:2)
Snow SexCrash? (Score:2)
I think I prefer Stephenson.
Fallacious fellatio (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Fallacious fellatio (Score:2)
His characters are truly paper thin and just really god awful. Did you notice how each character is introduced as the greatest this or the best that? I just can't help but get the impression that this guy is an idiot. Trying to produce a best selling book by mixing two things that are (sort of) popular right now. Techno books and biological catastrophes.
It's truly, truly bad. The bum has a flaccid penis the thickness of a beer can? Come on, it's like some adolescent fantasy.
This is a classic in the making!!! (Score:2)
You can probably find Plan 9 from Outer Space [imdb.com] at your local video store. It involves aliens who resurrect our dead, and use the zombies to get our attention. You can find the DVD for $10 now at Amazon [amazon.com]
There's also Bride and the Beast [imdb.com]. Here, a woman falls into a deadly perversion also - interest in her new husband's gorilla!!! Bwwaahaahaa!
And to think, when I first saw this slashdot story, I thought it was a serious review!
Re:Hmm, a little short on research (Score:2)
Tim