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Pour les autres auteurs qui s'appellent Chris Ward, voyez la page de désambigüisation.

Chris Ward (2) a été combiné avec Jack Benton.

23+ oeuvres 294 utilisateurs 25 critiques

Séries

Œuvres de Chris Ward

Les œuvres ont été combinées en Jack Benton.

The Cold Pools (2014) 20 exemplaires
The Man Who Built the World (2012) 18 exemplaires
Going Underground (2014) 13 exemplaires
Exile (The Tube Riders, #2) (2014) 10 exemplaires
Revenge (The Tube Riders #3) (2014) 9 exemplaires
Fallen From the Train (2014) 5 exemplaires
Head of Words (2013) 3 exemplaires
Finding My World (2015) 3 exemplaires
Forks (2012) 2 exemplaires
Ms Ito's Bird & Other Stories (2012) 1 exemplaire
Death Depends (2012) 1 exemplaire
The Tree (2021) 1 exemplaire
Benny's Harem 1 exemplaire
The Tube Riders: Books 1-3 (2014) 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

Les œuvres ont été combinées en Jack Benton.

The Kiss: An Anthology of Love and Other Close Encounters (2014) — Contributeur — 38 exemplaires
Insignia: Japanese Fantasy Stories (2013) — Contributeur — 2 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Autres noms
Benton, Jack
Professions
writer

Membres

Critiques

I really wanted to like this. I did. The characters seemed intriguing. But I read seven pages and the robot character said ‘my programming told me’ EIGHT times. There’s communicating information and then there’s overkill.
 
Signalé
clacksee | 1 autre critique | Dec 12, 2022 |
I thought this might be an interesting book. It dealt with a young man from England who was sent by his parents to live in Japan for a time. I have a son and a nephew, both of whom went to Japan to live for a few years after they graduated college. So, I thought getting another perspective on the experience of learning to live in Japan might be interesting. Sadly, this book didn't foot that bill.

The young man sent to Japan, Jack Williams, was a complete asshole. He would likely have qualified as a "hooligan" back in Britain,: his life consisted mostly of lots of drinking and picking fights. His parents probably thought that sending him to Japan would help straighten him out. Well, it sort of did in the end. Suddenly, for no apparent reason, he repented his assholism and took up a new life...or something. I wasn't convinced.

Jack is sent to a Japanese college whose primary purpose is instruction in English, that is subjects are taught in English so the students can strengthen their language skills along with strengthening skills in other subjects.

One of his classmates is Kubota Miyu, who is a very complicated young woman. She and Jack become sort of friends, but also sort of enemies. After her "father" dies, Miyu learns that her "father" wasn't actually her biological father, but her uncle. Her biological father, apparently, lives in Nagano and is the man she always thought was her uncle. Also in Nagano, she thinks, might be her sister and her mother, both of whom disappeared from her life when she was quite young. She has only fleeting memories of them.

Well, Jack's assholism gets him in trouble with the police, so he effectively goes on the lam by accompanying Miyu to Nagano where she hopes to find her mother, sister, and "real" father.

The book is organized by alternating chapters from the points of view of Jack or Miyu. In the first half of the book, Jack is just a complete asshole. When he and Miyu travel to Nagano, he is mostly still a complete asshole, but for no apparent reason, suddenly turns into a decent human being in the last chapter or two.

I dunno, it didn't convince me, and I'd much rather have had glimmers of Jack's ability to act like a decent human being earlier in the book. Basically, I have no interesting in following the life on a complete asshole.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
lgpiper | Jun 12, 2022 |
Set aside most of a day for this PG15 space opera involving fire planet Abalon 3.
 
Signalé
BarbaraHarrison | 1 autre critique | Aug 23, 2021 |
An interesting idea of dystopia, with Great Britain divided into urban centers and rural production zones, violent oppression, experimentation on humans and the myth of space travel. In the midst of this you have a group of urban kids who ride tube trains for fun and thrills and get sucked into a government conspiracy. Good characters, and the story kept moving swiftly. I am looking forward to reading more of these.
 
Signalé
WiebkeK | 5 autres critiques | Jan 21, 2021 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
23
Aussi par
2
Membres
294
Popularité
#79,674
Évaluation
3.9
Critiques
25
ISBN
163
Langues
3

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