Hazel (1853 KP) rated The Calling (Endgame #1) in Books
Dec 7, 2018
The result of collaboration between James Frey and Nils Johnson-Shelton is this first book in a dystopian series, <i>Endgame: The Calling</i>. Twelve teenage descendants of ancient cultures from across the world have been trained to represent humanity in a game that will determine the future of the world. The only way to win is to discover three keys and be the last player left alive. These young people are not just playing for their own lives for if they die their entire family line will be wiped out.
<i>Endgame: The Calling</i> focuses on discovering the first key, Earth Key. After meeting each other in China, each of the twelve is given a clue to solve that will help lead them in the right direction. Although there can only be one winner, a couple of the player decide to help each other out, but is there really anyone who can be trusted?
<i>Endgame</i> reminds me of <i>The Hunger Games</i> by Suzanne Collins but on a much larger scale, and also a more adult version. The entire planet is the games’ arena, which does not bode well for a lot of the world’s inhabitants. That is one of the things I disliked about this book, the unnecessary deaths of innocents. There was a lot of gruesome murder, which admittedly is the point of <i>Endgame</i>, but some of it was uncalled-for.
I did not particularly care for the writing style and formatting of the text. It was often confusing to work out who was saying or doing what. Another thing I did not like was that there was not an obvious protagonist. It is hard to know whether there is a particular character we should be rooting for or whether they should all be regarded as equal.
For a science fiction, dystopian novel <i>Endgame</i> is an interesting idea, fast paced and full of action. Unfortunately the events, names and puzzles leave the reader feeling bewildered, and the gruesome scenes rather disgusted.
Overall I think this book would appeal to an audience who loves a lot of brutal action and solving things. It requires the reader to be able to think rather than sit back and enjoy. Personally, I am not bothered about reading the next in the series.
Parcel - Delivery Tracking
Shopping and Utilities
App
If you are looking for an app to track deliveries on iPhone, iPad or Apple Watch - Parcel is the...
Escape to Pagan: The True Story of One Family's Fight to Survive in World War II Occupied Asia
Book
A gripping true story of survival set in Hong Kong and Burma, as one family struggles against...
Leading Across New Borders: How to Succeed as the Center Shifts
Ernest Gundling, Christie Caldwell and Karen Cvitkovich
Book
An insightful, real-world look at the skills today's global leadership demands Leading Across...
Lean Construction Management: The Toyota Way
Book
The book presents a mixed research method adopted to assess and present the Toyota Way practices...
No Ordinary Disruption: The Four Global Forces Breaking All the Trends
Richard Dobbs, James Manyika and Jonathan Woetzel
Book
Our intuition on how the world works could well be wrong. We are surprised when new competitors...
Compensation
George T. Milkovich, Jerry M. Newman and Barry A. Gerhart
Book
Best selling title. Tackles major compensation from three sides: theory, research, and practice - no...
Consumer Behaviour
Isabelle Szmigin and Maria Piacentini
Book
Presenting a brand new approach to teaching consumer behaviour, Szmigin and Piacentini move beyond...
Buddhist Extremists and Muslim Minorities: Religious Conflict in Contemporary Sri Lanka
Book
2009 brought the end of the protracted civil war in Sri Lanka, and observers hoped to see the...
Top railway journeys of the world
Book
This beautifully illustrated and fully updated book features 26 of the world's greatest railway...

