商家名称 | 信用等级 | 购买信息 | 订购本书 |
Five Nights at Freddy's - The Silver Eyes | |||
Five Nights at Freddy's - The Silver Eyes |
Scott Cawthon is the author of the bestselling video game series Five Nights at Freddy s, and while he is a game designer by trade, he is first and foremost a storyteller at heart. He is a graduate of The Art Institute of Houston and lives in Texas with his wife and four sons. Kira Breed-Wrisley has been writing stories since she could first pick up a pen and has no intention of stopping. She is the author of seven plays for Central New York teen theater company The Media Unit, and has developed several books with Kevin Anderson & Associates. She is a graduate of Cornell University, and lives in Brooklyn, NY."
网友对Five Nights at Freddy's - The Silver Eyes的评论
It is a rather fun book. It answers many questions left by the games and also turns one thing from the games on its head. The characters were mildly flat but well developed and it was very well written. Can get a tad gruesome at points though.
An amazing book to help discover the lore inside. I flew through it and was at the edge of my seat. Also it was a great stress relief from the stress of college finals! Because everyone knows killer robots are the best to combat stress.
This book was great. A few things didn't exactly match up with what we've seen in the games, but it was still a very immersive read. If your a fan of the games, you'll love this book
I was honestly surprised with how much I actually liked the story. FNAF: The Silver Eyes definitely bring an entirely new perspective to the ever evolving and highly theorized universe created by Scott Cawthon. While overall the story was a bit cheesy, I got hooked almost immediately. The suspense was well built, and the world itself was entirely plausible. The character building and dialog was a bit stunted, but it didn't take away from the story as much as one might think. There were a few scenes that I wish had had more detail, but I was very pleased with this book. It brings a whole new perspective to the franchise, and it raises a lot more questions. I would highly recommend, after reading the book, to check out the Game Theorist's FNAF 5 Theory, because he does talk about the book and brings up some interesting points.
I give the book a 4 out 5 stars mostly for formatting, a little for the character. Over all I seriously enjoyed this book, and highly recommend it.
Too many people are reviewing this book as if it were written as an extension of the game. I'm a fan of the franchise, but I'm here to do an objective review of JUST the book itself, not how it plays into the series.
Short summary: It's okay. It's worth the $3 for a quick read.
This book has glimmers of some really talented writing but it's totally bogged down by a lack of sound editing. Thankfully I can just skip over typos, grammatical issues, and things like tense changes or confused pronouns without it drawing me too far out of the story but if this book weren't sailing self-published on an already established franchise those would be huge issues. Hopefully they fix it for the paperback issue.
I'm a fan of horror/thriller books. I re-read Shirley Jackson's The Haunting of Hill House after finishing this book and it's like night and day in terms of suspense and ambiance. This book is less of a thriller/scary book and more a book about a group of teenagers coming of age. I know that sounds ridiculous since there's an animatronic on the cover, but the focus isn't on the robots - it's on the teens. The game focuses on dark corners and jumpscares. The book focuses on the teens going to diners to hang out, a scholarship dedication and once in a while popping into a haunted restaurant. (Almost like an afterthought.) It's a little scooby-dooish, but since it's probably intended for tweens - that's okay. In fact, I think if you approach this as a teen coming of age story that just happens to have some animatronics in it, it'd be a more satisfying read.
I'm being serious here. I can tell you more about the type of man the main character's dad was than I can about the motivation of the killer robots. There's a good amount of pages dedicated to the memorial and scholarship dedication of one of the murdered kids - in fact, you find out some details about the little girl who won the scholarship of all things - but the climax has all of two seconds of, "Oh wait, the robots' TRUE motivation was this." It is literally one tantalizing line and then the lights come back on and the ride is over. What's worse, this motivation is explained by one of the characters verbally rather than shown in the story itself because otherwise you wouldn't really pick it up.
There was also an issue with pacing. There's very little suspense in the parts that are meant to be spooky, and when the action does happen it ramps from 0 to 11 rather than properly taking its time. It doesn't get very violent, at least, which again goes toward it being a good book for tweens.
So in all I'd say this is a decent read if you're looking for a story about a gang of mystery solving teens that have a little kid with them rather than a great dane. It's the right speed for a tween or young teenager, probably. Not too scary, not too violent, and they probably aren't going to care when a verb isn't conjugated properly. Probably not going to be a book to recommend to your book club, though.
喜欢Five Nights at Freddy's - The Silver Eyes请与您的朋友分享,由于版权原因,读书人网不提供图书下载服务