thistlechaser: (Cat with book: Toy)
thistlechaser ([personal profile] thistlechaser) wrote2016-11-30 11:26 am

2016 book: Insert Coin to Continue

Insert Coin to Continue by John David Anderson
Rating: Disliked (Hated-Disliked-Okay-Liked-Loved)



So often I go into a book completely blind. My To Read pile is about 170 books high, so by the time I get to a book, usually I've long since forgotten anything about it. And as they're ebooks, I can't even see much of the covers. That usually leads to surprises, and generally happy ones.

Insert Coin to Continue started with a giant happy surprise. As I read through the front matter, I got to the listing of 'other books by the author' and was overjoyed to see that John David Anderson was the author of one of my favorite books of last year: The Dungeoneers (my review of it).

Unfortunately, right from the first page, this story really didn't work for me. The main character seemed bland, and his 'voice' was hard to tell apart from his best friend's. Plus the plot just didn't work at all for me, I didn't believe it: In it a boy found a secret level of a video game which somehow changed all of reality. He woke up the next morning and his legs were paralyzed, and he was seeing a coin slot with 'insert coin to continue' above it. He had a coin on his nightstand, stuck it in this floating coin slot, and suddenly his legs worked. As he went through his day, stuff like that happened. He looked in the mirror and saw his clothing had stats and names (like Shoes of Average Traveling Speed, +1 resistance to fire). No one else noticed these differences, yet all of reality was changed by it (teachers turned into other things, but no one else in the classroom saw it but the main character).

That seems like such a fun idea, doesn't it? But for some reason it just all fell so flat for me.

I'm not the target audience for this book, so my faults with it are probably personal to me. (This was a middle grade novel, which is one step younger than a YA novel.)

I thought I could at least get to the 50% point before giving up, but when I hit the 30% mark I had completely lost interest in it, so sadly I moved on to something else.

It's such a disappointment when you're sure you'll like a book but it just doesn't work out.

[identity profile] xxmadsenxx.livejournal.com 2016-12-01 04:29 am (UTC)(link)

I'm amazed by the amount of books you read. I wish I had the attention span to read even a fraction of the number of books you read!

[identity profile] thistle-chaser.livejournal.com 2016-12-01 04:17 pm (UTC)(link)
Thanks! Some folks read a lot more than me, but I find a 50 book/year goal works best for the amount of time I have to read.

[identity profile] bacchuslives.livejournal.com 2016-12-02 12:30 am (UTC)(link)
Interesting premise, but I don't think it would have worked for me for very long...

[identity profile] thistle-chaser.livejournal.com 2016-12-02 12:39 am (UTC)(link)
I like the idea of it, but yeah, it just didn't work for me either.

[identity profile] bacchuslives.livejournal.com 2016-12-02 12:51 am (UTC)(link)
What I really hate in fiction is when someone comes up with a fantastic and unique premise and the does it poorly (ruining it for everyone else)... Not that this is this case here, but it made me think of situations where I felt that way about a book.
Edited 2016-12-02 00:52 (UTC)