Showing posts with label Contests. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Contests. Show all posts

Monday, January 30, 2017

Ready Player One

Cline, Ernest. Ready Player One. New York: Crown. 2011. Print.



First Sentences:
Everyone my age remembers where they were and what they were doing when they first heard about the contest.




Description:

When you are a hungry reader like me, you look for interesting books from a wide variety of sources. Recently, my 11 and 13-year-old nephews recommended Ernest Cline's Ready Player One, as one of their favorites. I'd never heard of it, but plunged in and was captivated enough to binge read it in a couple of days.

It is an especially interesting book for those of us who lived in the 1980s and played coin-operated video games in arcades, watched TV sitcoms like Family Ties, and lapped up movies like War Games. In Ready Player One, knowing details about these social icons is key to understanding and solving the ultimate game that forms the basis of the plot. And playing is definitely worth your while as the final prize is over $250 billion dollars.


The game and the prize fortune are hidden within the online simulation world of OASIS. And what is OASIS, you ask?
[The Oasis was] a malleable online universe that anyone could access via the Internet, using their existing home computer or videogame console. You could log in and instantly escape the drudgery of your day-to-day life. You could create an entirely new persona for yourself, with complete control over how you looked and sounded to others....You could become whomever and whatever you wanted to be, without ever revealing your true identity because your anonymity was guaranteed.
James Halliday, the creator of OASIS, had just died. Having no living heirs, he decided to create a game within OASIS with his massive fortune as the winner's prize. A video message was posted after his death introducing the game, its prize, and an opening riddle about three keys to open three gates to find the fortune. 

But after five years, no one in the entire world had discovered even the first key (and definitely everyone was looking) Then one name appeared on the online scoreboard signifying the first key had been found -- by Parzival, alias teenage Wade, the narrator of the story. 

We follow him as he struggles with the puzzle riddles and exploring the worlds of OASIS and Halliday's life. Because the game's creator was a lover of everything from the 1980s, Parzival/Wade has to master television dialogue and film trivia as well as game-playing skills of ancient video consoles to have any hope of finding the treasure.

Almost immediately, Parzival sees on the scoreboard that four other avatars also have found the first key and are competing against him to solve the next riddles and get to the billion dollar prize first. But also in the running are representatives from the gigantic IOI corporation who wants to control the OASIS worlds and make it into a for-profit operation. The race to the prize is on.

I'm a non-gamer and have only played a few ancient games in arcades in the '80s. But this book dusted off plenty of memories for me (including the phrase "Ready Player One" which appeared before the start of a video game) and introduced me to a boatload of potential technology likely to be commonplace in the future. 


It's a fantastic, page-turning affair of avatars, robots, games, combat, human interactions and mental struggles that I dare you to put down once you are in Parzival/Wade's mind, trying to answer to coded questions and perform the complex tasks required.

(Soon to be a movie in 2018. Can't wait.)



Happy reading. 



Fred
(See more recommended books)
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If this book interests you, be sure to check out:

Card, Orson Scott. Ender's Game

In the future, children are recruited to be trained as military commanders to thwart the expected attack of powerful aliens. One young student, Ender, must learn the battle strategies as well as leadership skills to survive the complex training and mock skirmishes during his training.

Sunday, July 28, 2013

The Prize Winner of Defiance, Ohio

Ryan, Terry. The Prizewinner of Defiance, Ohio: How My Mother Raised 10 Kids on 25 Words or Less. New York: Simon & Schuster. 2001. Print


First Sentences:

The ordinary sleepy town of Defiance, Ohio emitted an industrious hum on hot days, a subtle pulse of activity -- like the buzzing of distant bees.
It was late Indian Summer, a little too warm for a late October day, in 1953. Most of the rust-red and golden leaves still held fast in the towering maple trees that lined our block on Latty Street. You could feel the moisture in the air seeping up from the muddy, slow-moving Auglaize River a few blocks away.
My mother, Evelyn Ryan, had sent six of her nine children outside to play while she and my sixteen-year-old sister, Lea Ann, made lunch. As usual, all the school-age kids had come home at noontime, and we crammed as much recreation into the hour as we could.







Description:

Wait, hold on. Did she say nine children? All coming home for lunch at one time? This is a person I want to know more about, along with any stories about her huge family. I am hooked immediately! 


In The Prize Winner of Defiance, Ohio: How My Mother Raised 10 Children on 25 Words or Less, daughter Terry Ryan recalls the unusual life of her mother, Evelyn Ryan, mother of ten (yes, they added one more!) and a highly successful contest winner. 


Living a typical life of a woman in a small Ohio town in the 1950's as what we now call a "stay-at home-mother" or "housewife," Evelyn needed to find a way to keep her family financially solvent. Her husband had a low-paying job, and what he did earn he often drank away. An outside job for her was highly irregular for a woman at that time and unthinkable for a mother of ten.

Her solution? Enter contests that offered monetary or product prizes. Write a poem to describe a car, tell why you loved this mattress in 25 words, compose a jingle to advertise a sandwich. Magazines, radio, newspapers, and television in those years all promoted such contests to their public and Evelyn entered them all -- and won many. She won freezers, bicycles, toasters, money, and even a car. All winnings were gladly used in the household or sold for cash to keep her family going.


To increase her chances to win yet overcome the 
restriction of "One entry per person," Evelyn submitted multiple contest solutions using various spellings of her own name as well as each of her children's names. 

Here are some samples of her work:


[jingle - large hero sandwich]

     My
     Frisk-the-Frigidaire
     Clean-the Cupboards-Bare
     Sandwich

[ad - soup]

     Seasoned right for season-round zest,
     Cents and minutes are all you invest

[ad - Kool-Aid]
     Kool-Aid season's ANYTIME,
     For more "good" reasons than I've rhyme


But more than just a compilation of Evelyn's snappy lines, this memoir details the frustrations of financial insecurity in the 1950s and the challenges of family life and marriage she overcome all by herself. While Evelyn enjoys the mental aspects of contesting, her real motivation is  to win the prizes and provide necessities for her family.

[a personal poem, not written for a contest]

     An old Christmas custom
         to strong to resist:
     You run out of money
         but not out of list.

Evelyn eventually does discover a group of fellow "contesters," women like her who regularly submit entries for prizes to supplement their household income. Discovering others in her situation who also possess interesting brains is a lifeline to the outside world and friendships. Through their correspondence and meetings, Evelyn temporarily escapes her family struggles to be with peers.


I loved this book. It is packed with great samples of her witty writing, the unusual contests, and the variety of prizes she won. But it also shows the difficulty in being a woman in the 1950s. 


This is a wonderful portrait of a fascinating, intellingent and always positive woman. It is a great example of perserverence, fortitude, and an undying sense of humor in the face of many challenges.

[The movie version with Julianne Moore and Woody Harrelson is not bad either.]


   
Happy reading. 


Fred
www.firstsentencereader.blogspot.com
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If this book interests you, be sure to check out:

Joyous, exasperating, and funny accounts by Shirley Jackson of her domestic life with children in their homes in New York and Vermont. (She is the author of the short story, The Lottery, but these memoirs are quite the opposite in seriousness). This link offer these two books in one binding, a good option since you will want to read them both!