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	<title>doomsday book Archives - Reading the End</title>
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	<description>before I read the middle</description>
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	<title>doomsday book Archives - Reading the End</title>
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		<title>Doomsday Book, Connie Willis</title>
		<link>https://readingtheend.com/2008/02/27/doomsday-book-connie-willis/</link>
					<comments>https://readingtheend.com/2008/02/27/doomsday-book-connie-willis/#comments</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Gin Jenny]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 27 Feb 2008 04:58:50 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[1 Star]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[connie willis]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Diana Wynne Jones]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[doomsday book]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[not much plot]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[time travel]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://readingtheend.com/?p=59</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Recommended by: Between the Covers Ah, time travel books.  You are so numerous, and yet you so often do not want me to love you.  It doesn&#8217;t have to be this way.  The Time Traveler&#8217;s Wife and me are buddies.  Time at the Top makes my life happy by its very existence.  It can be done.  Apparently with Time in the title. (Just so I don&#8217;t feel like a big meanie when I complain about Doomsday Book, I&#8217;ll say that Diana Wynne Jones, whom I love more than my luggage, wrote a time travel book that I didn&#8217;t much care&#8230;</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://readingtheend.com/2008/02/27/doomsday-book-connie-willis/">Doomsday Book, Connie Willis</a> appeared first on <a href="https://readingtheend.com">Reading the End</a>.</p>
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										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Recommended by: <a href="http://coversgirl.blogspot.com/2008/01/book-review-doomsday-book-by-connie.html" target="_blank">Between the Covers</a></p>
<p>Ah, time travel books.  You are so numerous, and yet you so often do not want me to love you.  It doesn&#8217;t have to be this way.  <em>The Time Traveler&#8217;s Wife</em> and me are buddies.  <em>Time at the Top</em> makes my life happy by its very existence.  It can be done.  Apparently with <em>Time</em> in the title.</p>
<p>(Just so I don&#8217;t feel like a big meanie when I complain about <em>Doomsday Book</em>, I&#8217;ll say that Diana Wynne Jones, whom I love more than my luggage, wrote a time travel book that I didn&#8217;t much care for either.  It&#8217;s one of my least favorites of hers, not quite down there with <em>The Time of the Ghost</em>, but still very not my favorite, maybe even less favorite than <em>Hexwood</em> which I also don&#8217;t like as much as her others.)</p>
<p>I don&#8217;t know.  I read this over a <em>long</em> period of time, much longer than is normal for me, and at no point did I feel the slightest interest in what was going to happen to anyone.  For this book to have worked, the characters would have had to be really vivid –</p>
<p>Er, P.S., this is a book about a girl from Oxford in the future, called Kivrin, who goes back in time to 1320 in order to study the Middle Ages and she gets there and lives with a family there and meanwhile back in future-Oxford a bunch of stuff goes wrong and everyone gets sick with a weird virus that came from they don&#8217;t know where.</p>
<p>– as I was saying, the characters would have had to be really vivid, because Kivrin doesn&#8217;t ultimately have much to do in the past.  In fact, no one does.  I&#8217;m so glad I didn&#8217;t live back in the day because I would have caught plague and furthermore it was obviously AMAZINGLY BORING, because nobody in the past did <em>anything</em> until they all caught the plague and died.  These things kept coming up, and I&#8217;d be all, Aha, a plot! and get set for that to be the important thing, like Kivrin crushing on the Manly Priest, or the lady&#8217;s husband&#8217;s vassal having a big crush on the lady, or the daughter&#8217;s engagement to the big old creepy guy.  These were not the important things.  They weren&#8217;t anything.  God, it was boring.  And then it would cut to chapters set in future-Oxford where everyone there was bitching about futurey things and asking each other where, oh where, could this mysterious deadly virus have come from?</p>
<p>(The past, as it goes.)</p>
<p>And I&#8217;m not saying it couldn&#8217;t have worked, this nothing happening thing, because there are books in which the characters are just so vivid and interesting that there doesn&#8217;t have to be a lot of <em>action. </em>You&#8217;re just content to lie back and watch these interesting characters go about their daily lives doing regular interactions and nothing out of the ordinary.  <em>Doomsday Book</em> does not achieve this effect, and blah, I just couldn&#8217;t be bothered with it.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://readingtheend.com/2008/02/27/doomsday-book-connie-willis/">Doomsday Book, Connie Willis</a> appeared first on <a href="https://readingtheend.com">Reading the End</a>.</p>
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