Hybrids Book Review by Jessica Nelson
Title: Hybrids
Author: Whitley Strieber
Publisher: Tor Books, Tom Doherty Associates, LLC, April, 2011
Length: 336 pages
Price: $24.99 US/$28.99 CAN
ISBN: 978-0-7653-2376-7 (hardcover)
Hybrids is a book that looks at the claims of alien abductions and UFO sightings, and asks, “what if … ?” What if we’re visited regularly by alien races? What if they’re still here? What if they’re actually working with our government(s)? What if the highest levels of those governments don’t even know about it? What if the work being done, is being done on actual human beings? What if that work gets loose in society?
In Hybrids, New York Times bestselling author Whitley Strieber tells a story of two people deeply in love, who discover they are the first fruits of just such experimentations when subsequent generations run amok. Generations that were perfected only after the aliens themselves gave up and left. Generations that were thought, even by their own creator, to have been destroyed.
Stronger, more cunning, and exponentially faster than humans, the hybrids are tired of hiding. They want to come out and play. And mankind looks like a mighty fun toy. The best games of all include harvesting our biological material to further their own race, and taking over this world for their own. The only people capable of stopping them are those who came before them, and those two people are torn between the humanity they thought they were, and the biomechanical programming they never knew they were living their lives by.
Hybrids draws on the countless and always-growing stories of alien contact with humans. It also tackles some of the many theories regarding what our government does or does not know about alien life and technology; then, it combines all of this with the base essentials of artificial intelligence. Taking from so many areas that humans generally find unnerving, the author plays on our uncertainties about the reality of such things, and what consequences they could have. As human beings, we are acutely aware that our curiosity often gets us in trouble, and scientists may be the most curious of us all. One thing science needs to survive, is progress. Progress that often fills some with wonder, and others with dread.
The story has fabulous potential. Unfortunately, it doesn’t live up to it. The flow of the story is somewhat halting; just as you find a comfortable rhythm, it stumbles and stutters, and you have to find it all over again. It has an unexpected but understandable military perspective due to the fact that the protagonists are both highly trained … er, programmed … military personnel. However, even as we know we are being encouraged to connect with them on a personal level for their humanity, the deepest, most human feelings of our fair couple feel forced and unbelievable. Other characters feel equally, if not even more hollow, such as when the president of the United States refuses to deal with the fact that an alien intelligence has just killed hundreds of thousands of people and destroyed a very large city, because he’s busy wondering about damage reports from a hurricane, despite the fact that FEMA has obviously identified the alien situation as much more damaging, ongoing, and in need of immediate attention to keep it from worsening.
Author Whitley Strieber’s many works include over twenty-five other books, one of which formed the basis of the movie The Day After Tomorrow. Despite the flaws pointed out above, I still think the basis of this story is a good one that a lot of people could really get into, and that perhaps film would better showcase its potential. If Mr. Strieber should have the opportunity to write an adaptation of Hybrids for the big screen, I will most certainly watch it.
I won this book through the Goodreads.com First Reads program. I would like to thank Goodreads for hosting the program, and Tor Books for selecting me as a winner. They put out some really fantastic books. You should check them out!