What do you think?
Rate this book


354 pages, Kindle Edition
First published November 22, 2011
I don't have a quote to start this review with because the writing was pretty subpar and nothing particularly caught my attention. I suppose I could say "Mess with the bull you get the horns!" because Roland repeats it like four times, but it was good zero times. I'll just get into it. I like this book, overall. It's far from a masterpiece, and the plot isn't all that mysterious or intricate. But I knew these things going in. Video game companion novels are typically like this.
I enjoy the different perspectives, the new characters, and of course, Roland. The book has a good feel for the dangers of Pandora and for what it might be like to suddenly find yourself stranded there as a normal person instead of a mercenary, or a Vault Hunter.
I like Marla's ingenuity. She proves to be so smart and resourceful, making the most of the terrible situations she is dragged into. Cal is a good kid. He's brave and I really enjoy his interactions with Roland. Zac is probably my least favorite character, but I still like his chapters. He is not particularly interesting to me, but the events happening to and around him are. Roland is good and dependable and pretty badass, so besides all the "bull and horn" comments, I don't really have any complaints about him.
I do, however, have complaints about the following: 1. The prologue can't decide if it's present tense or not, which is extremely distracting. Example,
"It was all Roland's fault. Roland knows that McNee likes him."Maybe I'm just nitpicking, but I found it difficult to read the prologue because of sentences like that one. Pick a tense. Please.
And 2. There is a lot of telling instead of showing, or showing and then also telling. To the point of utter redundancy sometimes. Example,
"Its tail lashed out angrily...and spikes flew from it, to clatter off the stone wall over Vance's head. It could whip spikes out of its tail, throw them arrowlike at its target."Yes. I know it can throw spikes from its tail at a target. Want to know how I know that? YOU SHOWED ME AND THEN IMMEDIATELY ALSO TOLD ME. Do not do this thing.
An honorable mention to the list is the fact that the author seems to be trying to make a statement about Cal playing too many video games in the very beginning, with him constantly on a VR headset, which makes no sense to me in a book that is based on a video game. This is not the place for commentary on "those darn kids, always on those darn vidya games."
To sum it up, I do actually like this book well enough. It's all right. The writing and story are simple, and sometimes a little frustrating, but it kept me engaged. I wouldn't recommend this to someone who hasn't played Borderlands, (again, fairly standard for video game companion novels) but to someone who has, I say it's worth a read.