Surprisingly great...
I have a lot on my mind about this book and I'm not going to rehash the plot - the blurb tells you everything you need to know. I'm just going to say:
Agent Ethan Burke wakes up in Wayward Pines after an accident, and nothing is as it seems.
He just wants to leave...but he can't.
Most authors can't tell you where they get their ideas for a story, and even when they do, it doesn't seem to make sense most of the time. Whenever I read a book, it's a little game I play with myself - trying to figure out where the idea comes from. And, for the most part, I will never know how far off I actually am.
When I started this book, the idea that came to mind is that maybe the author woke up somewhere after a heavy night of drinking, not knowing where he is, with a pounding headache and unable to recall anything.
Hey, if you've never found yourself in that scenario, I need to say two things:
Congratulations...and fuck you for judging me - it only happened once, and, surprisingly, I managed to learn my lesson.
Okay, the author left a note at the end of the book, and I was way, way off. On the other hand, some things that popped into my head were not. But before I go there, I need to disclose that I only watched the first episode of the television series. It's not that I was not interested, but life got in the way. So I have no way to compare the two (book and series) beyond that first episode, and I think I might have enjoyed the book more because of it.
A few days before I started this book, I was having lunch with my wife at an eatery when a song came on. It was too soft to hear any lyrics, but I stopped eating and asked my wife if she knew anything about the TV show TWIN PEAKS - it was the theme song that was playing. She hadn't, and I told her about this great show that was weird and haunted, yet utterly beautiful and unique. When I read this book, it was the scenery from that show that kept flashing through my mind. And Blake Crouch admits that this book was hugely inspired by this show - I totally get it.
But, after the pilot episode of WAYWARD PINES, my mind was taking me in a certain direction with the story. (I was wrong.) It reminded me of a television show I'd seen a few years before called PERSONS UNKNOWN. At the risk of pissing off the fans, I lost interest after the 8th episode (if I can remember correctly) and never watched the conclusion. I moved back this book for months because I feared it might be the same thing. (Again, I was wrong.) And the worst possible outcome for this story might have been the LOST finale, a disappointment which we won't discuss. (Happily, I was wrong yet again.)
The reason I'm throwing the TV show names out there, is because I was worried that this idea was not really original. The television industry love to make money by redoing or remaking hits - I will spit and tell you that, no, I do not have any wish to watch the "re-imagining" of HAWAII 5.0, MCGUYVER, MAGNUM, (sigh) TWIN PEAKS, etc.
Right now, I'm giving the computer a very disgusted look.
The computer doesn't care.
So, after all that babbling, I will say that PINES turned out to be original and entertaining, and I'm actually looking forward to reading the next two books.
If you like a bit of a mind-fuck, you need to read this book.