danlo wrote:I'm intrigued...is it gruesome in the Alive sort of way?
Yes. Worse in my opinion. I think harbinger nails it in his post below when he says that you are with these characters 24/7 throughout the ordeal. The thing is, Smith refuses to shy away from the brutality. It's not gratuitous but he doesn't let the reader off the the hook in any way shape or form.
******SPOILERS AHEAD**********
Harbinger wrote:I read The Ruins this afternoon and I found it to be gripping and very well written. I liked that it did not have chapters; There was literally no need for them- the first several pages introduce the players and setting in past tense but switches to present tense for the remainder of the story of which time there are no gaps. You are on this journey with them 24/7 from the moment they decide to go. This is the first Scott Smith novel I've read, and I was impressed with his style. I like the short glimpses into the character's past for example Stacy's drunken uncle admonishing her to plan, and Jeff's dad teaching with parables instead of orders, so to speak.
I agree, I thought that there were several well done moments during the flashbacks. I particularly liked the one with Stacy and her uncle...very unsettling. I thought the internal dialogues were also very well done and very realistic.
harbinger wrote:While the characters could definitely acted more intelligently, no one did anything exceedingly stupid (well letting go of the rope kind of qualifies) as is so common in this genre. The downward spiral was well conceived and imagined. I had some difficulty with the fact that they didn't at least try to attack the vine- would it burn, or smother itself out? I understand it was HUGE, but I would have wanted to learn it's strength.
I wondered about that as well but as far as burning goes I don't think it would have worked. If you've ever tried to burn green wood you'll recall that it's very difficult. The fact that the plant was green and apparently had a high moisture content (the acidic sap) leads me to believe that it probably wouldn't burn at all. Also the fact that the plant grew and spread so quickly leads me to believe that, even if they had succeeded in burning a portion of it, it would just re-grow.
Harbinger wrote:Which brings up the vine itself which is what I presume you want to discuss. I don't know guys- alien, demon, Mercurio? You tell me. I do believe it was malevolent, and that it enjoyed the terror and suffering before the feasting. I also am curious as to just how strong it actually was- which could help explain a lot of things- including the Mayans arrangement with it. The vine was capable of striking quickly, but was it strong enough to overpower a man if it wanted to. I think so.
I'm not sure what it was. I haven't really given it much serious thought. Off hand I guess I kind of thought of it as an evolutionary anomoly but alien works for me as well. I agree it was malevolent and intelligent.
I don't think it was strong enough to overpower a human as there were a few times where it was able to hinder their progress as they walked but couldn't actually stop them. I actually think that given the choice it probably wouldn't have minded if one of them escaped as it would, theoretically spread the plant into the jungle and provide the plant with a new source of food. I think the Mayans were effectively enforcing a quarantine. Although now that I think about it, Why would the plant alarm the mayans with the bird sounds when Jeff walked through them on the first night? Wouldn't it benefit the plant to spread throughout the jungle providing it with a whole new hunting ground and habitat?
The questions I wanted to discuss were how did the mayans originally quarantine the plant? How did they sow the earth with salt around the ruins without coming into contact with the plant? I speculate that they may have used slaves (who knows how long this plant has been there!) and then forced them onto the hill after the work was completed.
I also was thinking of what I might have done in the characters place. I was thinking that the only way to escape would be to fight back against the mayans. I would have tried experimenting with the way the plant spread and grew. If it spread through contact (spores maybe?) and was extremely virulent than I would have taken duct tape and attached a small vine to a rock or maybe the frisbee and tossed it into the jungle if the margins of the jungle were close enough to be reached. If repeated this may have given the Mayans something to worry about other than keeping the characters on that hill. Sure I may have jeopardized the continent of North and South America but if the Mayans contained it once maybe it could be done again after we had escaped.
The one thing that puzzled me, if my theory on how it spreads is correct, is why didn't the huge storm near the end, or any other huge windstorm for that matter, ever blow any plant material into the surrounding jungle?
Just my thoughts. Any insights would be appreciated. I'm glad you enjoyed the book though!