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Jumper: Griffin's Story (Jumper)
Steven Gould

Tor Books, 2008 - 320 pages

average customer review:based on 27 reviews
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Fantastic

Steven Gould's rewrites the Jumper universe to be in line with the movie. While the original holds more depth, this is more fun. It is a coming of age tale as well, but with more action.
I really enjoyed this story, and in spite of the movie's lack luster showing, I hope Steven Gould continues to write in this fantastic world.


Superior to the original jumper

The first Jumper suffered from a major flaw: a superpower without a downside is material either for a comedy or a comic for five-year olds. It just isn't interesting, and as plotting isn't one of Gould's strengths, Jumper suffered badly as a result. Great read, but empty calories.

I didn't read the sequel. Giving Millie the power seemed like a stupid, desperate, cop-out, so take this review with that grain of salt.

With Griffin's Story, he finds the middle -- the flaw in the design that creates some real lasting conflict, an answer to "Well, why doesn't he just...." Yes, certain elements are reproduced -- "recycled" would suggest a degree of change that he can't claim. That certainly is a weakness.

Far more significant is that this book has serious, serious pacing issues. It's like the book was a movie, and at some point he thought, "Crap, I have only seven minutes until the roll the credits". So, he rushes into a really stupid last 30 pages that betrays much of what he had established beforehand. At one point it degenerates into bad movie clicheville, when two characters have a conversation that just happens to reveal all kinds of information that would be useful if the main character happened to be hiding somewhere listening. A conversation, by the by, that makes no sense except to give the guy that info.

Steve, buddy, word of advice -- you do stuff like that early. When you do it late, it just annoys off the audience.

Gould has a gift for characterization, and once you accept that stories like these ain't exactly going to be MacBeth, that becomes a major strength. But I can't help lament what might have been. This could have been a quite spectacular 400 page novel. There was lots of room to show Griffin getting smarter and learning how to use his abilities more successfully. Also, he could take some time to bring some closure to the two really nice relationships that he developed, then just abandoned. Unfortunately, Gould hasn't shown he has the storytelling chops to pull that off.

Oh well. In the meantime, we wait for "Jumper 4: They Finally Meet".

3.5 stars, if such a rating were allowed.


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3rd in the Series and still going strong!

I am a huge fan of Steven Gould. I read the first Jumper book several years ago, and followed it immediately with the sequel, Reflex. When I heard last year about a movie being based on the books, I was excited, and yet a little leery. I haven't seen the movie yet, but was thrilled when Gould wrote a 3rd book solely to support the inclusion of a 2nd jumper in the movie. This book is the story of Griffin, from his childhood through his late teens, and his survival tactics and struggles as a teleporter. I'm sure it sets the stage for the movie to pick up where the books leave off, although from the previews, while there are portions of the movie lifted directly from the 1st book, the rest looks entirely different from the books.

In all of Gould's books, his characters seem so alive and the stories are completely believable - I'm led to never question the teleporting because the characters deal with it in such a rational way. In the first book, the main character first discovers he can "jump" in the local library - and I love how throughout the book, even years later, when threatened he automatically winds up back in the stacks. In "Griffin's Story", a similar circumstance occurs, and I adore it because it makes the story believable.

Gould is a young adult writer, yet his books appeal to all sci-fi readers. His book Wildside, about an alternate world and the battle to preserve/destroy it, deserves a closer glance


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reviews: page 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6



What if you could jump?  Go anywhere in the world in the blink of an eye?   What would you do?  Where would you go? 



 



What if you were only five years old?



 



Griffin O?Connor jumped for the first time in front of a busload of tourists in Oxford;  there was no hope of keeping his ability a secret.   He was hunted from that day, on the run with his family, and then without them.  His only hope is to stay alive and free until he can become the hunter himself.



 



ANYWHERE IS POSSIBLE



 



Jumper is a major motion picture from 20th Century Fox/New Regency Productions, starring Hayden Christensen, Samuel L. Jackson, Diane Lane, and Jamie Bell.




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