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The Ruins by Scott Smith
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The Ruins

by Scott Smith

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1,5671052,141 (3.33)52
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Vintage (2008), Paperback, 384 pages

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English (102)  Vietnamese (1)  German (1)  Dutch (1)  All languages (105)
Showing 1-5 of 102 (next | show all)
What a gripping story this was! This book is the closest to "un-put-down-able" I've come to in a long time. I raced through just over 500 pages in four days. Essentially, this is a classic horror tale about a group of young people who head off to some remote ruins within the jungles of Mexico and meet up with something chillingly evil. I was constantly wondering what would happen next. The story is told in a clean, spare style that's effortless to read. It's by turns creepy, suspensful, and gruesome. ( )
  woodge | Nov 20, 2009 |
Really good. Fast read. I didn't wanna put it down. Stephen King needs to read this. ( )
  orthodexy | Sep 27, 2009 |
Much different from the movie; I, personally, like the book better. I had a totally different picture in my head of how the vines/ruins looked than the movie portrayed them. 3 out of 5 reasons I'm glad I don't go on vacation in Mexico. ( )
  oxlena | Sep 11, 2009 |
Great book for this genre

This was a great book for the thriller/suspense genre. For those who didn't think so, maybe you should try reading something else, like....romance novels.
The Ruins is your typical thriller/suspense novel and if you know anything about these types of books then you can expect to read it and sit on the edge of your seat until it is completed. Then you'll sit back and think..hmmm, I wonder if that can really happen? Anything is possible when you mix (dumb) American tourists, alcohol and ancient Mayan ruins.

Read the book BEFORE you watch the movie, which by the way, is almost book verbatim. ( )
  Sunflower6_Cris | Aug 28, 2009 |
The Ruins tells the story of two couples vacationing in Mexico. They meet up with a German named Mathias and three guys from Greece. They hit it off well and enjoy each others company. One day Mathias suggests that they take a day trip to an archaeological site that his brother has run off to visit with a girl he has met. The two couples, Mathias, and one Greek head off to find the site.

The trip ends up being harder than they bargained for. A rough trip on a bus and then a grueling hike through the jungle takes them to a village inhabited by natives. There is a mound near the village that the natives seem to be preventing them from stepping foot on. However, once one of the party steps on a piece of vine from the mound, the locals force them all to go onto the mound and then stand guard to make sure no one leaves.

The group soon realizes that they are not alone on this mound. The vines seem to be moving closer and closer. They seem to have a collective mind. It appears they are coming for them.

This is a great horror novel. It's not the plot that grabs you, face it, people attacked by vines is certainly nothing new. But it's how the characters react in the situation. Some take charge and try to solve their problem. Others are completely self absorbed and take care of themselves. They truly are representative of humanity and that is scary.

Since I read this book it has been adapted for the big screen. The movie is good. But as is often the case, the book is so much better. ( )
  mniday | Aug 15, 2009 |
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For Elizabeth, who's known horror.
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They met Mathias on a day trip to Cozumel.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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Scott Smith (author)

The Ruins (novel)

Book description

Amazon.com (ISBN 0743555635, Audio CD)

In 1993, Scott Smith wowed readers with A Simple Plan, his stunning debut thriller about what happens when three men find a wrecked plane and bag stuffed with over 4 million dollars--a book that Stephen King called "Simply the best suspense novel of the year!" Now, thirteen years after writing a novel that turned into a pretty great movie featuring Bill Paxton and Billy Bob Thornton, Smith is back, with The Ruins, a horror-thriller about four Americans traveling in Mexico who stumble across a nightmare in the jungle. Who better to tell readers if Smith has done it again than the undisputed King of Horror (and champion of Smith's first book)? We asked Stephen King to read The Ruins and give us his take. Check out his review below. --Daphne Durham

Guest Reviewer: Stephen King

Stephen King is the author of too many bestselling books to name here, but some of our favorites include: Cell, The Stand, On Writing, The Shining, and the entire Dark Tower series. King also received the National Book Foundation 2003 Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters, has had many movies and television miniseries adapted from his novels, short stories, and screenplays, and is a regular columnist for Entertainment Weekly. Keep your eyes peeled for Lisey's Story (October 2006), a new television series on TNT based on Nightmares & Dreamscapes (July 2007), and a graphic novel series based on the Dark Tower books coming from Marvel (2007).

When I heard that Scott Smith was publishing a new novel this summer, I felt the way I did when my kids came in an hour or two late from their weekend dates: a combination of welcoming relief (thank God you're back) mingled with exasperation and anger (where the hell have you been?). Well, it's only a book, you say, and maybe that's true, but Scott Smith is a singularly gifted writer, and it seems to me that the twelve years between his debut--the cult smash A Simple Plan--and his return this summer with The Ruins is cause for exasperation, if not outright anger. Certainly Smith, who has been invisible save for his Academy Award-nominated screenplay for the film version of A Simple Plan, will have some 'splainin to do about how he spent his summer vacation. Make that his last twelve summer vacations.

But enough. The new book is here, and the question devotees of A Simple Plan will want answered is whether or not this book generates anything like Plan's harrowing suspense. The answer is yes. The Ruins is going to be America's literary shock-show this summer, doing for vacations in Mexico what Jaws did for beach weekends on Long Island. Is it as successful and fulfilling as a novel? The answer is not quite, but I can live with that, because it's riskier. There will be reviews of this book by critics who have little liking or understanding for popular fiction who'll dismiss it as nothing but a short story that has been bloated to novel length (I'm thinking of Michiko Kakutani, for instance, who microwaved Smith's first book). These critics, who steadfastly grant pop fiction no virtue but raw plot, will miss the dazzle of Smith's technique; The Ruins is the equivalent of a triple axel that just misses perfection because something's wrong with the final spin.

It's hard to say much about the book without giving away everything, because the thing is as simple and deadly as a leg-hold trap concealed in a drift of leaves…or, in this case, a mass of vines. You've got four young American tourists--Eric, Jeff, Amy, and Stacy--in Cancun. They make friends with a German named Mathias whose brother has gone off into the jungle with some archeologists. These five, plus a cheerful Greek with no English (but a plentiful supply of tequila), head up a jungle trail to find Mathias's brother…the archaeologists…and the ruins.

Well, two out of three ain't bad, according to the old saying, and in this case; what's waiting in the jungle isn't just bad, it's horrible. Most of The Ruins's 300-plus pages is one long, screaming close-up of that horror. There's no let-up, not so much as a chapter-break where you can catch your breath. I felt that The Ruins did draw on a trifle, but I found Scott Smith's refusal to look away heroic, just as I did in A Simple Plan. It's the trappings of horror and suspense that will make the book a best seller, but its claim to literature lies in its unflinching naturalism. It's no Heart of Darkness, but at its suffocating, terrifying, claustrophobic best, it made me think of Frank Norris. Not a bad comparison, at that.

One only hopes Mr. Smith won't stay away so long next time.--Stephen King

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:54 -0400)

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