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Coming soon to a theater near you...Scott Smith's popcorn-thriller The Ruins entwines the reader in a vacation nightmare
There are some books that should be pre-stamped "Coming Soon to a Theater Near You!" These books have about the depth of a summer movie, and the same simple, popcorn enjoyment. These are "beach books"you read them once, often in one sitting, only to find them in the cheap box at a garage sale a couple summers later. Scott Smith's The Ruins is once such beach-read. Unsuprisingly, this fast-paced thriller/gorefest was optioned for film rights by Ben Stiller's production company before the publishing date. Scene by scene, you can practically see the film unpooling.
Smith's only previous book was the highly respected A Simple Plan Four twenty-somethingsyou know the type: two couples that are young, educated, white, with a future of successful possibilitygo on a group trip to Cancún, Mexico for a few weeks. Theirs is a sort of slacker vacation, full of snorkelling, sunbathing, hikes, socializing, and lots and lots of drinking. They hang out with some goofy Greek guys despite no common language, and pal around with a German traveller named Mathias. Mathias originally came with his brother, who dumped him to go off into the jungle to hang out with a hot archaeology chick at a dig. Their flight back to Germany is coming up, so Mathias wants to go and find his brother in the jungle and haul him home. All he has is a hand-drawn map.... OK, you know already that shakily-sketched hand-drawn maps are trouble. Especially in foreign countries. Especially when the route takes you deep into the jungle where even the occasional stumbled-upon village only speaks Mayan and not even Spanish. Mathias doesn't want to go alone, so one of the American guys Jeff volunteers to tag along, and before you know it, his girlfriend Amy, their pals Eric and Stacey, and even one of the non-English speaking Greeks that they only know as "Pablo" have joined on the quest to find the missing brother. Since horror thrillers like this are all about the unfolding of events, the terror, and finally the doom, I won't divulge too much. Let's just say when the kids reach their destination in the jungle, they'll wish they never came in the first place. I kind of scoffed that so much deterioration of events could occur in the short, efficient time-frame of the book, but then I remembered that when you are in a strange place, time often seems to stand still. We are so used to an 8-hour workday flying past with little fanfare, but when we travel, we are reminded how much drama can be had in a such a short time period. The Ruins captures the spontaneous and fluid subculture of adventure travelling in the same way that Alex Garland's The Beach Home | Currently Playing | For Rent | Links | "Get to know us!" ©2006
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