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William BrinkleyCríticas

Autor(a) de The Last Ship

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This is a post apocalyptic novel. The plot moves along at a slow pace, perhaps too slow for some. The writer is rather eloquent. There is much reflection and little action. And it is good so. The main character is complex and invites you to put yourself into his shoes, so to speak. All in all, this is very worthwhile reading and considering it’s length you are in for days of enjoyment.
 
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nitrolpost | 18 outras críticas | Mar 19, 2024 |
This is a 30+ hour long book. Speech patterns akin to Brit college professor vice gritty sailor. combined with a propensity for verbosity using a plethora of words. This book could be 8-10 hours long with no problem. I learned a new word every day. The story is fascinating. I loved the plot and persevered to the end in spite of the authors writing style.
 
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buffalogr | 18 outras críticas | Sep 3, 2023 |
Ok but I wish there was a sequel.
 
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Connorz | 18 outras críticas | Jan 4, 2023 |
Unbelievably grandiose. And the sex scenes were creepy.
 
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Castinet | 18 outras críticas | Dec 11, 2022 |
This book lingered in my mind for weeks after I read it. I sometimes still flash on it. It is the story of the men on a warship after global thermonuclear war. They travel around the oceans and every time you think something is going to go right for them, something worse happens. Gives you a lot to think about. Well worth the read if you like lots of characters and huge books and post apocalytic fiction.
 
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Luziadovalongo | 18 outras críticas | Jul 14, 2022 |
Mixed feelings. Very wordy, hard to wade through Lots of Navy regulations. Weather descriptions. Could have been edited down. Some questionable motives. Never explained how the last ship survived. Someone miss? Not get their rockets off? that part was never explained. While I can say I like it, I think I will be remembering it and how it played out for some time.
 
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melsbks | 18 outras críticas | Feb 11, 2022 |
I love this book. I couldn't understand how they could make a TV show from it. I never watched it because I felt it would damage my feeling about the book.
 
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bcrowl399 | 18 outras críticas | Jun 27, 2020 |
Unlike some who have dissed this book, I wasn't turned off by author William Brinkley's extensive vocabulary in "The Last Ship". For me, the turnoff was the long, overblown scenes which could have been explained or drawn in far fewer pages. By the time I was 100 pages into the book, I found myself skimming - which I absolutely hate to do to a book.
There were plenty of Navy characters introduced throughout the novel, but very few of them were developed to the point where the reader got to know much about them or their backstory. The lead (and totally dominate) character throughout the book was Captain Thomas (last name never revealed) who took the reader on a long first-person apocalyptic journey in the aftermath of a nuclear war with the Soviet Union.
I did get the book years before the television show, The Last Ship, hit the airwaves a few years ago, but never got around to reading it. Because I liked the show so much, I thought maybe this was the time to read the novel that it was (supposedly) based on. Well, the show centers around a Navy Destroyer called the Nathan James and has a captain named Thomas, but that's about as closely connected as it gets to the book. (Spoiler alert: The show is much better!)
Actually, the book picks up a little steam (no pun intended) after the Nathan James meets up with the Russian sub, Pushkin. The final 125 pages or so of the book are quite good (if the reader can make it that far) with a couple of excellent plot twists.
Recommended for those who want to learn a lot of new vocabulary words and serious sailors only.
1 vote
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coachtim30 | 18 outras críticas | Sep 15, 2017 |
I stupidly picked up the book without reading a review. I thought the book would reflect the TNT series. I was sadly mistaken. There is very little between the two. I found the series to be everything the book was not. I have read and liked Brinkley's "The Ninety and Nine" . Instead The Last Ship proved to be worse in all ways. It had all the fixings for a good post-apocalyptic story, but other than some bright spots of human interaction, it is a dismal affair. A nuclear war being the least of it.
I gave the book to a book drive after finished reading it. That shows how much I felt it was a poor job.

Don't bother to read the book. Watch the series and enjoy the drama. Kudos to TNT for turning a sow's ear into a silk purse!
 
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AmishTechie | 18 outras críticas | Jul 17, 2017 |
The Last Ship by William Brinkley is a post-nuclear-apocalyptic novel which focuses on the survival of the crew of the destroyer Nathan James. Although, surprisingly, the actual actions of the crew are secondary to the incessant, introspective, ponderous narrative by the ship's captain. Many of the captain's reflections concern how much more wonderful sailors are, in every respect, when compared to other people. I guess it's good sailors are, perhaps, the only known survivors, huh? Someone did need a good editor for The Last Ship. I concur with the sentiments expressed by Publishers Weekly: "Perhaps the most surprising thing about this apocalyptic novel of the sea is that Brinkley has been able to spin so slender a plot to so great a length - more than 500 pages." Or, more precisely for my copy, 616 pages - of small type.

It soon became clear that the key for reading The Last Ship was not to savor every word (as one does when reading a truly great author, where it is clear that every word was carefully chosen), but to quickly skim over many sections of the captain's verbosity, while looking for some forward movement of the plot. Oh, and the captain repeats information too - just in case you missed something. (Kudos to the great vocabulary, even though at times reading it felt like I was at a cocktail party stuck listening to some pretentious jerk talking just to show off. See the last quote, chosen because it was actually a typical sentence.) There was also a rather graphic sex scene late in the novel that felt like an unnecessary addition and was totally out of place. Actually, trying for no spoilers here, the arrangement with the women was totally unrealistic. It would have behooved Brinkley to, perhaps, talk with some real women about it rather than relying on his imagination.

Although this is asking a lot of a reader, set the writing aside and the actual plot is decent. We don't get enough information about what started the war, but the premise that only one ship has survived is intriguing. The dilemma is in whether or not I would recommend this book to others. You might enjoy The Last Ship if you like post-apocalyptic fiction and at the same time are not intimidated by an author's excessive use of a large vocabulary (not always correctly used), and pages of complicated sentences.
Recommended for the plot, so-so for the author's writing
4 vote
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SheTreadsSoftly | 18 outras críticas | Mar 21, 2016 |
On the Beach by Shute was a much better treatment of this theme. Here we have a nuclear end of the world with the survivors being an American Destroyer and a Russian sub. They search for Eden and find it in the South Pacific and then it is blown up for inane reasons.
 
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jerry-book | 18 outras críticas | Jan 26, 2016 |
Great read. Easy pace as the story builds. Could happen is a crazy world like ours.
 
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trek520 | 18 outras críticas | Dec 7, 2015 |
Although Brinkley's writing style is formal (and positively terrifying in its convolutions and uncommon verbiage), the story is fascinating. Set just after woman were allowed aboard Navy cruisers and an end-of-the-world event, it is an interesting comparison to the television series based on it. In the show, women are so integrated into the crew that gender is rarely an issue, while in the novel, it is a major, major issue. Having a plague to deal with rather than the novel's nuclear fallout changes the dynamics as well. That said, the novel was fun--but warning! It is a long, long read to the last line.½
1 vote
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Prop2gether | 18 outras críticas | Nov 4, 2015 |
recommended by Bob Haase. 616 pages!!! author uses too many adjetives to describe everything! needs an editor. Skipped to the middle of the book and it got exciting. Navy sailors are aboard the last ship because of a nuclear explosion that has leveled the world. They find the ideal island. The few women agree to have a house for each of them, while the men rotate through the woman, to see if the mating will result in children. Another Russian ship is found and they agree to live peacefully together and to share. The Russian ship starts out with those who select this ship and want to see if there is life anywhere. It blows us accidently when it fires off it rockets. Then the last remaining ship sets off. Finds an artic station and lots of food. The girls on the ship after mating with the Russian men who were on a submarine and spared the nuclear radiation effects get pregnant. The ship goes on to find if there is life anywhere.
 
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Dottiehaase | 18 outras críticas | Jan 1, 2011 |
Excellent story line and well written. In depth look at the thoughts of the main character. Unfortunately, no sequel to this, it would have been good!
 
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rocking40 | 18 outras críticas | Feb 13, 2009 |
American nuclear destroyer and Soviet nuclear submarine survive On The Beach-style fallout. The ships wander the seas looking for safety and thinking about sexual politics.

For a standard doomsday thriller, the prose is ridiculous. I ended up skimming the thing.

Cast: the Captain, the crew, the Women, the Captains insufferable prose.
Timeframe: pre-catastrophe through immediate survival
 
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benwbrum | 18 outras críticas | Dec 10, 2008 |
A riveting story of a US Navy warship and her crew who have survived WW-III
 
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Sturgeon | 18 outras críticas | Apr 29, 2007 |
A really good read, interesting ideas how the race survives, much less depressing than Shute's On the Beach.
 
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TracyatBN | 18 outras críticas | Feb 28, 2007 |
The Last Ship was a great book of the post-apocalypse.
 
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Foghorn-Leghorn | 18 outras críticas | Jun 5, 2016 |
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