MJ Nicholls's Reviews > Germinal
Germinal
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by
MJ Nicholls's review
bookshelves: pernod-and-gauloises, novels, voluminous, pre-1900s, penguin-classics
Oct 29, 2011
bookshelves: pernod-and-gauloises, novels, voluminous, pre-1900s, penguin-classics
This novel is about as grim and horrendous as literature gets. Instead of ranting about the history of human suffering at various pitches of bowel-plopping rage, let me take a more facetious route. Let me instead discuss various mining experiences lived out on the Sega Mega Drive. Remember Mega Bomberman? Those who do will remember the mine level.
This level was pivotal in the game, since here a remote-controlled power-up was available which was crucial for facing down the final boss, whose beardy metamorphoses proved impossible without both a back-up life and a self-detonator. The problem was using the detonator hastily, as an ill-timed whack of the C button would invariably blow up the hero, who had a hard enough time dodging bombs. The mining level itself involved negotiating the terrain on a little blue cart and threats from crazed red baddies, stumbling around the scorching hellhole with startled eyes, running into bombs like kamikaze hearts.
[image error]
Then there was Lava Reef Zone, on Sonic & Knuckles. The presence of fire and darkness usually indicated the impending doom of Robotnik and his enormous egg-shaped earth-conquering moustachiopod. Since the introduction of fire-proof TVs, leaping onto scorching lava wasn’t a great concern for Sonic. This level involved spinning down into an underground mine, where giant crushers and ledges threatened his pretty blue head.
And there was Scrap Brain Zone. A factory filled with trap-flaps, flame pipes and crushers, its backdrop a bleak brown silhouette of chimneys and skyscrapers. The foes being caterpillars who died by careful bops to the head and little bomb-men in metal helmets who blew up when you ran past. The challenges were all mechanical—spinning ledges, squishing ledges, vanishing ledges. A holy wine cup with black grapes shooting electricity from both sides, razors looming over sluggish conveyor belts. Some of the most terrifying moments of my childhood happened on this level. Fact.
But about Germinal? Imagine the amount of times Sonic gets crushed by gamers the world over, then transfer that to human lives, and you have the sorry state of 1800s French mining. For more info read my forthcoming book Zola the Hedgehog: When Rocks Fall On Top of People.
This level was pivotal in the game, since here a remote-controlled power-up was available which was crucial for facing down the final boss, whose beardy metamorphoses proved impossible without both a back-up life and a self-detonator. The problem was using the detonator hastily, as an ill-timed whack of the C button would invariably blow up the hero, who had a hard enough time dodging bombs. The mining level itself involved negotiating the terrain on a little blue cart and threats from crazed red baddies, stumbling around the scorching hellhole with startled eyes, running into bombs like kamikaze hearts.
[image error]
Then there was Lava Reef Zone, on Sonic & Knuckles. The presence of fire and darkness usually indicated the impending doom of Robotnik and his enormous egg-shaped earth-conquering moustachiopod. Since the introduction of fire-proof TVs, leaping onto scorching lava wasn’t a great concern for Sonic. This level involved spinning down into an underground mine, where giant crushers and ledges threatened his pretty blue head.
And there was Scrap Brain Zone. A factory filled with trap-flaps, flame pipes and crushers, its backdrop a bleak brown silhouette of chimneys and skyscrapers. The foes being caterpillars who died by careful bops to the head and little bomb-men in metal helmets who blew up when you ran past. The challenges were all mechanical—spinning ledges, squishing ledges, vanishing ledges. A holy wine cup with black grapes shooting electricity from both sides, razors looming over sluggish conveyor belts. Some of the most terrifying moments of my childhood happened on this level. Fact.
But about Germinal? Imagine the amount of times Sonic gets crushed by gamers the world over, then transfer that to human lives, and you have the sorry state of 1800s French mining. For more info read my forthcoming book Zola the Hedgehog: When Rocks Fall On Top of People.
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Reading Progress
October 26, 2011
–
Started Reading
October 28, 2011
–
18.58%
"Tough going. Human misery pressed into the flesh with scalding hot tongs. Not that I expected better, but jeez. History teaches us nothing."
page
110
October 29, 2011
– Shelved
October 29, 2011
– Shelved as:
pernod-and-gauloises
October 29, 2011
– Shelved as:
novels
October 30, 2011
–
Finished Reading
December 22, 2011
– Shelved as:
voluminous
March 5, 2012
– Shelved as:
pre-1900s
July 9, 2012
– Shelved as:
penguin-classics
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Richard
(last edited Oct 29, 2011 09:51PM)
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rated it 3 stars
Oct 29, 2011 09:50PM
I wonder what video game you will decide to use for the purposes of comparison if you ever read and review Nana.
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MJ wrote: "I might have to resort to writing a proper review. Gasp."
"Trust in yourself and you can achieve anything!" --The Simpsons.
"Trust in yourself and you can achieve anything!" --The Simpsons.
One of the pictures has vanished. Shame. Glad you liked this review, I pasted most of it from an abandoned book about video game addiction.
Hasan wrote: "This analogy is improbable but excellent"
MJ is nothing if not improbable. Some people even think it improbable that he's a real person at all. He might be nothing more than a fictional character in a postmodern novel. ;)
MJ is nothing if not improbable. Some people even think it improbable that he's a real person at all. He might be nothing more than a fictional character in a postmodern novel. ;)