Title | : | The Twisted Ones (Five Nights at Freddy's, #2) |
Author | : | |
Rating | : | |
ISBN | : | 1338139304 |
ISBN-10 | : | 9781338139303 |
Language | : | English |
Format Type | : | Paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 297 |
Publication | : | First published June 27, 2017 |
It's been a year since the horrific events at Freddy Fazbear's Pizza, and Charlie is just trying to move on. Even with the excitement of a new school and a fresh start, she's still haunted by nightmares of a masked murderer and four gruesome animatronic puppets. Charlie thinks her ordeal is over, but when a series of bodies are discovered near her school bearing wounds that are disturbingly familiar she finds herself drawn back into the world of her father's frightening creations. Something twisted is hunting Charlie, and this time if it finds her, it's not letting her go.
The Twisted Ones (Five Nights at Freddy's, #2) Reviews
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I love going through a new stack o’ books with Ms. L. I usually smile until my chubby cheeks ache and often, actually laugh out loud…which may be part of the reason we don’t meet in public anymore…but I digress.
When I picked up Five Nights At Freddy’s: The Twisted Ones by Scott Cawthon and Kira Breed-Wrisley, I was initially filled with excitement. I’d heard people talk about “Five Nights”. Kind of. I imagined something creepy and weird and angsty and thought it was probably another movie I had missed. Oh, and this is the sequel. I’m sure I’ll be just fine.
First, and undoubtedly you know this, it is a video-game, not a movie. To be clear, it is a “horror video game sensation”. Not the Atari Pac-Man that I adored. But I really dug the book.
There is a somewhat sinister satisfaction in watching good robotics go bad. Fiction, obviously, we know robots don’t “go bad”, they only have bad creators. Or, in this case, a maniacally evil creator. Folks, this is one angry dude…err…creature.
So, we have Charlie. She’s clearly been through a traumatic time. Her roommate, Jessica was also drawn into the drama, but it wasn’t her father at the center. Not unaffected, Jessica is certainly coping better than Charlie is. The worst part, Charlie feels like she’s way better than fine.
Jessica may need some back-up, so she is happy to hear that their friend John is coming back. Teenagers should worry about school and sports, not battle diabolically out-of-control animatronic puppets to save an entire town. But that does build a unique bond.
Before the trio could truly meld, it becomes apparent that their troubles are far from over. There is no way that the phony Freddy Fazbear could be back and Dave was only human, after all, so dead is just dead. Odds of Charlie’s father encountering someone even as remotely skilled and talented in his field made meeting Dave extraordinary. Statistics simply cannot allow for a third person to think in that way.
A repeat of last summer has to be impossible. But something sinister is certainly afoot. Sadly, there’s nobody better than Charlie, John and Jessica to solve this puzzle. And, hopefully, survive doing it.
This review was written by jv poore for Buried Under Books, with huge thanks for the Advance Review Copy to add to my favorite classroom library. -
Ah, another day of FNAF lore is another casual day for me. It shouldn't come as a surprise to anyone that I'd read this book (I'm overly obsessed with FNAF theories. Too obsessed...in all honesty). While it took me a while to get to it, the book was definitely worth the wait.
The Twisted Ones is the second book in the FNAF book series. The lore is different from the video games (same animatronics, different back story, but some similar names of characters...) but you could easily try to eave it into the video games if you tried (or if you trust Scott and his sneaky ways).
While this appears to be a YA novel, some of the gore is definitely closer to R rated. If you're a fan of FNAF, it probably wouldn't come as big of a surprise to know some of the gore is REALLY GORY, but keep that in mind if you choose to read it.
Plot wise, the story continued with a smooth transition. There is a time jump between the first and second book, but it worked in it's favour. Slowly plot details are revealed and old characters appear, and eventually Scott and Kira build and add to this spectacular take on the lore. I really did enjoy it - more animatronics, more craziness!
The book is relatively fast paced - I didn't get bored once. I really hope the next book is the last book in this series to finish it up. This book was the perfect sequel, so I'd like to see an explosive ending (by the way, MAJOR CLIFFHANGER ALERT).
Now, time for some lore discussion - this book will raise questions. Don't try to tie it to the book, and you'll be feeling mighty fine! If you start trying to make a wild, crazy theory you'll get fed up and quit. This book is supposed to be fun and increase circulation of this series (from my perspective) and it is increasing the fan base. Look at how many people are frustrated with the fact that this book doesn't fit in with the FNAF video games and are talking about it constantly... It's a lot of people. More conversations, more circulation, more participation, more people reading... It's marketing genius. Is this book kinda silly? Yes. Were half of my questions answered in regard to lore for this book series? No. But it's fun! I think this is a fun read that didn't require my brain to explode to understand it.
Side note: Can we get a FNAF graphic novel or something? This book would be EPIC in picture form...just saying.
Four out of five stars. -
There better be another book Scott Cawthon....
I have nothing to say except that if a Scott doesn't write another book after that Cliffhanger I'm gonna be beyond pissed off. 😡😡😡 Otherwise it was amazing lol. -
This series is pretty garbage but I'm trash for FNAF lore and theories so it works out. Naturally this book created more questions and didn't really answer any that I was left with from the first (what little I remembered anyway). It's utterly ridiculous and I'll read the next when it comes out. I don't even know if Cawthon counts these as official lore - I can't keep anything we've learned about the games straight anyway. I wouldn't recommend this unless you're really eager for more FNAF material lol. Also Charlie is the most ridiculous character ever.
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So.. there is no third book I take it? Sigh. Way to go leaving me hanging on the tip of a cliff like this.
I’m not sure why this took me so long to finish, Imean the text is pretty big. Not sure if its targeted for YA but its pretty gruesome at that.
Nice book, Haven’t read the first one whops , But thats ok it still worked either way. -
The first Five Nights at Freddy's book was a feast of scares inside a dark, dank, and claustrophobic pizzeria inhabited by murderous animatronics in the form of teddy bears and other 'lovable' stuffed creatures. The shock value was high, the nightmarish suspense real.
The Twisted Ones, however, tones down the horror element a notch or two. It's basically a goosebumps books (not a negative criticism, I'll always have fond memories of my feverish spells spent inside the pages of those childhood horror stories) with a shade of 80's horror and some crime fiction elements thrown in for good measure. Whilst enjoyable, I found it didn't pack the same punch as the first Five Nights at Freddy's book.
Suzanne Elise Freeman narrated the audio-book and did a fantastic job at hyping the suspense and bringing the characters to life.
Overall, The Twisted Ones is a solid 3/5 stars. -
Two stars for book lore that we get for the FNAF book-verse, but other than that, plot was all over the place and the writing was a bit hard to follow. Again, I thought Charlie was a bit Mary-Sue. Honestly, I feel like this would work better as a B-list anime, because that was the vibe I got the entire time reading.
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The main character, Charlie, is a pain in the ass, but the books are very entertaining.
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i thought that it was good except for the part when the main character gets stuffed into a circus baby suit.
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Edit 2: Jessica dalej mnie irytuje.
Edit: Podczas czytania drugi raz doszłam do wniosku, że naprawdę nie potrafię tego czytać nie myśląc o wydarzeniach z 3 części.
Rok po wydarzeniach z pierwszej części wracamy do Charlie, która zdecydowała się pójść w ślady ojca i studiować robotykę. Teoretycznie radzi sobie bardzo dobrze, ale wspomnienia dotyczące Sammy’ego są silniejsze niż kiedykolwiek. Część jej rodzinnego domu ulega uszkodzeniu na skutek tornada, odsłaniając tajemnicze pomieszczenie. Dodatkowo zaczynają ginąć ludzie, zaatakowani przez animatroniki, które, chociaż wydawały się pracą Henry’ego, to jednak coś było z nimi nie tak. Mamy też uszczuploną ilość bohaterów pierwszoplanowych, a dokładnie ograniczonych do Charlie, Johna, Jessiki i Clay’a, co wyszło historii jak najbardziej na plus.
Oczywiście wątek miłosny kwitnie, a raczej próbuje kwitnąć, bo biorąc pod uwagę okoliczności w jakich znaleźli się bohaterowie, to nie jest to proste. Bardzo dobrze by się rozwinął sam w ciągu tych wszystkich wydarzeń i narzucanie rozmowy na ten temat przez Jessicę było absolutnie zbędne. Generalnie postać Jessici irytowała tu strasznie i była elementem, jak dla mnie, kompletnie niepotrzebnym. Trio Charlie, John, Clay to była bardzo dobra drużyna i dla mnie nawet cała trylogia mogłaby się skupić głównie na nich.
Ale skoro przechodzimy do irytujących bohaterów, to Jess przebił tylko Arty. Kolega Charlie z uczelni, który ewidentnie ją podrywa, a przyczepia się jak rzep do psiego ogona. Na szczęście nie ma go dużo, ale jednak wystarczająco, żeby czytelnika zdenerwował. Mam nadzieję, że ta postać ma jakieś głębsze zastosowanie, szczególnie, że dziwnym zbiegiem okoliczności w ostatniej scenie doskonale wiedział, gdzie ma szukać głównych bohaterów, chociaż nikt go o tym nie informował. Ale jego zachowanie w tamtej chwili, biorąc pod uwagę tragedię jaka spotkała resztę, było absurdalne.
Bardzo podobał mi się motyw z transmiterem dźwięku, który powodował wymioty. A jeśli ktoś się orientuje w temacie i wie, czym jest dla graczy BB, to jedna scena na pewno bardzo mu się spodoba, szczególnie, że na pewno wielokrotnie chciał zrobić dokładnie to samo.
Książka jednak nie jest bez wad. Czyta się ją tak samo szybko, jak pierwszą część. Ma prosty, lekki język, ale zdarzają się powtórzenia i od pewnego momentu dość częste. Jest też mała niespójność, bo Charlie twierdzi, że Dave prezentował jej swoje blizny, co nie było prawdą, chyba że dzieli swój umysł z Carltonem. Historia jest też, w porównaniu z poprzedniczką, dużo brutalniejsza i całe szczęście. Klimat z horroru jest tu zdecydowanie bardziej wyczuwalny. Jeśli jednak ktoś chciałby się dowiedzieć czegoś o robotyce, patrząc, że Charlie chodzi na wykłady i czytamy, co mówi prowadząca, to nie dowie się jakichś bardzo istotnych szczegółów, a szkoda, bo to, co zostało przedstawione i dotyczy funkcjonowania robotów bardzo dobrze się czyta.
Podsumowując, jeśli ktoś był trochę zawiedziony pierwszą częścią, to druga powinna mu się bardziej spodobać. Mamy też w ostatnich scenach dość zaskakujący bieg wydarzeń, szczególnie gdy pada jedno, wręcz przełomowe zdanie, co tylko podsyca ciekawość czytelnika. -
Okay, that ending was SO good!
Admittedly, this book was a guinea pig in my “getting out of a reading slump” experiment. There were times that I found myself skimming towards the end. I don’t know if it was because I didn’t really care for the balloon boys or if it was because the last few chapters in books are always brutal to get through.
With that all being said, I am looking forward to reading The Fourth Closet sometime in the near future. -
Pretty gruesome but enjoyable book! It was a little slower for the action to start, but it's written well enough that you just keep going. I liked that some time had passed since the first novel and that we find out some stuff that happened in between. With the way this one ended, I'm glad the third book is already out and I don't have to wait to find out what happens to Charlie! Overall, this was a good book but I'm not sure the younger teens should read it.
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still not sold on the whole soul thing.. but whatever
still a better story than i thought it was going to be
and the ending has me intrigued for the next book -
Personal Response: I thought this book was pretty good because it kept me interested the whole time I was reading it. I would even say it was better than the first book because there were no low points during this book.
Plot: Five Nights at Freddy’s: The Twisted Ones by Scott Cawthon is the sequel to Five Night at Freddy’s: The Silver Eyes. The book starts with Charlie sitting class listening to a lecture. She starts to daydream about the attack in the pizzeria. Her friend, Arty, wakes her from her daydream. Charlie leaves from her class to get ready for a date with John, but Clay, the police officer from the first book, calls her to come check out a dead body the police found. Clay picks up Charlie and they go look at the body. Charlie notices that the person must have died from an animatronic from the puncture wounds. Clay brings her bad and Charlie goes on her date. She is late and covered in dirt. After the date, Charlie goes back to her dorm. The next day, Charlie works on her project for programming when she gets interrupted by Jessica. The two talk for awhile and Charlie heads to class. In class, Charlie starts daydreaming about the dead body. After class, John asks Charlie on another date. It is scheduled for tomorrow at around noon. Charlie really wants to look at Freddy’s Pizzeria again, so she convinces Jessica that they are going shopping for date clothes tomorrow morning. The next morning, Charlie brings Jessica to the pizzeria. Half of the pizzeria has been destroyed and emptied while the other half has not been touched. The two explore the remaining part of the pizzeria and find Dave’s dead body in the gold bunny suit. They leave and Charlie goes on her date. Charlie tells John about what she saw and John tells her about what happened after the events of the first book. Their date ends and Charlie goes back to her room. She has a dream about her brother being taken. The next day, Clay calls to tell Charlie some more bodies have been found and they all have the same marks as the first dead body. Charlie gets John to come with her to her old house. They look around and find a secret little room underneath the garage. This room is part of a business called Afton Robotics Inc. This business belongs to William Afton, who is also Dave. On the ground are three piles of dirt. Underneath these piles are three animatronics that really messed up. Charlie and John lift one up and examine it. The messed up Freddy gives off a hum that makes John feel queasy. Charlie reaches into it to get the device making the noise, but her arm gets stuck. John gets her arm out and they destroy the device. The next day, Charlie is driving and sees a bunch of vultures circling around in a field. Charlie looks and finds a body. Charlie calls Clay and the police pick up the body. Clay brings Charlie, Jessica, and John along to look for more bodies. At night, they find a dirt patch. They dig it up to find an animatronic. A lady is in the animatronic and she is barely alive. They get her out and bring her to the hospital. Charlie realizes that the animatronics want her. She goes to the lady’s house and lets one of the animatronics take her. Clay, Jessica, and John realize that Charlie is missing. Clay tells the two that he has the animatronics from the pizzeria. Clay brings the two to his house and brings them to the animatronics. Jessica and John tell the animatronics that Charlie is missing. The animatronics get out of Clay’s house and start the search. The book gets back to Charlie, where she wakes up in some new pizzeria. She tries to escapes, but she sees the ghosts of the children. Charlie is forced back into a suit by an animatronic is knocked out in the process. The book jumps back to the group which is slowly finding where Charlie is. The book jumps back to Charlie, who has woken up and is about to escape. Charlie hears John, who has broken down a wall to get into the pizzeria. The animatronics try to attack the group, but the good animatronics attack them. Clay shoots some of the messed up animatronics and it turns out they were just illusions. Dave comes back to try and kill Charlie, but John knocks him out. Dave wakes back up and tells Charlie that he actually took Charlie and not her brother. John tells Charlie that it is time to leave, but Charlie refuses to leave because she thinks that her brother is still in the springtrap suit. The pizzeria collapse and both Charlie and Dave die. The book ends with John and Jessica talking to Arty and Marla.
Characterization: Charlie changes from being a detective trying to figure out who killed the four people to being dead. Dave changed from being dead to becoming “Springtrap” to being dead for good.
Setting: This book takes place in the little town of Hurricane. This is where several people are found dead with marks from the animatronics. This book also takes place in a different Freddy’s Pizzeria than the other book. This is where Charlie is taken when she gets herself kidnapped and where she and Dave finally die. This book also takes place a year after the events of the first book. The characters are getting over the events of what happened in the pizzeria.
Recommendation: I recommend this book to boys and girls at the age level of 13 and up. The reason for that age group would be that there is some gore in the book. I would not want some kids reading about the gore, even though the gore is not as bad as the first book. I also recommend this book for any Five Nights at Freddy’s fan because it keeps adding to the lore of the series. -
Un segundo libro flojo
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"I'm surrounded by monsters, and murder, and death, and spirits."
Hmm...I'm not sure but this one lacked something for me this time. Charlie seemed unhinged - talking to herself, not really letting anyone in. She was constantly either blurting things out, making movements or motions or other irrational things that seemed to surprise even herself. Jessica was somehow much less present in this one and John seemed to only hold a "savior" roll. The detective was just awful.
But it IS the continued story, possibly holding a lot more lore from the games. It was full of gore and horrible walking furry automatons that definitely kept both the creep and the fear factor racked up. The new direction the story took and the hook/cliffhanger at the end were just enough to probably have been digging around for the third book eventually. hopefully these characters fair better in the next one. -
I didn't enjoy it as much as the first one. This one was a bit more cheesy, but I'm probably going to continue with the series.
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★★★/✯☆
Leí el primer libro hace bastantes años, y lo que más recuerdo de él fue lo mucho que me gusto y la intriga con la que me dejo el final.
Casi cuatro años después pude comprarme éste en físico y las ganas de volver a adentrarme en la historia me hizo empezarlo enseguida, pero me lleve, en gran parte, una terrible decepción.
Creo que mi mayor problema con él es que no me creí la mayor parte del mismo. Que entrara de lleno a la acción ayuda a que las cosas pasen más rápido, claro, pero el hecho de pensar que tres chicos adolescentes son más capaces de hacer el trabajo de investigación que tendría que hacer la policía cuando lo único que tienen como referencia son la muerte de algunos niños me pareció bastante absurdo.
No digo que esté mal el contexto, pero hubiera sido más creíble si la historia hubiera transcurrido muchos años después que el primer libro y no sólo un año después, como si dicho año les hubiera dado las herramientas que necesitaban para desarrollarse como personajes, cosa que tampoco pasa.
Charlie se me hizo insoportable e inmadura a como la recordaba, y aunque no sé si se debe a que ahora soy mucho mayor que ella a diferencia de cuando leí el primer libro que teníamos la misma edad, o que simplemente no tuvo realmente un desarrollo, y en cambio, se volvió menos razonable por todas las decisiones estúpidas que tomaba, terminé detestando al personaje.
Muchos de los personajes no los recordaba y eso me hizo recordar lo poco relevantes que habían sido en el primer libro, a pesar de que contaban como protagonistas.
El desarrollo de la historia, como ya mencioné, hubiera sido bueno y lógico si no fueran adolescentes que a penas están encontrándose a sí mismos, cosa que el libro describe.
La narración, a pesar de que me había gustado en el primer libro, se me hizo bastante rígida, sin muchas descripciones en escenas importantes y muy descritiva en partes que no eran necesarios.
Sin embargo, a pesar de todo lo que ya dije, el final, como en el primer libro, me dejó en el piso con muchísimas preguntas y con bastantes ganas de leer el tercero, y por fin saber qué es lo que realmente ocultaba el padre de Charlie.
Y, aunque mientras lo leía me daba la sensación de ser demasiado cliché: adolescentes que resuelven crímenes como si el estudiar fuera cosa de nada, dándoles demasiado tiempo libre, lo disfrute dentro de lo que cabe.
FNA siempre será algo que ame con la vida y no sólo por esta trilogía, sino también por el juego y lo mucho que me acompaño en mi adolescencia. -
FNaF franchise took off unexpectedly nearly three years ago now and community has been focusing on the backstory so much that its creator Scott Cawthon started writing some books about it. First one, "The Silver Eyes," was an average book overall, there were several discrepancies between the game lore and it had suffered from moderately unskillful writing and too many and useless characters.
Enter now, "The Twisted Ones", the second addition to novel universe of FNaF. Taking off where book one left, this book revolves around one year after the events occurred in first novel. Several murders started to occur and evidence points to new animatronic killers.
First book's annoying protagonist Charlie is the star again here, being the daughter of the man who created the animatronics. Most of the useless side characters are absent in this book, only John and Jessica remain as Charlie's friends. This is a positive improvement since too many characters without any notable features made it harder to remember which was which in the first book.
The book suffers from the poor storytelling that plagued its predecessor. I had hoped that Cawthon had improved his writing between these two books but I encountered the similar amateur typos, too many repetitive words in a brief amount time and pointless descriptions of the environments and dialogue between the characters still lurking around every page turn.
Story is somehow interesting at first but as someone who is in their just 30s, I am genuinely astounded by the stupidity and recklessness of the main protagonist of the series. Charlie is 19 years old in this book yet she acts like an 11 year old most of the time. You can generally see her coming into rash conclusions, doing things out of spite and "ignoring" his star-crossed lover John all the time. Yes, I saw that "ignore" verb so many times in the book that if I had a penny every time Charlie ignored something John said, asked or done, I would have had an overflowing Swiss bank account. Charlie was a pain in the ass in the first book and she continues to be so in the second. And she added stupidity to her other negative feats in this book as a bonus.
New hostile animatronics are a bit vague in description. They are non-existent in any of the games as far as I know, since they can devour someone through a gaping maw in their torso, as well as creating illusions to make themselves appear as friendly robots rather than hideous electronic creatures they are. I can't make any positive or negative comments on them, it's Scott's universe and he's free to add whatever he wishes. But the fact that the gap between the games and the novels is getting wider is impossible to ignore.
There is no sense in some of the parts of the book, like two teenagers going to the old pizzeria to find Springtrap's body hidden somewhere, but they never bother to tell it to anyone, despite the fact that they know a police officer very well and he knows what happened in there. Hell, they even tell that to their friend John after some time. Can you imagine holding back something like that from a friend who has endeavored everything happened in that pizzeria a year ago? This is again an example of how insufferable and incomprehensible our main protagonist Charlie is. Everybody has to put up with her shit throughout the entire book, like they were doing it before.
Relationship between John and Charlie is so crude and out of place that it makes you cringe in your seat while you read. Charlie is an ice queen haunted by her past to the extent that becomes wearisome to the reader and you want to get in the book and shout "get the hell over it" to her face. John has a crush on her for some unknown reason dating back to first book, but he gets nothing back for a good 150 pages of this book, as well as the 300 pages of the first one. Charlie clearly has PTSD which requires some serious medical help as far as I perceived from the book as someone who is in medicine field, yet no one ever implies that she needs treatment. In a realistic approach in human psychiatric disorders, at least her friends should have talked to each other about her rapidly deteriorating mental condition. Her suicide mission was pretty much pointless, her obsession over her late brother whom she has barely known is outright schizophrenic and her last attempt of forced romance with John moments before she was killed by the spring locks is laughable at best.
Original animatronics reappear towards the end and they are friendly to the humans, this is understandable if we consider the fact they are possessed by the spirits of the children slain by Springtrap and they rise to combat his creations. But the absence of Yellow Freddy, who is occupied by their best friend Michael's spirit who saved them from their latest encounter with animatronics, is discernable in the final battle. Original animatronics nearly killed all of them in the first book, until Yellow Freddy appeared and somehow persuaded them they are not the enemy and yet they help the teenagers here on their own accord without the guidance of him.
And about the ending, it was a really forced cliffhanger. Cliffhangers mean something when they are tied up to a point or expectation. John looking at a glance to the newcomer and gravely stating "that is not Charlie" is added to create some sort of paranormality to the scene but since Springtrap had cheated death twice from the spring locks before their very eyes, I don't understand why John dismissed the chance of that woman being Charlie so easily. Is it because "he loved her so much" that he can immediately understand that newcomer is not Charlie but a twisted version of herself? And also, what was her aunt doing at the end of the book, next to her crushed body in the mascot? Is that family completely paranormal, from father to aunt and daughter? I mean, I like cliffhangers but they have to make some sense. Animatronics haunted by children's spirits is a paranormal event meanwhile creating illusions by tampering with brain's sensory network is somehow possible but most if it is pseudoscience as described in the book. This book struggles to choose between paranormal and pseudoscience all the time and it still had not made its final decision even at the last pages.
Overall, this is another addition to ever-growing FNaF lore, if you are interested like me, then you will read this until the end despite the negative aspects I have described above and many more I have forgotten right now. But for someone who does not have a clue what FNaF is, it is just a poorly narrated book which promises nothing but frustration and waste of time.
Three stars because I like the lore but if a third one comes and shows no improvement, I will stop being so generous about these reviews. -
admittedly, i did actually enjoy this despite the very obvious flaws. compared to the first book, i definitely think the storyline is more developed in this one, however the characters could use some work. it seemed as if charlotte was being put through unnecessary events just for sympathy and it was ineffective. not to mention john's whole existence revolving around her. (still love him) i look forward to reading the last book in the near future tbh.
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To be honest…i was kinda bored during the book but the end saved it completely sooo 3 stars xd
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madafak co to było 💀
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Voy a comenzar hablando de los personajes. Hay claramente una única protagonista, Charlie. Esta chica es muy madura para su edad, también influye en ello sus constantes traumas del pasado (la desaparición de su hermano, la muerte de su padre y la tragedia en el Freddy Fazbear's Pizza). Ella comienza a rehacer su vida creyendo que todo lo ocurrido hace un año era ya pasado. Todo bien hasta que descubre, junto con Clay, una serie de cadáveres con marcas que ya conocen. Ahí su mundo se vuelve inestable, más aún cuando comienza a descubrir secretos relacionados con su padre y su casa. Es una chica un tanto paranoica, a mi juicio, y muy impetuosa. Su sentido de querer ayudar a los demás y de que sus amigos no sufran por ella hará que cometa una serie de locuras.
Toda la trama gira prácticamente en torno a Charlie, pero hay otra serie de personajes. En primer lugar destaco a John. Este joven es el medio amigo medio ligue de Charlie. Ambos tienen una tensión sexual-amorosa no solucionada y esa medio tensión se nota en el libro. Su actuación ha salido muy desapercibida en este segundo volumen, aunque creo que en el tercero tendrá más protagonismo. Él, junto con Charlie y Jessica, es uno de los supervivientes de la tragedia de la pizzería. Si John ha salido poco, menos aún lo ha hecho Jessica, compañera de piso en la universidad de Charlie. Clay es otro personaje que lleva a cuestas el trauma, nota de ello es su decadente estilo de vida.
Por último están Dave y los animatrónicos. Su presencia sigue estando presente en este volumen, pues dejó un halo de oscuridad y de miedo. Los animatrónicos que salen en este son casi los mismos que en el primero, más algunos nuevos, pero con una versión más terrorífica y fea. Son como los gemelos malos de los primeros. Esto tiene un porqué, uno de los misterios de este libro.
En cuanto a la escritura, la historia está muy bien escrita y con unas muy buenas descripciones que te van metiendo en la ambientación. Hay momentos que podría llamar de "ahogamientos" en los cuales el lector contiene la respiración de forma imperceptible durante ciertos acontecimientos. Aunque la ambientación es muy buena, no me ha llegado a resultar un libro de terror. Sin embargo sí me ha resultado ser una historia con muchos tejemanejes, secretismos y una gran dosis de misterio y acción. Los temas que tratan también son los cotidianos para la vida de los adolescentes o preadolescentes, pues en la historia aparecen los problemas de instituto-universidad, relaciones amorosas, la amistad antigua y nueva en una nueva ciudad o la pérdida.
En conclusión, la historia literaria creada dista mucho de los videojuegos originales, pero aún así es una historia entretenida. La trama gira en torno a la aparición de nuevos animatrónicos y del pasado misterioso de Charlie y, especialmente, de su padre. Este libro, a diferencia del primero, entra directamente en la trama. Su escritura te atrapa mucho y te lleva directamente a los acontecimientos con su buena ambientación. Si queréis pasar un buen rato y recordar el videojuego, este es tu libro.
Más en mi blog La Gran Biblitoeca de David (
https://lagranbibliotecadedavid.blogs...) -
(Spoilers be ahead. Sail safely)
So, before I begin with this review, for those confused, I read this story a few months ago, and decided to do a review on it as it fits with Gothic Themes. The Twisted Ones is a sequel to the first novel, The Silver Eyes, which in upon itself was a good book, so how does the sequel hold up? Strong in some areas, weak in others. Starting with some weaker parts, it starts out slow, like the previous book, and ends way too quickly, as well as being less about the animatronic characters we know, and more about their nightmarish counterparts, the Twisted ones. Even then, the book has less of the first novel's main baddie, William Afton, who now is Springtrap. However, this is a small problem, considering we get tons of growth from the main protagonist, Charlie, who finds that she's just as skilled with robots as her father, Henry, has a boyfriend and their relationship is incredibly awkward, and even helps the police with the murders. "Murders you say?" I hear you ask in your head. Yes, this whole book's a murder mystery practically. Bodies start showing up, with scars that Charlie's all to familiar with, which makes this novel better than the first thematically. While the first book is mainly about a reunion linked to a bunch of tragedies that happened in the past, that each character is linked to, this is more of a present day mystery, that's made more scary by the fact that the Twisted Ones are the main villains, instead of a weird dude in a rabbit costume. They're mindless machines meant to strike fear and to kill our protagonist, built BY Afton. Turns out they make way better spooks than him too, as their whole gimmick, which I won't spoil, is way creepier. Overall, this is a great story that keeps you on your seat, that has a few problems with pacing. -
[December 25th, 2017] mini review oh my
"Sign you up for this? You had one foot in the car at the first mention of murder! You practically invited yourself."
2.5 or 3 stars, I guess?
Having finished the first one, I was curious to see where The Twisted Ones would take us.
Again, revisiting the characters of the previous novel, only a few of the more prominent ones are present: Charlie, Jessica, Jon and Clay —outlining and setting their importance to these series of novels that accompany the lore of the FNAF games. At a glance The Twisted Ones seems to be merely a sequel or rather detailing the aftermath of the events of the first book, when really it cements what the FNAF series has become—neverending. I say this particularly in the sense that the series now has six games under its belt and now two books, with a seemingly impending third book on the horizon from what the cliffhanger presents.
FNAF will continue to supply us questions while still leaving us baffled and possibly more convuluted than ever before.
Not a bad read, but in terms of figuring out the lore and backstory details a lot of headaches will be involved.