Arena

Holly Jennings, 1985-

Book - 2016

"A fast-paced and gripping near-future science fiction debut about the gritty world of competitive gaming... Every week, Kali Ling fights to the death on national TV. She's died hundreds of times. And it never gets easier... The RAGE tournaments--the Virtual Gaming League's elite competition where the best gamers in the world compete in a no-holds-barred fight to the digital death. Every bloody kill is broadcast to millions. Every player is a modern gladiator--leading a life of ultimate fame, responsible only for entertaining the masses. And though their weapons and armor are digital, the pain is real. Chosen to be the first female captain in RAGE tournament history, Kali Ling is at the top of the world--until one of her... teammates overdoses. Now, she must confront the truth about the tournament. Because it is much more than a game--and even in the real world, not everything is as it seems. The VGL hides dark secrets. And the only way to change the rules is to fight from the inside.."--

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Subjects
Genres
Science fiction
Published
New York : ACE Books 2016.
Language
English
Main Author
Holly Jennings, 1985- (-)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
325 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781101988763
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

PRESS THE START BUTTON TO BEGIN . . . . In 2054, video technology has advanced into a fully immersive, virtual sport where contestants feel every aspect of the adventure. Death is experienced, although in the gamer's reality it is nothing but a do-over. Kali Ling is the top female fighter in the Virtual Gaming League, a superstar pro athlete with every need supplied and any vices censored. To the VGL, image is everything. Gamers always put on a good show, promoting sponsors and giving the audience what they want. When her team loses their preseason Death Match, it puts them in the losers' bracket going into the RAGE tournament. Then a teammate dies, requiring a replacement to be brought in a week before the gladiatorial competition, and Kali is made captain and expected to turn defeat into a glorious victory. Can she be the leader her team needs, becoming the first female captain to take the championship? Jennings' debut, with action-packed battle sequences and older computer-game references, will appeal to fans of science fiction like Ernest Cline's Armada (2015).--Lockley, Lucy Copyright 2016 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Jennings's debut novel has a strong concept but doesn't do it justice. In the 2050s, virtual gaming is now a competitive sport in which athletes can "die" and yet keep playing. But the costs are high, as Kali Ling learns when she and her teammates battle to win their game's highest prize. It feels plausible that competitive video gaming and virtual reality might combine in sports that let viewers enjoy excessive violence with no apparent consequences, and there's lots of potential for interesting stories with that background. However, the after-school-special nature of the narrative, which boils down to Kali helping her teammates win only after she kicks drugs and stops partying, lacks complexity and fails to engage. Once Kali straightens up and flies right, there's no stopping her or her team: they win every match, and she outwits her awful manager and has an inevitable relationship with the male character who challenges her life decisions. For a book about fighting, there's a remarkable lack of real conflict. Agent: Leon Husock, L. Perkins Literary Agency. (Apr.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

The year is 2054, and virtual gaming is one of the world's most popular sports. -Millions tune in to watch the Virtual Gaming League's competitions and the biggest is the RAGE tournaments-a fight to the death among teams of elite athletes. Kali Ling is the first woman to captain a RAGE team. When her group is disbanded, first in virtual defeat, then in the death of a member, the grim knowledge underneath the shine of fame rises to the surface. As Kali tries to guide her team back up the ranks in the tournament, she will face not only the gladiators on the killing fields but the demons in her own life. VERDICT Depicting the action and excitement of virtual gaming that made Ernest Cline's Ready Player One such a hit, Jennings's debut delves into the real-world issues (drugs, sponsor demands) that athletes face. Add strong female characters to the mix and readers seeking more fast-paced sf about virtual reality will be pleased.-KC © Copyright 2016. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by School Library Journal Review

In this riveting story of professional athleticism, players make their names known in the virtual arena rather than the stadium. Their challenges are far from typical: they face opponents and fight in the virtual world with swords and medieval fervor and then slam back into reality. Death feels real, pain echoes even after they unplug, and these athletes cope in the most dangerous of ways. Kali must lead her team to redemption in the arena following a surprising and devastating loss but also keep them alive as they navigate the seedier side of professional gaming after a teammate dies. This title is mystifyingly slow; though it kicks off with fast-paced action, it drags until the "second act." Readers will sympathize with Kali's struggles with personal loss, and as the story progresses and new characters are introduced, this quickly becomes an addictive read. VERDICT Those who make it through the lengthy exposition will delight in this real-world gaming tale that blends sports, video games, friendship, and just a dash of dystopia.-Ashley Prior, Lincoln Public Library, RI © Copyright 2016. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A video game that inflicts real pain on its playerswhat could possibly go wrong? In this debut novel, quite a lot. In 2054, Kali Ling is on Team Defiance, part of a competitive Virtual Gaming League in which players compete in a virtual world. When a player's avatar takes damage or dies in the game, they experience unimaginable, real physical pain, leading gamers to develop drug habits and mental illnesses. When the team captain overdoses and dies, the league quickly covers it up, appointing Ling captain and bringing in a new player, Rooke. Ling immediately hates him but also wants to have sex with him (even though the last captain died in her bed days before). As their insipid romance blossoms, they fight their way through the tournament and discover what else the league has been covering up. The end result boils down to Ready Player One plus The Hunger Games minus anything that made those books enjoyable. The prose is amateurish, with stupefying turns of phrase such as, "L.A., the West Coast equivalent of New York" and "My heart rifled into my throat." Ling's half-Chinese heritage is stated as if it's a personality trait, then repeated ad nauseam in place of any character development. Descriptions of ongoing drug use read like a tween recounting what the kids who smoke under the bleachers said. Tender moments between Ling and her love interests are purple nonsense ("He tasted like an autumn night"), and descriptions of actual sex"I drove my fingers through his hair, and his tongue assaulted mine"are thoroughly anti-erotic. Scenes meant to be hilarious aren't; for example, Ling nearly screams with laughter upon learning that someone is from "CANADA." (In all caps, because it's just that hilarious.) Worse still is a scene in which a character reveals that his girlfriend died because, well, she did so many drugs that she thought she could fly and leaped from a balcony to her death. That urban-legend reference should be a joke, but the only joke here is on the reader. Game over, man. Game over. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

***This excerpt is from an advance uncorrected proof*** Copyright © 2016 Holly Jennings CHAPTER 1 This wouldn't be the first time I died. Sure as hell wouldn't be the last, either. But while most watched this virtual world from the safe haven of reality, there was nowhere else I'd rather spend my Saturday night. Crouched high on the tower's parapet, I overlooked a sea of wheat fields. The scent of lavender and taste of wheatgrass wove together in the air, drifting with the breeze as it swept through my hair. I took a deep breath and smiled at the irony, as thick as the mountain air filling my lungs. Lavender. Wheat fields. Tranquility. Peace, in a place anything but peaceful. Movement in the fields caught my eye, down and right. A zigzag carved its way through the ten-foot-tall stalks, heading straight for the tower. My smile widened. Maybe this sucker had the balls to take on Kali Ling. The warrior. I stilled inside. Even breaths. No fear. At the field's edge, the stalks trembled violently. The air filled with the rainstick rustling of brush and dry grass. Yes. Someone would emerge. I gripped the sword sheathed across my back and waited, muscles tight, mouth watering. Come on. Give me something. A brute. Six--no--seven feet tall, wielding a mace. Or an axe. Give me anything. A rabbit scurried out from the field. Nothing followed. The grass fluttered in the breeze. Birds chirped, nestled in the nearby sycamore trees. It was the rabbit, and only the rabbit. For now. I punched the parapet's brick wall, but when my frustration subsided, I realized another irony. In 2054, most twenty-year-olds hid behind a barricade--of textbooks. Studying for hours, days, or even years on end, they'd hide away from the real world only to remerge bright and eager to end up in jobs they'd hate. Meanwhile, I strapped on battle gear, sword and all, and headed into these fields. Fields I now frowned at, which had stilled just to spit on my excitement. Only streams of sunlight punctuated the stalks from above, like skylights from the heavens. Everything blended together in shades of beige as if the landscape had been whitewashed through a sepia lens. In the distance, the enemy's tower loomed, wrapped in a corkscrew of mountains and rocky terrain. How many of them remained? How close were we to victory? Shuffling footsteps turned my attention inside. I leapt from my perch and landed on the tower's stone floor with the impact of a fallen leaf. The wind whispered around me as it bowed to my movements. The warrior. Pffft. I should be the ninja. A pigtailed blonde stood in the center of the tower, dwarfed by more than the stories-high walls around her. Lily, fair-skinned with delicate features, like the flower she was named for. Dressed like a scantily clad Scandinavian warrior, she wore nothing but fur-lined armor and a wicked grin. Her hands rested on the pair of short axes sheathed at her hips. Not so much like a flower. Lily shook her head as she approached. "Your eyes," she said. "What?" "They can't see your eyes." She pushed up to her tiptoes and brushed strands of raven hair away from my face. "Does it really matter?" I asked. She frowned. Of course it mattered. Soft and black, my eyes were a distinguishing trait. How marketable. How perfect. "It's the Death Match," she said with a tsk. "Everything matters." "Did Clarence teach you to say that?" "Do you think I would have listened?" She grinned and nodded at my perch. "How's the view?" "Boring." A piercing scream ripped through the stillness, resounding off the tower's walls. My ears perked up, and I seized the dagger at my waist. Dust clung to the air in suspended animation, trapped like the breath inside my lungs. Then, chuckling at myself, I exhaled, released my grip on the weapon, and nudged Lily. "Really? Did they tell Hannah to go down easy? God, they'll do anything to add tension." My chuckles faded when I met Lily's taut expression. She shook her head, drew an axe from her belt, and crept toward the tower's entrance. I scoffed. "Lil, come on. There's no way someone took her out that fast." "I'll check it out anyways." "From the treetops?" I called out. "Where else?" Lily disappeared from view through the tower's entrance. Leaves crunched, and branches snapped as she climbed. Then it went still. A breeze drifted through the tower and brushed against my bare midriff. I adjusted the armor padding on my shoulders and gripped the sword at my back, drawing it out slowly, purposefully, to catch the late-afternoon sun glinting on the blade. As if millions were watching me. Absolute quiet blanketed the tower. The birds stopped chirping. The wind stopped rustling. My breath hitched. I planted my feet, sword out. Ready. Scuffling footsteps and soft grunts sounded out beyond the tower walls, followed by sharp chopping and wet splats, like cleavers hacking up meat. Or a person. Then, nothing. I took a step forward. "Lily?" Silence. Then footsteps, heavy and rough, beat up the dirt path to the tower. Two men appeared in the entranceway, both tall enough to brush the top of the tower's entrance. The metal armor covering their chests, wrists, and calves struggled to contain the muscle beneath, every buckle and clasp strained tight. Ribbons of blood snaked down the swords gripped in their hands. Not bad, boys, but certainly not enough. Not for me. "Is this it?" I asked with a grin. "I was hoping for a challenge." On cue, two more men appeared behind them. Oh shit. Four? What kind of crazy-ass ploy was this? Pushing into a tower with four left only one to guard their own. Where was the rest of my team? Why hadn't they taken the enemy's fortress? Of the foursome, one had a cut down his eye and cheek and wore no armor on his chest. He moved toward me first, and the others fell in step behind. At the sound of their pursuit, he held a hand up and gave a swift shake of his head. They halted. Taking me alone, One-eye? Impressive. And completely dumb-ass stupid. He broke off from the pack, leaving them at the door. The trio paced and whimpered, like hyenas waiting for the lion to make the kill. But like good animals, they obeyed their master. One-eye charged, weapon raised, footsteps pounding across the stone floor. I remained, feet planted, bringing him to me. Breaths filled my lungs, slow and steady. A smile pulled at my lips. Let's dance. He grunted as he swung for me, muscles straining. I parried his blows and swept him to the side. Like wind. Like water. Metal clanged against metal in a steady beat, his weapon slipping across mine every time. We broke apart. He grimaced, muscles clenched. Sweat dripped down his face. I grinned and rolled my shoulders, muscles like liquid. His knuckles turned white around the hilt of his sword. My weapon rotated with the flicks of my wrist, like an extension of my own limb. He came at me again, making chopping motions in the air. The wind whined under the sharp slashes of steel. I stood tall as he reeled back and swung. As his sword whooshed through the air, I ducked. He stumbled past, revealing the canvas of his back. My sword ripped across it in so many rapid successions, I nearly wrote my name. Zorro could kiss my ass. One-eye went down to his knees, shaking. Breaths rasped through his lungs. Snorting like a bull, he pushed up to his feet and came at me again. Wielding his sword with both hands, he swung it like a bat, hard. The impact reverberated down my arms and knocked the sword from my grip. It went flying, smacked the far wall, and tumbled to the ground out of reach. He grinned at me and brought his weapon down. I rolled, missing the blow. Drawing the dagger from my hip, I pushed up to my feet and slammed the blade into his shoulder. It disappeared down to the hilt. He groaned. I jerked it sideways. He cried out and dropped his sword. It clanked on the floor. Blood poured out of the wound, gushing over my hand. I lost my grip on the dagger and tumbled to the ground. Get up. The instant my back hit the floor, I pushed up, but my heels slipped across the bloody floor. One-eye ripped the blade from his shoulder and advanced. I scrambled backwards. Keep space. He can't hit you if he can't reach. I backpedaled, trying to get my feet beneath me, heels not catching. Blood sprayed out from my kicking heels. My back hit the wall. Cornered. First rule of fighting: never get cornered. Damn it. One-eye closed in. My chest tightened until I gulped for air. No. I was fine. I'd died before. Simulations. Practices. They teach you how to die. Fighting with honor. For the show. He knelt and delivered a swift backhand across my face. My head snapped to the side, vision reeling. Pain blistered across my face with the sharp sting of a rubber band. One-eye straddled me and pushed his weight into my stomach. I gagged and wriggled beneath him, trying to free myself. No luck. His weight and legs formed a vise around my lower half. In a sweeping arc, he swung the dagger toward my neck, like a reaper wielding his scythe. Skin slapped skin as I caught his forearm with both hands and strained against him. He grimaced and leaned forward, adding weight behind his strength. My hands trembled, muscles screaming in protest. The blade lowered. Cold steel kissed my skin. I gasped and bowed my neck in. Come on, Kali. Fight. Every nerve in my arms and chest ached. The trembling in my hands descended into violent shakes. One-eye grinned down at me like an animal driven mad with hunger. The dagger dug into my throat, sharp and burning. I squirmed and clamped my teeth shut on a squeal. "Shhh," he hushed, condescending and overexaggerated. His crew of douche bags giggled in the background. Blood trickled out of my neck. Fucking bastard. Didn't cut deep. I'd bleed out in minutes, not seconds. He was drawing this out, purposely, to make me suffer. With one hand, he pinned my wrists above my head and with the other, held the knife over my face. I braced for the final blow, straining every muscle against a shudder. But instead of bringing the knife down, he let it dangle just above my lips. My own blood, sweet and metallic, dripped down and seeped into my mouth. I sputtered and coughed. Laughter rumbled in his chest. He was enjoying this, sick asshole. And he should. He'd won. I closed my eyes. This was it. Defeat. Might as well accept it. No. That wasn't part of my image. That wasn't Kali Ling. The warrior. I wrenched a hand free and punched One-eye hard across the face. His head jerked sideways, but his weight remained planted on my hips. Damn it. I reached for his shoulder wound, dug my fingers inside, and pulled. He threw back his head and howled, legs convulsing around me from the pain. I grinned, then faltered. My neck. My breaths morphed into gasps for air as the blood continued to drain from my throat. Numbness captured my fingers, and they slid down his chest, trailing three rows of fading blood across his skin. He looked down at me. Our eyes locked. Mine fluttered. He laughed, revealing a row of perfect, bleached teeth. That sardonic laugh reverberated in his chest, flexing muscles I'm sure were already flexed. It was over. He had won. My hand collapsed to the floor. Coldness crept up my limbs as my vision whirled and faded. No. This wasn't happening. We don't lose. We never lose. The weight pressed against my stomach lessened as One-eye leaned toward my face. His breath came out in snorts, ghosting across my cheeks. Sweat dripped from his skin and mingled with mine. It swirled together with the blood in my mouth, salt and metal. I gagged from the taste, and from the blood bubbling up my throat. My breaths shortened. He grew closer still, until the heat from him radiated against my skin. An inch. Maybe less. I could just picture the cameras zooming in. "Night, night, sweetheart," he whispered as my eyelids fluttered, and my head rolled to the side. Despite the numbness, a flood of emotions rushed through me. Shock from losing the fight. Fear as the darkness closed in around me. Rage fueled by the adrenaline pumping through my veins. And beneath it all, I had to admit I was impressed. He knew how to put on a damn good show. Excerpted from Arena by Holly Jennings All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.