Armada, by Ernest Cline, is about Zack Lightman (that name's words are almost Luke Skywalker) who plays the MMO space shooter Armada. Zack's father dies suddenly so he becomes obsessed with his dad's interests in 70s and 80s gaming and pop culture. Eventually, as a teenager, he finds his dad's journal outlining a conspiracy and from there the plot thickens.
Just like Cline's previous novel, Ready Player One, Armada is so chock full of nerdy pop culture references it made me blush and feel ashamed to recognize it all. He even used two nerdy curses in one sentence, one from Firefly and one from Battlestar Galactica (the 70s one); I think it was, "frakin' gorram", or something like that. And who else knows Conan's prayer to Crom but Mark and I, who repeat it regularly? This book goes deep into nerdy pop culture references.
I enjoyed the story, sort of Ender's Game meets 2001: A Space Odyssey, and all the nerdy game, film, and music references. I just found it a little bit unbelievable that Zack, a millennial, and his circle of friends would all be into the same 70s and 80s ephemera. I mean, as an 80s kid, I always looked back to the 70s but millenials looking back twenty or thirty years? Seems incredible to me. Also, the adults in this story are also insufferable king kong, godzilla nerds. I mean, I'm nerdy but these characters are up over the fence nerdy. I felt embarrassed for them and for myself reading it. Is "nerd porn" a term? I think this book might define it.
Aside from my disbelief that anyone can outnerd me, I think the story is well written and presents an interesting story that's tailor made for a film script conversion.
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