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title = "All You Need Is Kill - Hiroshi Sakurazaka"
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date = 2014-12-03
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[taxonomies]
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tags = ["books", "hiroshi sakurazaka", "reviews", "scifi"]
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[GoodReads Summary](https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/6255949-all-you-need-is-kill):
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When the alien Gitai invade, Keiji Kiriya is just one of many raw recruits
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shoved into a suit of battle armor and sent out to kill. Keiji dies on the
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battlefield, only to find himself reborn each morning to fight and die again
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and again. On the 158th iteration though, he sees something different,
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something out of place: the female soldier known as the Bitch of War. Is the
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Bitch the key to Keiji’s escape, or to his final death?
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{{ stars(stars=4) }}
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I admit I got this book because of "Edge of Tomorrow", which I watched before
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reading the book. As usual, only the concept of the story is the same in both.
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Apart from "soldier keeps repeating the same day over and over again due alien
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technology", there is absolutely nothing in common with the movie.
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The story starts slowly, mostly because Keiji Kiriya is still a fresh guy. But
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he still kills one special alien and gains temporal superpowers. When that
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happens, the story picks up and it's really hard to drop it. Then the story
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stops to tell the backstory of Rita Vrataski and the pace drops a bit; then it
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goes back to the fight and it picks up again. That's probably how I read this
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thing so fast.
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In a way, the book is more brutal than the movie, as much as "Jarhead" the
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book is more brutal than "Jarhead" the movie. Also, the explanation for the
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"time travel" -- which in the book is no time travel at all, being much more
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akin to the way Kitty Pride sends people in the time in "X-Men: Days of Future
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Past" -- seems much more plausible than the movie.
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It is a short but interesting story, nonetheless.
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