2012: Seeking Closure
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Average customer review:Product Description
It's December 21, 2012. The President of the United States has just gone on the air to inform the world that in three hours time, the world will end, and there is nothing he can do about it. And then he and all the world leaders walk away and leave the people to fend for themselves. What would you do? Based on a story by Tom Townsend, and soon to become a motion picture from Inner Glow Pictures, 2012: Seeking Closure is the story of a world gone mad in a time of chaos, of disaster and destruction and people desperate to seek closure while the society goes mad. To learn more about the upcoming film, visit: www.seekingclosurethemovie.com
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #140616 in Books
- Published on: 2009-04-28
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 190 pages
Editorial Reviews
About the Author
Gregory Bernard Banks began his pursuit of a writing career in 1997, after spending years studying his other creative love, graphic design. Over the years since he's served as moderator for the Zoetrope All-Story Writers Workshop, as a site administrator for Scrawl: The Writer's Asylum, and as webmaster for the WRITER and MARKET Literary Search Engine. He's currently co-Webmaster for the Speculative Literature Foundation, and A forum administrator at Lulu.com, and and is the owner of both BDDesign LLC and it's publishing imprint, WheelMan Press. Banks is also a contributor to Audacity Magazine (AudacityMagazine.com) with his column, "A Sedentary View", and continues pursuing his dream of landing a 7-figure book deal by the time he's 80. He's published five books prior to this one, Crossroads and Other Tales, Phoenix Tales: Stories of Death & Life, A Writer's Journey in Poetry & Prose, An Interview with Santa and Other Christmas Treats, and The Summoner. Banks lives in the rapidly growing city of Stockbridge, Georgia with his parents, his computer, and far too many books on his Amazon Kindle to count.
Customer Reviews
Fast-paced, quick reading
A contemporary twist on a quotidian premise, Gregory Banks fictionalizes the 2012 doomsday prediction with a stock disaster story heavy with religious overtones that sees the human race tumbling towards apocalyptic calamity. It is December 21st, 2012 and the President of the Unites States has alerted the world that they are on a crash-course with an asteroid, and that in three hours all will be destroyed. We're familiar with this scenario, the movie Deep Impact comes quickly to mind, but I was curious to see how the author would reconcile this seemingly Christian morality tale with a doomsday scenario based on Mayan paganism.
The fast-paced story quickly unfolds into a series of character-driven vignettes centering on the terrible mistakes people have made and the various ways they decide to address their past. Violent and even savage at times, Banks paints a bleak picture of humanity where people are "sophisticated beasts who must be given direction" and whose souls can be freed only by death (with just hours remaining the Israelis and Palestinians still can't stop killing each other). Once the three-hour fuse is lit, the story moves quickly towards disaster and the situation becomes more desperate as we move along. In such a character driven story it was odd that I felt more compelled by the doomsday scenario than by the people it would affect.
This is a very easy read, with short chapters that are never boring but there are so many characters that there is not enough time to get to know anyone, or to develop those characters we are supposed to care about the most. One of the most interesting threads concerns a bizarre religious cult reminiscent of the Heaven's Gate UFO group whose mass suicide in 1997 coincided with the appearance of Comet Hale-Bopp. We also get to know a fictional American president whose controversial decision to hide in an underground bunker while the rest of humanity awaits destruction drives his guilt and ultimately becomes his undoing. And the story of three immoral men trapped in an elevator with three hours to live would be a great setting for a one-act play but we are never with them long enough to develop a strong personal connection or a sense of involvement with their feelings.
Speckled with drug use, violence and gang warfare the story is balanced with mushy themes of repentance and redemption. The end of the world seems to be caused not by man's own doing but by a cosmic or even supernatural event out of our control and it is our reaction to certain doom that sparks destruction, instead of the event itself. What ensues is a chaotic exercise where evil men are just as damned as those who repent and where no one has anything to lose. In the end, 2012: Seeking Closure is an exploration of man's ability for chaos where one wonders why anyone deserves a second chance and why humans need to find greater meaning even if there isn't one. Banks succeeds by addressing the question: how would we react if we learned we had only three hours left? The answer won't be pretty.
Strengths: compelling use of a countdown, fast-paced, easy reading that is never boring
Opportunities: familiar premise, lots of characters
Will appeal to: light readers, persons of faith, fans of doomsday/apocalyptic literature
Mark McGinty is the author of ELVIS AND THE BLUE MOON CONSPIRACY
A book I probably could have READ in 3 hours if I had the time!!!
Gregory Bernard Banks' 2012: SEEKING CLOSURE is a very fast paced read, and difficult to put down. It tackles a disturbing question - what would you do if the President announced that the world would end in 3 hours....and there was nothing - nothing that could be done?
I found the chapters to be well-written and the characters interesting. Banks' descriptions made me feel for many of the characters and sympathize with their stories. I didn't just ask myself what I would do with my last 3 hours....I wondered what I would do if I was in these characters' places in their last 3 hours.
I don't want to call this book a fluffy read, as it is deeper than that. But it is extremely fast paced and difficult to put down. Well done, Mr. Banks!
J.R. Reardon
author, CONFIDENTIAL COMMUNICATIONS
AUTHOR, BANKS, MAKES THE STORY BELIEVABLE
A novel of fiction is turned toward realism in the hands the author, Gregory Bernard Banks. He has set a good part of this story in a stalled elevator, where three men with diverse backgrounds remove their shrouds of fake imaging. The dire circumstances brought on by a world ending makes the real life problems of these three men surface and boil in a cauldron of emotions.
A chance escape from the elevator into the outside environ of fear is peppered with revenge...revenge so strong that one "elevator" man even foregoes the attempt of a temptress to entice him into a last act of sex before the end comes. His revenge transends any desire to respond.
2012: Seeking Closure, is briliantly crafted to expose the weakness of the three "elevator" characters during their fast pace attempt to close out the wrong deeds done by them and to them before the world will end. But does it?
This novel by Gregory Banks reels toward the reader like a movie, because it is one. I learned more about the film, by going to the web site refered to on the books back cover.
The book enhances an interest in that film by the same name...2012: Seeking Closure.
