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The Grey

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John Ottway has found the job at the end of the world, working as a hunter for an oil-camp on the North Slope of Alaska. It’s brutal, cold, and isolated, and there’s little he needs to do but wait for the day when he has the courage to end his life, as he plans to, some day, “at a time to be determined.” But the plane that ferries him and the other camp workers between the Slope and civilization crashes in the tundra, leaving Ottway alone with a handful of terrified survivors to face a punishing landscape, wolves who see them as an invading pack, and, ultimately, the prospect of a death he didn’t choose in its most insistent, inexorable form. As he battles to save the lives of those with him, he looks into the darkness of an unforgiving nature and must weigh the abysses in himself and the wrongs he carries against what he leaves behind, and choose whether his own life is worth saving, or not. What critics say about the film THE “Prepare to be devastated… the equivalent of a wet finger in a hot socket… nerve-frying suspense… one of the most captivating studies of shared peril… explores the dark shadows of the male psyche…” — Rex Reed, New York Observer "…a stripped-down, elemental tale of survival in brutal circumstances, as blunt and effective — and also, at times, as lyrical — as a tale by Jack London or Ernest Hemingway…." — AO Scott, The New York Times

152 pages, Paperback

First published February 17, 2012

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About the author

Ian Mackenzie Jeffers

1 book20 followers
Ian Mackenzie Jeffers is a director, producer, screenwriter, playwright, and novelist. His novel 'The Grey' was the basis for the Ridley Scott-produced film starring Liam Neeson. He is working on a new novel and several new film, television, and theatre projects.

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5 stars
133 (34%)
4 stars
130 (33%)
3 stars
81 (21%)
2 stars
29 (7%)
1 star
11 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 45 reviews
Profile Image for Joshua James.
Author 3 books11 followers
December 2, 2012
The book will always be compared to the movie, and in many ways, I agree with those on here who have admitted liking the film better. Both are sad, but for very different reasons. The personal history of the main character has been completely changed, and with that, what drives his push for survival...if that's what it is. There is a scene at the beginning of both that has Ottway kneeling with a rifle in his mouth, and the burden that pushes him to this place in the film feels somehow simpler; more sorrowful. It is completely different from why he does it in the book. Both the film and the book Ottways are dark, damned, lost souls, but the one in the book is darker, less confident, and less redeemable. I wouldn't dream of spoiling either, as the poetry of how these things gets revealed is part of the joy of the experience. While I enjoy the film immensely, (it was one of my very favourites from this past year, and possibly of any year), I will say this: the wolves in the book act more realistically than the ones in the film. But the film wolves, to me, feel more elemental; they are a force of nature, mirroring the storm that is pursuing him from within. Some of that comes out in the book as well, just not as much. And in the film, Liam Neeson comes across as something of a force of nature himself, whereas the written Ottway is just a man with a troubling past. I do recommend it, though. Especially if you really loved the movie and are interested in a sort of alternate universe version of the story. What you won't find, much to my disappointment, is the poem Ottway recites several times in the film, written by his father. I think about that poem a lot, and was disappointed that it didn't appear in the source material.
Profile Image for Glen Krisch.
Author 27 books520 followers
May 29, 2012
Outstanding thriller. The novella is different enough from the movie that it's possible to enjoy both as separate stories.
Profile Image for Krystal.
1,929 reviews423 followers
Want to read
July 20, 2020
Not gonna lie, I mostly want to read this because I saw the movie recently and it was super dark and creepy and also

I HAVE QUESTIONS.

Would have preferred the original but looks like it's near impossible to track down?
Profile Image for Ruthie Jones.
1,028 reviews55 followers
October 30, 2012
I'm not a fan of the stream of consciousness writing style, but it fits here. The book has a lot more wolf action than the movie. It's a real heart pounder, to be sure.

There's also that old reliable theme of facing our demons and worries threaded throughout the story. The wolves are wolves, but they also represent our fears. We can run from our fears, we can battle them constantly, we can close our eyes and dream them away, and we can laugh at them. But whatever we do, they always seem to be there snarling and nibbling at us. The real courage and test comes not from vanquishing our fears and demons but from recognizing and accepting them and persevering despite the blood and tears.

"Each time they leave us alone a little I wonder if they're done with us, if they think we've learned our lesson, gotten the idea, and each time no, apparently we're still getting it wrong, we're not going the way they want us to go, or like I said they just don't like us and won't like us till we're all dead. Then they may like us fine." ~ chapter 9
Profile Image for Douglas Cook.
Author 10 books7 followers
August 10, 2016
First lines "Four weeks on, four weeks off. When you’re off, you sit in a bar in Anchorage, stare at the bottles, sleep in a motel, if you don’t keep a house, or aren’t welcome there, and bit by bit you drain away whatever you made when you were on."

Mackenzie Jeffers, Ian (2012-01-31). The Grey (Kindle Locations 15-17). . Kindle Edition.
Profile Image for Kathy Jackson.
Author 1 book6 followers
May 3, 2012
So I decided to get the short story “The Grey” to read to see if it was better than the movie. It is only 90 some pages long so didn’t take that long to read – started it around 4:30 am and finished it a few minutes ago. I had a several hour break in there to so it really didn’t take that long to read.

OK, the story is well done – I can see the landscape, feel the desperation of the men, and hear the howling wind as it freezes me through. The characters are far more real and the parts of the movie that I thought were unrealistic aren’t in the book at all. Wolves don’t really act the way they did in either the book or the movie – but it was way more believable in the book because it wasn’t about the den or nest. It was about the men being a threat to the wolves because they tried to keep the wolves from eating the dead. The men drew first blood and the wolves reacted as if threatened.

I did like the book – the hopelessness the men feel at every turn sinks into your consciousness until you feel it right along with them. When they wonder why they don’t just lay down and die, you feel it too. When they find it hard to believe that they can still go on, you find it hard to believe too. It shows what resolve the human spirit can have to live…or to die.

I give the short story an A for the detailed scenery, the sense of loss you get when one of the men (and even one of the wolves) dies and the strength of the characters. It was the right length too – much more would have become too drawn out and harder to believe.
Profile Image for Charles.
186 reviews
January 30, 2014
A bleak book. A man's book. A book about being pursued by the ghosts of your failings and failures until you die a meaningless death, alone and scared. Such is life.

In some ways, "The Grey" is reminiscent of Hemingway's "The Old Man and the Sea," except that instead of the ocean, it's the Alaska tundra, and instead of sharks, there are wolves, and instead of them eating Santiago's fish, they eat Ottway and his co-workers. In both, all a man can do is struggle and survive and hope it's not all for naught. Once more into the fray. . . (I was disappointed that the book didn't contain the poem that was frequently recited in the movie - whereas I'm no fan of poetry, I like that little verse.)

The plot of the book is significantly different than that of the movie, as are the characterization and the back story of Ottway himself. Many of the themes are shared, however. Still, I appreciate that the book and movie are different, because I can like the book and the movie in different ways and for different reasons.

I read that "The Grey" originated as a short-story called "The Ghostwalker," and I can see how the story might work better in this format; stretching the action out for 145 pages causes the wolves' pursuit and attacks to be a bit unrelenting for the reader. Regardless, the writing is gripping and poetic and cutting, with amazing passages of description and sparse yet effective dialogue. I'd like to see with what Jeffers follows this book.

Profile Image for Faith Marlow.
Author 31 books143 followers
June 5, 2012
Very enjoyable, fast- paced book. The writing style is very unique. The sentences are often written long, as if told in one big breath. This took a little getting used to because I could not help but think that an English teacher would cringe at the seemingly endless number of run-on sentences. However I very quickly adjusted to the writing style as it seemed to push me through the story with the same urgency as the characters.

If you enjoyed the movie, which I did and it brought me to the book, certainly read it. If you enjoyed the book and have not watched the movie, you certainly should. They are just enough alike and just enough different to make them both very enjoyable.

Faith Marlow
Being Mrs. Dracula by Faith Marlow
Profile Image for Kanwarpal Singh.
2,492 reviews48 followers
March 25, 2022
John Ottway loses everything in his life and he was having difficult time to Focus on anything, so to get rid of that he found the job at the end of the world, working as a hunter for an oil-camp on the North Slope of Alaska. It's cold, isolated, and nobody to talk and try to console what's going on in there life, when he try to kill himself , as he plans to, some day, "at a time to be determined." But the plane that ferries him and the other camp workers between the Slope and civilization crashes in the Tundra, leaving Ottway with a handful of terrified survivors to face a punishing landscape with there injuries.
Wolves of the area are also on hunt, who see them as an invading pack, and the prospect of a death he didn't choose in its most insistent and sudden. As he battles to save the lives of those with him, he looks into the darkness of an unforgiving nature and must weigh the abysses in himself and the wrongs he carries against what he leaves behind, and choose whether his own life is worth saving when he want to kill himself in the first place.
Profile Image for Silver.
231 reviews48 followers
December 3, 2013
First of all let me say that there was a lot I enjoyed and liked about this book. I think that in many ways it had a lot to offer and was an engaging and gripping read. It was well written and I really enjoyed the stream-of-conscious first person narrative style of the story. I thought it gave a certain psychological aspect to the story and was an interesting and original way to tell the story. I am drawn to these sort of books in which man is pitted against nature and in return most resort to his own primal instincts in order to survive. I also really appreciated the stark bleakness of the book. I generally enjoy books which portray a very stark and brutal reality.

So I did really enjoy this book and thought it was a good read, well crafted, and by no means a bad story, but with that being said there was one thing which I did find bothersome.

While reading this book I could not help but think that the author just thought it would be cool to write a book about a group of men being hunted down by a pack of wolves. The wolves within the story act in a way that is completely contrary to their own nature. In fact the narrator himself within the book acknowledges that the wolves are behaving in a rather unusual way.

The wolves seem compelled by an almost vindictive need to slaughter the group of survivors and throughout the book behave in an incomprehensible way which even leaves the characters in the book baffled. At no point does the story even make an attempt to provide any sort of plausible reason for the wolves behavior. There seems to be no rhyme or reason for why the wolves are so willing to go through such persistent lengths to hunt down and kill these men, other than the fact that the author thought it would be thrilling and frightening.

I was left to wonder if perhaps the wolves were intended to be symbolic of death itself?
Profile Image for Iliana.
47 reviews6 followers
July 26, 2016
This pretty much takes everything out of you as you follow the characters and they get picked off one by one first by a plane crash and then by wolves and then by nature. Towards the end I was still optimistic, hoping the main character (AT LEAST) will make it. That he'll follow the river towards civilization, that the wolves will give up. Alas.
6 reviews2 followers
March 13, 2012
When reading The Grey, Jack London comes to mind. I found this wolf-packed survival history of human and animal nature as an opposite to Call of the Wild. Both stories show us how the lives of men and canines could be linked and how these connections remain with us 'till the end.
75 reviews43 followers
May 19, 2014
A gripping story about how a group of men deal with the fatal force of nature and the certainty of death. The story deviates a bit from the movie, especially Ottway’s personal history, which, I think, makes it more interesting. A must read for every man.
94 reviews1 follower
May 24, 2021
1.5, and even that’s generous. I save 1’s for DNFs. I finished this, begrudgingly. Only took 2 days but maybe felt like 7. The movie kicks this book’s ass. Watch that.

Look, the story was not bad, it was actually very interesting. However, what kills this for me was the writing. The writing was atrocious. Like, really bad. Like, first draft bad. This book was sorely in need of an editor, as dialogue could get confusing and was laid out improperly. Typos, inappropriate commas GALORE. Run on sentences like a mf*ker. It almost, dare I say, read like it was an ESL author at times who didn’t have enough help with the language. Fight scenes with the wolves were incredibly clunky, and the narrator was incredibly annoying and held no authority over the narrative—not in a “unreliable narrator” sort of way, but in an incredibly unpolished one. This was a grinding read that really made me feel as miserable as the characters in the story, so...perhaps the immersion was better than I thought.

This was not good, and I REALLY wanted to love it, but I just could not, and cannot in good conscience recommend it. If it was edited and worked on and had gone through multiple drafts, I’d be all over it. But it wasn’t (or if it was, it really gave the impression that a poor job was done on that front).

Profile Image for CJ Butler.
13 reviews11 followers
November 23, 2017
Its a bit different from the film adaption, I can assure you but the feel is still there and there is more to learn about Ottway than there ever was in the film co-written by the same author. The book is intense, unforgiving, and has more of a realistic vibe to it qnd in a bag it could be one of the classics of the past decade, I reccomend this book to everyone who is in for gritty in your face adventure and true-to-life-survival-horror. I definitely dig this man's work and I hope I read more books by him eventually.
Profile Image for Rebecca.
1 review
September 25, 2018
Better than the film, but the stream of consciousness style of writing is quite irritating. As an ecologist, I find some of the wolf behaviour difficult to believe. Not to mention the total lack of female wolves! 😝
Profile Image for Toni.
308 reviews8 followers
January 15, 2020
The Grey
This book is great. If u want a wild ride. This book will take u on it. Definitely recommend this book.
11 reviews
September 3, 2021
I think that this book was very suspenseful and thrilling just like the movie however it was very intense and had some details of gore, so if you don't like anything like that I wouldn't recommend this book. this book also had a lot of meaning to it and I think you can really see that showing throughout this book.
Profile Image for Francisco.
347 reviews8 followers
August 30, 2013
He de admitirlo: me gustó más la película, aunque por los motivos equivocados. Son esas escenas de Hollywood las que le dan ventaja y el hecho de que los compañeros de Ottway son más reales que lo del libro, en su perspectiva más de autoreflexión que de narración. El Ottway de la película (Liam Neeson I-will-find-you-and-I-will-kill-you) es intenso, duro y excepto esa escena casi al final donde grita a Dios, inquebrantable, mientras que el del libro permite conocer lo que piensa, lo que siente, su desesperanza y frustración, sus fantasmas personales y definitivamente se vuelve más humano. Un lector previo de "The Grey" ha puesto en Goodreads que los lobos también son una metáfora de los demonios internos y eso me cambió mi perspectiva de lectura, porque al final, no pude dejar de interpretar que en Ottway huía de los lobos buscando una salvación que de antemano sabía inalcanzable y es al final, cansado, herido, su final del camino (¿la vejez?)que debe enfrentarse a su más grande enemigo, para vencerlo o morir con él, hasta el último intento. Y eso, para mí, es redención. Muy recomendable, pero triste, yo lo he disfrutado.
Profile Image for Daniel Kelly.
20 reviews
April 1, 2015
There are some really great moments here, especially when the character unfurls his back-story over the final chapters. Here "The Grey" finds some of the meaning and heft that makes the cinematic interpretation so powerful. However, the preceding 130 pages (it's a short book that took more than a few days to read, never a great sign) are hampered by a tough to digest stream of consciousness, one unsupported by a genuine voice or distinctive set-pieces. The survivalist element is competent, but can't redeem the lack of identifiable complexity or mystique the narrator places up-front. Ultimately, "The Grey" withholds its best content for much too long, leading to a sporadically touching, but oft grinding read.

Profile Image for James.
Author 5 books78 followers
May 26, 2012
I thought this novella was very well-plotted and found it a much better source of entertainment than the movie which was based on it (sorry to spout the old cliche but I think a better script could have been created out of this yarn). It reminded me of the Jack London short story 'Love of Life', with the exception that it is grittier and the odds more heavily stacked against the men who are fighting for survival. It is also a darker tale, albeit replete with much dark humour which is strangely engaging. I could not put it down.
Profile Image for Alana.
1,690 reviews50 followers
August 20, 2014
I still can't entirely decide if I like this one. It's definitely very dark and has some supernatural elements to it, in a way. On the surface, it's a story of wilderness survival and the comradeship of men in dire circumstances, but it plays out more as one man working through all of his inner demons, and whether he overcomes or succumbs to them in the end is left a bit up to the reader's interpretation.

This one is definitely one I would avoid in it's film adaptation, but that's because I'm squeamish and don't like scary stuff; others of you might find it quite enjoyable.
3.5/5
Profile Image for Nick.
391 reviews20 followers
August 23, 2021
I read this short novella right before watching the movie when it came out on DVD. I remember aspects of both and now I find myself adding this to my re-read list because I may be getting certain film and book elements mixed and intertwined.

Either way I did enjoy this read. It's fast paced and the scenery and wolves description are beautiful and terrifying all in same breath. It shows the uncanny human need for survival as well as human despair and suffering.

4 stars and I will review upon re reading it.
Author 10 books8 followers
June 21, 2013
One of those occasions when I saw the movie and then turned to the book because I was left wanting for more. (Also had something to do with Liam Neeson playing the lead role - i read the book so I could imagine the first person monologues being delivered the him!)

A good, short, but powerful read for those who want to think twice and thrice about what really happened in the end.. or was it in the beginning..
Profile Image for Christine Sinclair.
1,068 reviews11 followers
January 31, 2015
I'm not a fan of gore and violence, and I probably wouldn't go see this movie (even with the handsome Liam Neeson as the star). That said, the book is excellent! Man vs. nature, man vs. wolf, man vs. himself. The descriptions are gripping, and the action and suspense constant. The backstory of the main character Ottway, gives the novel much more depth than your usual cliffhanger survival story. A very good read, all in one sitting!
Profile Image for Mark Gendro.
469 reviews
August 28, 2021
[3 stars]

Simplistic writing and repetitive, yet entertaining. The film adaptation is far superior. The movie is based on the original novella "Ghost Walker"; whereas this is an expanded version of that novella which was released after the movie. This story is better suited for visual representation, but it is a decent quick read.
Profile Image for Bill.
252 reviews23 followers
October 26, 2013
This was a mildly interesting extended short story about a plane crash in Alaska. The all male survivors have to battle the intense cold, packs of blood thirsty wolves, and mainly themselves. One by one they are killed off in various ways until the inconclusive ending. It was not very satisfying. 2*.
May 13, 2015
Very well paced book, action from start to finish. The writing style was a little confusing for me at first, but I caught on pretty quick. The book is different enough from the movie that they're both worth enjoying separately. A sad, brutal, and bloody story that never let's you feel safe and out of danger. Excellent book!
Displaying 1 - 30 of 45 reviews

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