Thursday Review: Allegiant

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The Blurb: The faction-based society that Tris Prior once believed in is shattered—fractured by violence and power struggles and scarred by loss and betrayal. So when offered a chance to explore the world past the limits she’s known, Tris is ready. Perhaps beyond the fence, she and Tobias will find a simple new life together, free from complicated lies, tangled loyalties, and painful memories.

But Tris’s new reality is even more alarming than the one she left behind. Old discoveries are quickly rendered meaningless. Explosive new truths change the hearts of those she loves. And once again, Tris must battle to comprehend the complexities of human nature—and of herself—while facing impossible choices about courage, allegiance, sacrifice, and love.

Told from a riveting dual perspective, Allegiant, by #1 New York Times best-selling author Veronica Roth, brings the Divergent series to a powerful conclusion while revealing the secrets of the dystopian world that has captivated millions of readers in Divergent and Insurgent.

My thoughts:

I can’t complain about this book because I didn’t put it down. Do I wish the ending was different, yes. But very few series end exactly how I want them to, and endings were hard. I was happy to get Four’s POV, and while I’ve heard a lot of other reviewers say they couldn’t differentiate between the two voices, I had no trouble. Then again, people have said the same thing about my third book, so maybe it’s not a good sign I didn’t have a problem? :S

I appreciated how much all of the character’s changed from book one. And I enjoyed reading this book. My only complaint is one I’ve said since book one of the series. There was too much story for too little book. The first book should have (in my opinion) ended with Tris’ initiation/winning thing with Dauntless and the nagging feeling something isn’t right. Because that was the end of that story’s arc. The second book should have started with that huge thing that happened at the end of book one, and that entire thing, Tris’ reactions to her mom and dad, all of that, should have taken up a *huge* chunk of book two. I don’t remember much of book two, but I can tell you between all the new characters and reveals in book three, there should have either been more books, or a much longer book to allow me to fully feel the impact of everything that happened. So *much* happened. And the second you learned one thing, it was replaced with another that made the first thing irrelevant. I think with enough build up and slower pacing, the ending would have been perfect.

It’s not a knock on the author that I wanted more of her story. Entire books more even. It just means I got so invested in the world I want to spend more time with it. Who knows, she might have short stories in the works to flesh out. If so, I look forward to reading them.

Thursday Review: Graceling

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The Blurb:
In the Seven Kingdoms, people born with an extreme skill, “Grace”, are feared and exploited. Katsa herself despises hers, killing. Her uncle Randa, King of the Middluns, commands her to punish and torture his enemies. Prince Po, with combat skills, becomes her friend, and she learns terrible truths about her Grace and a secret hidden far away that could destroy the realm.

My Review: I really enjoyed the world building and the concept behind Graceling. The idea of Graces (essentially super powers) and their limits was interesting. There was plenty of action, but never so much that violence didn’t have time to have consequences. There were major character arcs for Po and Katsa, their characters develop so much that they almost aren’t recognizable at the end. That’s not a bad thing. Kristin Cashore had a firm grip on who her characters were, and she wasn’t afraid to take risks to get them to change that much realistically. I really enjoyed this book and checked out the next two at my library as soon as I finished it.

That being said, I still felt a bit of a disconnect in this book. I liked the characters, I liked the world, but I never really felt connected to either. There was something about the pacing. So much happened in this book on so many different levels, and despite that it seemed to drag in places. It was still incredible writing, and I enjoyed it, I just wonder if maybe there was actually more than one book (or novella even) in this story. I could see the entire overarching plot of this one book being an entire trilogy without taking away a single thing that made it great.

Thursday Review: Rot and Ruin series

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Blurb: In the zombie-infested, post-apocalyptic America where Benny Imura lives, every teenager must find a job by the time they turn fifteen or get their rations cut in half. Benny doesn’t want to apprentice as a zombie hunter with his boring older brother Tom, but he has no choice. He expects a tedious job whacking zoms for cash, but what he gets is a vocation that will teach him what it means to be human

I picked up the first Rot and Ruin book from a friend in my cohort a year ago. The book seemed standalone, and was pretty good, so when I saw the next two novels in the library, I grabbed them.

This series gets super dark. The world building is very similar to Walking Dead. Everyone comes back as a zombie when they die, but bites speed up the infection. And as in most post-apocalyptic zombie scenarios, the people are almost worse than the undead. Everyone lives in these secure settlements, but every now and then children go missing. Our protagonists discover theres a place called Game Land where children are given weapons and thrown at zombies for entertainment. Really, humanity just goes down hill from there.

These books were scary, and not just because of the zombies, but because the descent into the dark side of humanity, and the rage and fear that lives there, was realistic. If you like zombies, this series is a must read.

Thursday Review: Glass Frost

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The Blurb: When joined together, Cinderella’s slippers grant the wearer her heart’s desire. But whose wish will be granted?

When Cinderella’s glass slipper is stolen, Queen Felicia sends her faithful steward Terrance to the real world to retrieve his love and witch-in-training, Bianca Frost. The power of the glass slipper in the wrong hands could ruin peace in Everafter. Bianca must gather every bit of magic she has learned in the past few weeks to find the slipper and protect her new love. Together, Bianca, Ming, Prince Ferdinand, and Terrance venture deep into the heart of Everafter to seek clues as to who has stolen the slipper and why. Along the way, they uncover what happened to the Seven Dwarves after Snow White married the prince, but also learn the awful risk of tampering with black magic and the high price that must be paid for magical aid, even when used for good.

Bianca and Terrance’s relationship is put to the test. Through the pain of suffering and loss, Bianca must determine if following her gallant boyfriend into his faraway world is in fact her heart’s desire.

My Review: Full disclosure. I’m a jerk. I begged my fellow Musa author Liz Dejesus for a copy of Glass Frost, and she was nice enough to send me an advance copy. So why am I writing a review months later? Life got crazy at the end of last semester and I am, just this week, caught up from being behind on an entire semesters worth of promotions and blogging and all that fun author stuff. Somehow this amazing book kept getting pushed to side in favor of my never-ending to-do list.

Not today!

If you haven’t read First Frost, and you like fairy tale retellings, go read it. It’s a cute book with an amazing concept. All the fairy tales are real? Well, yeah, that’s a given, but this is actually even cooler than that. All the fairy tales are real, AND there’s a fairy tale museum that has artifacts from all the original stories; A glass slipper, a lock of Rapunzel’s Hair, a brick from the house of the third little pig. And they sell Princess gear and have a story time. Liz, I’m telling you, open this museum. I will buy an annual pass and take my three year old there every day for story time.

What Bianca Frost, daughter of the owner of the museum, doesn’t know is that all artifacts are real and they are all magic.

Anyway, she figures all of that out in book one, so go read that book.

In this book, Bianca is back, along with her friend Ming and the handsome boys from Fairytale land. There was much more action in this book than the last one. Liz strikes this amazing tone between nostalgic fairy tale you might have heard as a child, and young adult romance. The story does land more on the young end of young adult, so rest assured, this book is a clean read.

The ONLY thing I didn’t like about this book, and I had to dig deep to find this, is the Ming thing. I love Ming. But if I was Ming’s mother, I would be furious with Bianca’s mother. Rose (Bianca’s mom) was not going to let Bianca go visit the Ever After because it was too dangerous. Bianca eventually talks her into it, and Rose lets her go on one condition. Her unmagical, completely defenseless (whose parents think is visiting disney land) human friend go with her. I think it would have raised the stakes and made for better tension if Ming snuck along.

But that is probably just the mom in me. I love that Ming is there. She grounds the story and frankly, I identify with the girl who got scared and went home more than the girl who faced impossible odds. I like and look up to Bianca, but I think it’s great that Liz provided us with a female character who isn’t weak, but isn’t death defyingly strong either. In a post-Buffy world, the “Strong female character” has become the norm. And while that’s great, and it sends a good message, not everyone is strong. Not everyone is THAT brave. And it’s okay. Ming isn’t a weak, shallow, or one dimensional character by any means. She feels like a real person. She’s still a likable character even.

I like that Bianca has parents and friends and a life outside of her romance. She may be in a fairy tale but she has a life too. If you like fairy tales, check out First Frost and Glass Frost. You won’t regret it.

Thursday Review: The House of Hades

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The Blurb: At the conclusion of The Mark of Athena, Annabeth and Percy tumble into a pit leading straight to the Underworld. The other five demigods have to put aside their grief and follow Percy’s instructions to find the mortal side of the Doors of Death. If they can fight their way through the Gaea’s forces, and Percy and Annabeth can survive the House of Hades, then the Seven will be able to seal the Doors both sides and prevent the giants from raising Gaea. But, Leo wonders, if the Doors are sealed, how will Percy and Annabeth be able to escape?

They have no choice. If the demigods don’t succeed, Gaea’s armies will never die. They have no time. In about a month, the Romans will march on Camp Half-Blood. The stakes are higher than ever in this adventure that dives into the depths of Tartarus.

My review: It is so much fun reading how another author played interpreted Tartarus, Hades, and all things mythological. I loved the idea that Tartarus was alive. It flows with the original mythology really well, and answered some questions about how monsters keep coming back in this series. I did have an issue with the button thing, just because the monsters of Percy’s world never really seemed 1) bright enough to time something and 2) cooperative enough/trusting enough to put their lives in one another’s hands for twelve minutes. It added great tension, but it kind of felt like that was just there to add tension.

I love how much the characters in this series have grown, and I love how unique Riordan makes all their voices. I didn’t appreciate the red-shirting that happened toward the end. I saw it coming from a mile away and it was super sad, but

**spoiler**

I don’t like it when characters are literally introduced just to die. It makes me feel like the author wrote themselves into a corner and threw something expendable at it. It worked, and Riordan did a GREAT job, in fact it even tied up a loose end from earlier in the seris, but I just KNEW the minute that character was introduced… I saw this thing on tumbler that showed Leo,the seventh wheel shutting the door on the other side, and it was super sad to think that might be the resolution, but that resolution made sense. Him or Nico. It’s not that I want a character to die or anything. I just feel like the plot demanded it.

Since I’m in spoiler territory…OMG! Leo and Callpyso! Amazing! Loved it!
And the Nico thing!!!!

Spoilers over:

Anyway… I really enjoyed the book. I liked the dialogue, the tension was great, and it kept me reading. Now to wait for the next one….

Thursday Review: The Abandon Trilogy by Meg Cabot

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The blurb:

Man that cover sequence is amazing. Okay, here’s the blurb for the second book. Why the second book and not the first? Because it’s been a year since I read the first book, so this review is mostly about the last two, which I just finished.

Escape from the realm of the dead is impossible when someone there wants you back.

Seventeen-year-old Pierce Oliviera isn’t dead.

Not this time.

But she is being held against her will in the dim, twilit world between heaven and hell, where the spirits of the deceased wait before embarking upon their final journey.

Her captor, John Hayden, claims it’s for her own safety. Because not all the departed are dear. Some are so unhappy with where they ended up after leaving the Underworld, they’ve come back as Furies, intent on vengeance…on the one who sent them there and on the one whom he loves.

But while Pierce might be safe from the Furies in the Underworld, far worse dangers could be lurking for her there…and they might have more to do with its ruler than with his enemies.

And unless Pierce is careful, this time there’ll be no escape.

My Review: So full disclosure. I have a bit of bitterness toward this series and The Goddess Test series. It has nothing to do with the authors or the writers. But when I was querying Persephone, I was shot down by a few publishing houses because Abandon and The Goddess Test were coming out later that year and they didn’t want the market saturated.

But then I got published with Musa and decided when I saw Abandon in the library to give it a shot. I like Meg Cabot, I like Persephone, seemed like a win to me.

I hated it, but I don’t know if it actually had anything to do with the book or the fact that I’d been shot down for something that, sure featured a Persephone myth, but was SO fundamentally unlike my book that it seemed crazy it was rejected for fear or saturating the market. Completely different takes.

I can’t separate all that frustration enough to review the first book enough to do it justice. But I kept seeing the books around and I sort of fell in love with the covers so I picked up the next two books.

I really liked them! I don’t know if the book was actually better or if I’m just in a healthier place now, but I really enjoyed this book. Pierce didn’t seem as difficult to access to me. Before I had a hard time “getting” her, but in this book I understood her reactions, and she seemed very three dimensional. I like John, despite the borderline abusive vibe that seems so common to YA these days, but at least in his character it makes sense. His dad was an abusive control freak and these things tend to go in cycles. I like that he seemed to be fighting it, and at times called himself on it.

The plot was unique and interesting, and really other than the fact that the Underworld exists and they keep making references to Hades and Persephone, it’s not what I would consider to be a retelling of the myth. The story is completely separate and stands on its own without the myth. If they removed all references to the Underworld at all and called it something neutral like the After Life, the tone of the story would barely shift. That…wouldn’t work in my book, lol, so this is a much more original plot. The settings all felt like real places, and the secondary characters were engaging enough that I really hope she follows them around in short stories some. I’d love to get in their heads. The only issues that I had with the secondary characters is that they all seemed…REALLY unintelligent if they were good guys. It was kind of like good guy = simple, childlike, innocent reasoning skills which just didn’t jive with the fact that many of these are adults who would be complicated people with multifaceted reactions. I liked that Uncle Chris’s character was simpler than most of the kids in the book. That worked, and it made sense, and it kind of made his whole character tragic. But when the mom, dad, cemetery guy, his boyfriend, helpers in the Underworld, random strangers, bad guys, police officers, and every other character that couldn’t be outright called evil displayed the same good natured innocent simplicity, it took me out of the story.

But those are background characters, so it’s not that big of a deal. The main characters and secondary characters like Alex and Kayla were actually very interesting to me. I don’t know if I’ll pick anything else up by Cabot, her writing style, which to be clear, is fantastic, just doesn’t create the type of book I read. Doesn’t mean it’s not good, and I did end up enjoying these books, but it’s just not my thing. I’m happy in my slightly darker comfort zone.

I’m on the waiting list for the third book and am actually really looking forward to reading it.

Thursday Review: The Rising

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Blurb:
Things are getting desperate for Maya and her friends. Hunted by the powerful St. Clouds and now a rival Cabal as well, they’re quickly running out of places to hide. And with the whole world thinking they died in a helicopter crash, it’s not like they can just go to the authorities for help.

All they have is the name and number of someone who might be able to give them a few answers. Answers to why they’re so valuable, and why their supernatural powers are getting more and more out of control.

But Maya is unprepared for the truths that await her. And now, like it or not, she’ll have to face down some demons from her past if she ever hopes to move on with her life. Because Maya can’t keep running forever.

Old secrets are revealed and unexpected characters make a surprising return in this stunning conclusion to Kelley Armstrong’s New York Times bestselling Darkness Rising trilogy.

My Review: Kelley Armstrong is one of my favorite authors, and YA books are my favorite genre (yes, I know there are tons of genres in YA, I like them ALL better than “grown up” books). I was SO excited when she started writing YA. I am again going to point out how much her books are like L.J Smith’s books. Much more fleshed out of course, and better quality, but you have to understand how much the expectations of the genre changed since the 80’s. Anyhow, the first trilogy reminded me of all the good stuff from L.J Smith’s Dark Visions trilogy. Chloe is my favorite female MC ever. I modeled Persephone after her a bit (just a bit, Persephone got her voice pretty quickly and it wasn’t quiet once it made itself known).

This trilogy reminded me of the first one. Great tension, good characters. Maya wasn’t as good as Chloe (to me) but she was still better than most YA narrators. Armstrong allows her characters to think rationally and react to crazy situations realistically. When Maya’s long lost bio family is thrown at her, it is a tense and awkward reunion full of angst and mixed feelings as it would be. I was super happy to see Chloe and group in this book. Overall, very well done.

Really* good book. I only had two problems. The ending was….good but a little too good and happy for what they gave up. I felt like Armstrong was trying to be a bit too realistic. What would a group of teens do against a super powerful corporation? How could they have any hope of succeeding? True, it’s a pretty big obstacle to overcome, but that’s kind of a corner that the Armstrong wrote herself into. I just think another resolution could have been found that FELT better, or at least the characters should have felt worse.

The other problem was that it was a chase novel, which would be good, in fact, for a chase novel it was GREAT. 5 stars. But the second book in the series was a chase novel too. And so was a small chunk of the first book. Actually, if you removed the chase scenes from the second book, the actual progression of plot would fit neatly in book one and three. Or more from the first half of this book could have been introduced in book 2, like one of the new characters, which would have given hum more time to develop. There was a lot in this book that could have been focused on rather than running if some of that could have been shifted to book 2. More time could have been spent on the combination of trilogy one group and trilogy two group. I wanted to see more of their interaction. A lot of that learning about their powers and researching bit could have happened in conjunction with Kit, who would have a very logical reason to know what the experiments were trying to accomplish. And maybe the ending could have progressed without needing an epilogue to tell us what happened over bulks of time.

Don’t let any of those nitpicks deter you from reading this series though. It IS really good, all six books. I really did enjoy them. I love Kelley Armstrong 🙂

Thursday Review: American Gods

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The Blurb:

Days before his release from prison, Shadow’s wife, Laura, dies in a mysterious car crash. Numbly, he makes his way back home. On the plane, he encounters the enigmatic Mr Wednesday, who claims to be a refugee from a distant war, a former god and the king of America.

Together they embark on a profoundly strange journey across the heart of the USA, whilst all around them a storm of preternatural and epic proportions threatens to break.

Scary, gripping and deeply unsettling, AMERICAN GODS takes a long, hard look into the soul of America. You’ll be surprised by what and who it finds there…

This is the author’s preferred text, never before published in the UK, and is about 12,000 words longer than the previous UK edition.

The review:

When I brought draft one, chapter one of Persephone to my very first meeting with the Athens Area Writer’s group, I was asked by six different people “Have you read American Gods?”

No, I hadn’t, but because they were asking because it was a similar premise (gods existing in modern day, yet dying for want of worship) I held off until Persephone was published, just to avoid any accidental borrowing.

Then I held off because life got crazy and grad school got crazier.

Then I forgot all about American Gods until a friend picked it for book club, and WOW do I regret waiting. First of all, deeply flattered anyone saw ANY similarities between my little YA novel and ANYTHING Gaimen penned, much less this novel. Seriously, flattered. Other than the premise stated above, I don’t see much resemblance, but if I close my eyes and wish really hard, maybe one day I’ll write something to his caliber.

In this novel, the gods of old are giving a final dying gasp as they try to compete with the worship the new gods, media, technology, ect, get from, well, us. But they aren’t going down without a fight. Cue an awesome road trip with the best written, deeply flawed, least sympathetic characters ever. There are no “good” guys in this book, no team to root for, but no bad guys either. Everyone firmly wallows in the land of grey, including our protagonist Shadow, and my absolute favorite character, Laura.

American Gods reminds me a lot of a Christopher Moore novel. It has the same irreverent humor as Lamb, and the same sad ending you can see from miles away that can still surprise you, be heartbreaking, and funny at the same time. Books like this also have the strange ability to make me feel smarter than I actually am, and inspire REALLY deep conversations at book club. Read it, you’ll enjoy it 🙂

Thursday Review: Beautiful Creatures

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There were no surprises in Gatlin County.
We were pretty much the epicenter of the middle of nowhere.
At least, that’s what I thought.
Turns out, I couldn’t have been more wrong.
There was a curse.
There was a girl.
And in the end, there was a grave.

Lena Duchannes is unlike anyone the small Southern town of Gatlin has ever seen, and she’s struggling to conceal her power and a curse that has haunted her family for generations. But even within the overgrown gardens, murky swamps and crumbling graveyards of the forgotten South, a secret cannot stay hidden forever.

Ethan Wate, who has been counting the months until he can escape from Gatlin, is haunted by dreams of a beautiful girl he has never met. When Lena moves into the town’s oldest and most infamous plantation, Ethan is inexplicably drawn to her and determined to uncover the connection between them.

In a town with no surprises, one secret could change everything.

My Review:

I couldn’t get into this book. I tried, I kept reading it, then I’d put it down for awhile, and then I’d read it again. There were things I liked. The story was narrated by a normal human boy who was mooning over a supernatural teenage girl instead of the other way around, but I was kind of wondering why it wasn’t just narrated by Lena.

The thing I couldn’t get past, and this is a silly thing that is no reflection on the author and the writing, but I am so tired of the depiction of THAT south. I’ve lived in the South almost all my life. Heck, I went to school in Phenix City, Alabama, a city so southern that it’s spelled wrong. (Don’t tell me it’s not, their whole reason for choosing the name was to grab hold of that “out of the ashes metaphor. I took Alabama State History. I know). There was definitely some Civil War fascination, and now that I think about it, in history that was pretty much all we focused on. But that’s not the attitude of the whole south. That’s not even the attitude of a whole southern town. The kids are tired of it there too. My husband lived in a city so small that he is literally related to over half the town. They can be closed minded, sure, but not every single person. What does this add to Southern Literature? I’m not saying to ignore the bigotry, but don’t make is SO one dimensional. There is more to us.

This story, to me, seemed like it grabbed on to every negative southern stereotype in every direction. We have a black maid/cook/wise woman of the swamp who dabbles in Voodoo type magic. Rabid Southern church-goers, gossiping judgmental Daughters of the Revolution. Mysterious shut ins who get referred to as Boo-Radley. Bitchy cheerleaders. Annoying jocks. I mean really, there couldn’t have been a single other positive female role Lena’s age? Our protagonist has known these kids his entire life. Wouldn’t he know there was more to them? The only good people in the entire city are either out of towners or magic users or the MC? I couldn’t get over how offended this made me on behalf of my whole region to get into the story. I had to put the story down every time I got to a line that started like “In the South, we…” And that happened a lot.

And can we talk about the fact that one of the “evil” female characters defining characteristics was that she acted slutty? Can we sending girls the message that their sexuality is evil and can overpower an otherwise good boys judgement and make them do things they otherwise wouldn’t? Intimacy with Lena literally hurts/can kill the MC.

Lena has to be saved. This is Ethan’s mission from his very first dream. That kind of redeems itself since she is the one who saves him and she’s got powers, but there’s kind of an undertone that Lena wasn’t strong enough without him.

I loved the message of claim yourself, that there is good and evil in all of us, but I wish for once, “evil” for a woman didn’t have to be expressed by how promiscuous they act. How is THAT attitude any different than the attitude of those evil, close-minded southerners that get jabbed at so much in this book?

Thursday Review: Before I Fall

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Blurb: What if you only had one day to live? What would you do? Who would you kiss? And how far would you go to save your own life?

Samantha Kingston has it all: looks, popularity, the perfect boyfriend. Friday, February 12, should be just another day in her charmed life. Instead, it turns out to be her last.

The catch: Samantha still wakes up the next morning. Living the last day of her life seven times during one miraculous week, she will untangle the mystery surrounding her death—and discover the true value of everything she is in danger of losing.

Review: I love Groundhog Day. I love Christmas Every Day and all those other movies that have used the Groundhog Day trope. This book was amazing, and heartbreaking. I thought Oliver did a fantastic job of showing character growth. In terms of character development, it was actually better than the Delirium series. These were real people. They felt like people I knew.

It was also heartbreaking. I thought about this book for a long time after I put it down. That’s always a good sign. The only complaint I had is I did not know when the character figured out the days were only going to repeat 7 times. It says so in the blurb, and the character moves through a stage of grief a day (cleverly done) ending on acceptance.

But and spoilers ahead ***** her acceptance made no sense given that there were days that she didn’t die. To be clear, I liked the acceptance. I loved the ending. I just felt like a scene was missing where the character figured out the rules.

You should read this book if you need a good cry. It was amazing.