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  • Category: Reviews 2013

    • Book Review: “Raven Flight” by Juliet Marillier

      Posted at 9:03 pm by Laura, on July 16, 2013

      Raven Flight by Juliet Marillier 16085465

      Publisher: Knopf Books for Young Readers
      Publishing Date: July 2013
      Genre: young adult, fantasy
      ISBN: 9780375869556
      Goodreads: 4.08
      Rating: 
      ★★★★

      Neryn has finally found the rebel group at Shadowfell, and now her task is to seek out the elusive Guardians, vital to her training as a Caller. These four powerful beings have been increasingly at odds with human kind, and Neryn must prove her worth to them. She desperately needs their help to use her gift without compromising herself or the cause of overthrowing the evil King Keldec.

      Neryn must journey with the tough and steadfast Tali, who looks on Neryn’s love for the double agent Flint as a needless vulnerability. And perhaps it is. What Flint learns from the king will change the battlefield entirely-but in whose favor, no one knows.

      Neryn, after an exhausting and enlightening journey to Shadowfell with Flint, has finally found a place to call home with fellow rebels in King Keldec’s Alban kingdom. It is there she begins her training as a Caller, a person with the ability to call upon all fairy-like creatures called the Good Folk, to save Alban from destructive rule and bring it back to it’s traditional, safe ways. But she must meet with the four Guardians before she can help her rebel cause in this war, and she must travel in secret from King Keldec. With Flint as his most trusted confidante, how will the cause stay alive? And how will Flint manage to continue his double-agent life?

      Once again, Marillier brings to life Anglo-Saxon Celtic folklore in a very Tolkien-esque world. I was absolutely enchanted and could not put the book down. Neryn, albeit small in stature and physically weak, has such a powerful mind and fantastic connection with humans and Good Folk alike that I cannot help but admire her strength, confidence, and will. She’s incredibly intelligent and determined. Her love for Flint is not the primary focus at all in this trilogy, which is such a relief. It makes every moment they have together all the more sweet, and her goal in this trilogy all the more powerful.

      I find Neryn’s tasks quite relaxing to read. It’s a lot of visualization, mental imagery to control the physical world, traditional rituals and respect to the old ways. In a way, Neryn’s tasks are meditative, reflective, and every sacrifice made by the Good Folk is done willingly in her honor. She’s such a peaceful character, such a pleasure to read.

      There is a chapter in the book regarding a summer festival, several days of games and tournaments featuring men of strength. It’s very medieval, reminds me of Renaissance fairs, and truly shows how remarkable Marillier can be when she incorporates her academic knowledge with this fictional lore. I appreciated the descriptions, no matter how enthralling or brutal. It brought past and present Alban culture to life.

      I cannot wait for the next installment!

      Read my review of the first book, Shadowfell. 

      Posted in books, Reviews 2013 | 0 Comments | Tagged book review, books, genre: fantasy, genre: young adult, goodreads, review
    • Book Review: “Broken Harbor” by Tana French

      Posted at 11:56 am by Laura, on July 12, 2013

      Broken Harbor by Tana French 16171207

      Publisher: Penguin
      Published: April 2013
      Genre: fiction, mystery
      ISBN: 9780143123309
      Goodreads: 3.93
      Rating: 
      ★★★

      Mick “Scorcher” Kennedy always brings in the killer. Always. That’s why he’s landed this high-profile triple homicide. At first, he thinks it’s going to be simple, but the murder scene holds terrifying memories for Scorcher. Memories of something that happened there back when he was a boy.

      Mick Kennedy always solves his cases and solves them efficiently. When O’Kelly gives him a case to work on with rookie partner Richie, Mick races to work. But this triple homicide of a family out in Brianstown, the old Broken Harbor, brings back memories of his own childhood vacations — one in particular he believes mangled his youngest sister’s sanity.

      This is the fourth in Tana French’s Dublin Murder Squad series. Kennedy appeared in the last, Faithful Place, following the trend of featuring the previous book’s side character as the new protagonist. Also typical of French’s style is the psychological twist within each case. Rather than spanning several weeks or months, this book spans less than a week, and it is packed full of clues, twists, and wild circumstances.

      I loved the dynamics of Kennedy’s partnership with rookie Richie. He teaches, he scolds, he praises. He does not belittle Richie like the rest of the department, but instead wants him to learn from his mistakes and observe others in action.

      The insanity bits begin to take hold when Kennedy’s sister Dina enters the scene. Her dialogue is fantastic — run-on sentences, incomplete phrases, scattered breaths and punctuation, ideas not quite stringing together. That sort of dialogue continues into Patrick’s character, and later Jenny’s, as you begin to see their worlds crumble around them. This is such an effective way of recognizing the deteriorating mind without it being the mind of the protagonist.

      What prevented me from giving this four or five stars is due to the length. There were many passages I felt were unnecessary — whole chapters, even. As much as I enjoyed Dina’s character, I think we could have done without this side story. There was something about it that felt unresolved, or that if it was going to be explored at all then it should be done in depth rather than in the back of the mind or whenever it was convenient.

      Posted in books, Reviews 2013 | 3 Comments | Tagged book review, books, genre: adult fiction, genre: fiction, genre: mystery, goodreads, review
    • Book Review: “The Poisoned House” by Michael Ford

      Posted at 6:04 pm by Laura, on July 11, 2013

      The Poisoned House by Michael Ford 7795293

      Publisher: Albert Whitman & Company
      Published: September 2012
      Genre: young adult, gothic, mystery, history
      ISBN: 9780807565902
      Goodreads: 3.59
      Rating: ★★★★

      Life can be cruel for a servant girl in 1850s London. Fifteen-year-old Abi is a scullery maid in Greave Hall, an elegant but troubled household. The widowed master of the house is slowly slipping into madness, and the tyrannical housekeeper, Mrs. Cotton, punishes Abi without mercy. But there’s something else going on in Greave Hall, too. An otherworldly presence is making itself known, and a deadly secret will reveal itself–a secret that will shatter everything Abi knows.

      Abigail Tamper would love nothing more than to escape Greave Hall, a place that has only brought grief since her mother’s death. But Mrs. Cotton, the wicked housekeeper, has other plans for the scullery maid. When the master’s son returns from war, mysterious things begin to happen to and around Abi, circumstances that cannot be explained without a person accusing her of madness.

      This is a quietly brilliant ghost story. Everything about it mimicked the work of Wilkie Collins: subtle gothic tones, household disturbances, tyrannical person of some power over the protagonist, and massive family secrets that only the protagonist can discover and reveal. The atmosphere was chilling and the situations dramatic. I loved the moments the ghost would make its presence known. I really enjoyed the superstition that came into play as well.

      Ford’s ghost story was a nice change from the fantastical ghost stories of disturbed spirits out to harm living people. There’s a line between frightening someone into realizing/recognizing a secret that needs to be put to rest, and chasing after someone for the pure enjoyment of watching them flee in fear.

      Posted in books, Reviews 2013 | 0 Comments | Tagged book review, books, genre: gothic, genre: history, genre: mystery, genre: young adult, goodreads, review
    • Book Review: “Dark Companion” by Marta Acosta

      Posted at 1:34 pm by Laura, on July 5, 2013

      Dark Companion by Marta Acosta 16059357

      Publisher: Tor Teen
      Published: June 2013
      Genre: gothic, paranormal romance, young adult
      ISBN: 9780765329653
      Goodreads: 3.56
      Rating: 
      ★

      Orphaned at the age of six, Jane Williams has grown up in a series of foster homes, learning to survive in the shadows of life. Through hard work and determination, she manages to win a scholarship to the exclusive Birch Grove Academy. There, for the first time, Jane finds herself accepted by a group of friends. She even starts tutoring the headmistress’s gorgeous son, Lucien. Things seem too good to be true.

      They are.

      The more she learns about Birch Grove’s recent past, the more Jane comes to suspect that there is something sinister going on. Why did the wife of a popular teacher kill herself? What happened to the previous scholarship student, whose place Jane took? Why does Lucien’s brother, Jack, seem to dislike her so much?

      As Jane begins to piece together the answers to these puzzles, she must find out why she was brought to Birch Grove—and what she would risk to stay there…

      Jane Williams takes advantage of a marvelous opportunity to go to a private all-girls school and escape her life of poverty and abuse in the foster home system. As she begins her new life there, she befriends the Radcliffe family: Mrs Radcliffe, headmistress of Birch Grove Academy; Mr Radcliffe, a calm and quiet businessman; Lucky, a gorgeous womanizer; and Jack, an artistic musician hell-bent on confusing Jane with his riddles. But as stories about previous foster students’ deaths and disappearances crop up, Jane cannot hide from the truth any longer, and looks to the Radcliffe family for answers.

      This review will contain three parts: a book review, a literary review, and a spoiler section. Disclaimer: this book is considered a “chick-lit update” of Jane Eyre and Twilight.

      Book Review

      At first, Jane came across as a tough and stern girl anxious to prove to others that she can be independent and take care of herself. Any fan of Jane Eyre can also see similarities and differences between Eyre and Williams, and even who the characters represent from the original. But as the story progressed, Jane no longer seemed like an independent person. She lost personality, too. One moment she appeared to be in some sort of abusive relationship with Lucky without even realizing it — a smart girl from the streets would know the signs immediately, so why didn’t she? The next she’s throwing herself at Jack while simultaneously accusing him of hating her, when there is no sign of that whatsoever in the book.

      The vampire storyline was imaginative and I appreciated this fresh new look to it — but then it became too strange, too odd, too discomforting. It was as if Acosta didn’t know what she wanted these characters to be, more vampire-like or more human-like. This is where comparisons to Twilight come in. Meyer at least was solid on what she wanted from her vampires: they were immortal, they could not go out in the sun, and they could drink any kind of blood. But Acosta did not come across as sure in her footing with the characters, and it left the story wanting.

      There were so many excellent opportunities for this book to shine. I was open to a Jane Eyre-vampire twist, but the characters were weak, the plot even weaker, and the dialogue and descriptions told rather than showed. That’s the art of writing: showing, not telling. Acosta did not master this concept at all.

      Literary Review

      I was very hopeful at the beginning. Acosta provided quotes from the top Gothic novels to help set the tone of each chapter. I could see Jane as Jane, Lucky and Jack combined as Rochester, and there was even a crazy Mason in the story for Bertha. There was a fire in an old building, a rough past childhood, and the desire to keep emotions down and hidden rather than exposing them and becoming vulnerable. All the elements for a gothic novel were there as well, with the setting, the horror and terror, the uncanny and fantastic…

      But it was horrible. The name “Jane Williams” is not plain, it’s very Anglo-Saxon aristocratic. “Jane Eyre” is plain for its all-vowels, no-consonants, one-syllable name. If we wanted a modern Jane to be plain, she could be Jane Smith or Jane Moore, something so common and so soft to say that she would go unnoticed. The description of her appearance is more exotic than plain, as well. She is part Mexican, has beloved light brown skin and dark brown hair and eyes. In this all-white town she transfers to, she would be the most beautiful and exotic person there, not plain like Jane Eyre was to her friends.

      Lucky and Jack, combined, were complete caricatures of Rochester. Rochester is rugged — considered ugly in Victorian times, where delicate men were beautiful, and attractive in modern times, where the burly and scruffy are seen as manly — and speaks in riddles. Everything he says has two meanings: one that Jane and the reader misinterpret, and the other that is revealed to be his true intentions and true meaning. Lucky and Jack do not fit that. Lucky is gorgeous, stunning, pale and blond and an Adonis, who treats Jane like scum despite all she does to make him happy. Jack exaggerates Rochester’s insistence that Jane is a pixie or an elf. Rochester believed Jane to be a quiet, all-knowing, delicate being, and joked that she came from the land of “little green men.” But Jack is constantly talking to Jane about fairies and pixies and halflings, to the point that their conversations aren’t real at all. It became annoying and saddening.

      SPOILERS — DO NOT READ ON IF YOU DO NOT WANT TO BE SPOILED

      These vampire-like people come from a small tribe in Romania that have a genetic anomaly, where they need to have human blood every once in a while to survive…according to Acosta. Okay, sure, that would work for a good plot, a nice scientific twist to it — but the need to have Companions that give the blood and are bound for life, all the money for people’s loyalty, the strange ceremonies, the perfect night vision and strength and speed? The way they look at normal people as if they’re food? That’s not normal. If someone needed human blood to survive, wouldn’t that be considered a weakness? The concept of this bothered me, and the lack of information given to Jane prior to her accepting to become Lucky’s Companion made everything so unbelievable. Why would this incredibly intelligent, scientific-minded, logical girl immediately accept something so bizarre without having questions of her own? Wouldn’t she want to know why they needed blood? Why they needed Companions rather than dealing with modern medical science? Why it had to be her and not someone else? Once again, her lack of personality and characterization conflicted with this neat not-quite-paranormal concept, and both fell through entirely.

      Posted in books, Reviews 2013 | 2 Comments | Tagged book review, books, genre: gothic, genre: paranormal, genre: young adult, goodreads, review
    • Book Review: “Shadowed Summer” by Saundra Mitchell

      Posted at 1:25 pm by Laura, on June 30, 2013

      Shadowed Summer by Saundra Mitchell 3351355

      Publisher: Delacorte Books for Young Readers
      Publishing Date: June 2010
      Genre: gothic, Southern gothic, mystery, young adult
      ISBN: 9780440422570
      Goodreads: 3.5
      Rating: 
      ★★★

      Iris is ready for another hot, routine summer in her small Louisiana town, hanging around the Red Stripe grocery with her best friend, Collette, and traipsing through the cemetery telling each other spooky stories and pretending to cast spells. Except this summer, Iris doesn’t have to make up a story. This summer, one falls right in her lap.

      Years ago, before Iris was born, a local boy named Elijah Landry disappeared. All that remained of him were whispers and hushed gossip in the church pews. Until this summer. A ghost begins to haunt Iris, and she’s certain it’s the ghost of Elijah. What really happened to him? And why, of all people, has he chosen Iris to come back to?

      Fourteen-year-old Iris and her friend Collette decide to do something different this summer in their teeny tiny town: speak to the dead. At first, Iris pretends to just go along with Collette hearing things and seeing things. Until one night, Iris really does hear something: a boy’s voice. Over the course of the summer, the girls begin to piece together the town’s one and only piece of unfinished news about a boy named Elijah who disappeared and whose body was never found.

      Although the narrator is naive and has a voice that seems much younger and far more imaginative than a fourteen-year-old, Iris does tell the story well and through plain and simple language. She doesn’t like to be bossed around by Collette but is afraid to lose her best friend. She’s not interested in boys but really wishes Elijah would come out and just say what he wants from her rather than pelting her bedroom with rocks.

      The story was haunting and a perfect ghost story to tell around a camp fire. It also captures the heart of Southern Gothic: God-fearing and superstitious people, children wandering around saying they’re afraid of witchcraft but they pretend to do spells anyway, knowing the proper way to bury the dead based on who can go to heaven and who can go to hell. The sweltering heat, playing around by the river, and the ghost lights that float away from the bayou all created such a rich atmosphere for this chilling tale.

      Posted in books, Reviews 2013 | 0 Comments | Tagged book review, books, genre: gothic, genre: mystery, genre: young adult, goodreads, review
    • Book Review: “A Spy in the House” by Y.S. Lee

      Posted at 3:52 pm by Laura, on June 28, 2013

      A Spy in the House by Y.S. Lee 9322741

      Publisher: Candlewick Press
      Publishing Date: April 2009
      Genre: young adult, mystery, historical fiction
      ISBN: 9780763652890
      Goodreads: 3.79
      Rating: 
      ★★★

      Rescued from the gallows in 1850s London, young orphan (and thief) Mary Quinn is surprised to be offered a singular education, instruction in fine manners — and an unusual vocation. Miss Scrimshaw’s Academy for Girls is a cover for an all-female investigative unit called The Agency, and at seventeen, Mary is about to put her training to the test. Assuming the guise of a lady’s companion, she must infiltrate a rich merchant’s home in hopes of tracing his missing cargo ships. But the household is full of dangerous deceptions, and there is no one to trust — or is there?

      Mary Lang is sentenced to death at age 12 for thievery when a young lady saves her and offers her a place at Miss Scrimshaw’s Academy for Girls. Eager to start a new life, Mary accepts and changes her name to Quinn. By the time she’s 17, she is asked to become a member of an undercover all-female detective agency. She is placed in a prominent household as a companion to a spoiled daughter, and is supposed to uncover the truth about a series of shipwrecks pertaining to smuggled artifacts. But what she finds out, and who she works with, is the biggest surprise of all.

      For diving into the book knowing absolutely nothing about it, I really enjoyed it. It was a quick read, and Lee certainly knows her Victorian history and culture. I was happy to see all aspects of Victorian London in the 1850s addressed: the snobbery of the upper class, the poor on the streets in filth, the Great Stink from the Thames, opium use, the influx of Asian sailors, and the oppression of women. Apart from Dickens, authors rarely remark upon the hushed-up or negative aspects of life of that time. If anything, these are mentioned in passing while the upper class characters go about their country holiday. This was, ironically, refreshing!

      Mary is an exception in Victorian culture. She is part Chinese and part Irish, but her features both help and hinder her navigation through society. Porcelain white English women know she looks different and assume she has black Irish, Spanish, or French ancestors, and Chinese women consider her too white to be a part of their culture. Not only is her race enough to make her an outcast, but her orphaned life, childhood crimes, and headstrong will sets her apart as well. She has “ideas” and “notions” and likes to be independent. It makes her job in the Agency easy. She’s already tough for a woman, and no one will pay attention to her in the household because of her outcast status, so snooping should be easy.

      Another aspect that I found refreshing in this mystery was the love interest — or lack thereof. James Easton is a charming man and thoroughly believes in Mary’s capabilities to be an independent woman. Mary stayed true to her character throughout the book and wouldn’t toss all responsibilities aside, though, and I’m grateful for that.

      What prevented me from giving this book five stars was the lack of urgency on her assignment. It sounded, from the very beginning, like another agent already had most of the work done and Mary would only be in the way. And as Mary continued to search for clues, three or four different plots spun in different directions, to the point where I’d forgotten what Mary’s original assignment was. Thankfully they all linked together in a cohesive manner, but it almost felt as if Mary wasn’t needed in the first place.

      Posted in books, Reviews 2013 | 2 Comments | Tagged book review, books, genre: fiction, genre: history, genre: mystery, genre: young adult, goodreads, review
    • Book Review: “Long Lankin” by Lindsey Barraclough

      Posted at 12:04 pm by Laura, on June 23, 2013

      Long Lankin by Lindsey Barraclough 12908035

      Publisher: Candlewick Press
      Publishing Date: January 2012
      Genre: young adult, horror, gothic, mystery
      ISBN: 9780763658083
      Goodreads: 3.70
      Rating: 
      ★★★★★

      When Cora and her younger sister, Mimi, are sent to stay with their elderly aunt in the isolated village of Bryers Guerdon, they receive a less-than-warm welcome. Auntie Ida is eccentric and rigid, and the girls are desperate to go back to London. But what they don’t know is that their aunt’s life was devastated the last time two young sisters were at Guerdon Hall, and she is determined to protect her nieces from an evil that has lain hidden for years. Along with Roger and Peter, two village boys, Cora must uncover the horrifying truth that has held Bryers Guerdon in its dark grip for centuries – before it’s too late for little Mimi. Riveting and intensely atmospheric, this stunning debut will hold readers in its spell long after the last page is turned.

      Cora and Mimi are sent by their father from London to Bryers Guerdon to temporarily live with their great-aunt Ida. Ida, however, does not want the girls and keeps trying to convince their father they should leave. Cora, headstrong and determined to make the best of this visit, makes friends with some neighbor boys, Roger and Peter and the rest of their family. As the days pass and Auntie Ida’s stern warnings to stay away from the church and to keep all doors and windows locked tight, Cora and Roger soon learn of a chilling family secret, and Mimi is the target victim of a long-standing family curse.

      Holy Mother of God.

      I could not put this book down, but I also could not read it without turning on all the lights and blasting happy Christmas music at night. Even in the day I kept seeking out more light and cheerful noise. Although the protagonists, Cora and Roger, are roughly age 10 and Mimi is 4, this is not a book for children. The content and the atmosphere are perfect for young adults, but may be a bit too terrifying for some.

      Barraclough took an old folk song and spun a chilling tale from it. The poem itself gave me chills (small excerpt below): 

      Said my lord to my lady as he mounted his horse:
      “Beware of Long Lankin that lives in the moss.”

      Said my lord to my lady as he rode away:
      “Beware of Long Lankin that lives in the hay.

      “Let the doors be all bolted and the windows all pinned,
      And leave not a hole for a mouse to creep in.”

      The doors were all bolted and the windows all pinned,
      Except one little window where Long Lankin crept in…

      Barraclough also captured all the classic gothic tricks in this chilling novel. First, an old and crumbling estate. Cora and Mimi are constantly fighting through cobwebs and choking on the rotting air. Second, a family history that needs to be uncovered. Cora is a curious sort, to her aunt’s disdain, and begins to ask all the adults in the area all sorts of questions about the crumbling church, the tree with rags and children’s shoes, why Ida still lives in a rotting mansion, why there is Latin writing all over the place, who knows who in the village and why are people worried Mimi will disappear, etc. Third, documents and religious implications are scattered throughout. Cora finds a tin box filled with writings on the history of Bryers Guerdon and the Guerdon family, all recorded by a parish rector from Ida’s time and dating back to the 1500s.  Finally, sightings of haunted children, ghosts, and spirits, and things that rattle and slither and go bump in the night, fill these pages. Every sound is significant. Every sighting has a purpose.

      Frightening, immensely chilling, well-plotted and deeply fascinating, this book is worth a read if one is looking for a perfect ghost story. I haven’t read any recently published ghost stories like this since Susan Hill’s The Woman in Black. 

      Posted in books, Reviews 2013 | 3 Comments | Tagged book review, books, genre: gothic, genre: horror, genre: mystery, genre: young adult, goodreads, review
    • Book Review: “The Archived” by Victoria Schwab

      Posted at 9:12 pm by Laura, on June 18, 2013

      The Archived by Victoria Schwab 10929432

      Publisher: Hyperion
      Publishing Date: January 2013
      Genre: young adult, gothic, mystery
      ISBN: 9781423157311
      Goodreads: 3.99
      Rating: 
      ★★★★

      Imagine a place where the dead rest on shelves like books.

      Each body has a story to tell, a life seen in pictures that only Librarians can read. The dead are called Histories, and the vast realm in which they rest is the Archive.

      Da first brought Mackenzie Bishop here four years ago, when she was twelve years old, frightened but determined to prove herself. Now Da is dead, and Mac has grown into what he once was, a ruthless Keeper, tasked with stopping often-violent Histories from waking up and getting out. Because of her job, she lies to the people she loves, and she knows fear for what it is: a useful tool for staying alive.

      Being a Keeper isn’t just dangerous—it’s a constant reminder of those Mac has lost. Da’s death was hard enough, but now her little brother is gone too. Mac starts to wonder about the boundary between living and dying, sleeping and waking. In the Archive, the dead must never be disturbed. And yet, someone is deliberately altering Histories, erasing essential chapters. Unless Mac can piece together what remains, the Archive itself might crumble and fall.

      Mackenzie Bishop does the best she can to hang on to her dead brother’s memory while her family aches and attempts to move on. When her family rebuilds life in the Coronado, an old hotel-turned-apartment building, history begins to haunt her — literally. She is a Keeper, responsible for the lost souls trapped between life and death. It is her job to find them and send them back to peaceful rest. But as more and more Histories appear, and one History seems unable to listen to her demands to leave, Mac begins to unravel a decades-long mystery that could lead to an answer as to why the Archive seems to be crumbling to pieces.

      Haunting, eerie, and filled with rich language and deep emotion, this book is a must-have for any reader interested in Victorian literature and Young Adult literature. It has the perfect combination of the slow-building and mysterious plot trademarked in Victorian literature, mixed with the first-person, raw emotions, and teenage heroes of today’s YA genre.

      Schwab’s concept of a library archive as a place for the dead was incredibly believable and deeply fascinating. The bodies lie in drawers, and are records of that particular person’s memories and experiences. Librarians take care of them, and make sure they stay “asleep” and are left undisturbed. When awakened, these Histories escape into the Narrows, dark and eerie, maze-like hallways between the Archive and the Outer, or our world. It is the Keeper’s responsibility of that section of Narrows to find the History and return them. If a History escapes into the Outer, Crew is called upon to fight and work them back into the Archive.

      When Mackenzie moves into the Coronado and meets Wes, a charming and funny character that I ached to see more of, she begins to realize that the older and more haunted a place, the busier her work load. But she has to hide all of her work from her parents, who grieve for their lost son. Mac’s struggles with awakening her brother or not plague her thoughts, and Wes does the best he can to keep her from dwelling in the past. Schwab does an excellent job of making Wes a likable character. One would think all of the self-confidence could be turned into arrogance, but Wes is nothing like that.

      The flashbacks with Mac’s grandfather, Da, were appropriately placed as well. It allows for the reader to experience the new world and new rules without Mac’s first person to stop and explain. The flashbacks take the reader to a time when Da was explaining the Archive to her for the first time. It also shows her strong bond with her grandfather, and her desire to do good by him and make him proud.

      This would be one of those books that I would have to say, “Read it to believe it.” The slow pace and suspenseful plot fits wonderfully with this sort of tale.

      Posted in books, Reviews 2013 | 3 Comments | Tagged book review, books, genre: gothic, genre: mystery, genre: young adult, goodreads, review
    • Book Review: “Defiance” by C.J. Redwine

      Posted at 9:25 pm by Laura, on May 24, 2013

      Defiance by CJ Redwine 11410430

      Publisher: Balzer + Bray
      Publishing Date: August 2012
      Genre: young adult, dystopian, post-apocalyptic, fantasy
      ISBN: 9780062117182
      Goodreads: 3.8
      Rating: 
      ★★★★★

      While the other girls in the walled city-state of Baalboden learn to sew and dance, Rachel Adams learns to track and hunt. While they bend like reeds to the will of their male Protectors, she uses hers for sparring practice.

      When Rachel’s father fails to return from a courier mission and is declared dead, the city’s brutal Commander assigns Rachel a new Protector: her father’s apprentice, Logan–the boy she declared her love to and who turned her down two years before. Left with nothing but fierce belief in her father’s survival, Rachel decides to escape and find him herself.

      As Rachel and Logan battle their way through the Wasteland, stalked by a monster that can’t be killed and an army of assassins out for blood, they discover romance, heartbreak, and a truth that will incite a war decades in the making.

      Rachel Adams — fierce, impulsive, strong, and daughter to the best courier and warrior of Baalboden — is filled with anger and grief when the brutal Commander declares her father dead and assigns her Protectorship to her father’s apprentice, Logan. Logan, a techie inventor who always has a plan, is just as determined as Rachel to prove Jared Adams is alive. But as Rachel throws caution to the wind and acts impulsively, all of Logan’s plans crumble, and the two are sent out of Baalboden on a death mission into the Wastelands, where the Cursed One is bound to turn up at any moment.

      I eyed this book for months. I rolled my eyes at every dystopian or post-apocalyptic book I saw on the shelves because, really, it felt overdone. But this one, with the cover and fierce female protagonist and enticing first chapters, kept calling to me. I’m so glad I bought and read this book.

      Rachel is impulsive to a fault, and she knows it. That’s the beauty of her character: she’s aware that she reacts without a plan, and it only heightens as more of her loved ones die. Every action screams rage, regret, and revenge — her desire to rid Baalboden of their dictator is justified. What started as anger and frustration and a need to defy authority turned into something realistically deeper and more meaningful. Her reactions are very much like a soldier’s, a war victim’s, a person with PTSD. Beautifully written, expertly explored, and I thoroughly enjoyed it.

      Logan is really neat and clever! He’s easy to love. His character starts off as that quiet nerdy boy who loves to play with metal and wires, and bit by bit we discover he’s extremely protective, fiercely loyal, an excellent fighter and huntsman, and quick on his feet. There is always a plan, and you can count on Logan to come up with all sorts of scenarios and how to respond to them. Logic and fear control him, another natural response to a horror he witnessed when he was younger.

      The world, of Baalboden and the Wastelands, is so fascinating! Set in the future, the continent was ravaged by Cursed Ones disturbed by noise and oil drills from above. The Cursed Ones are wingless dragons, and though they should be feared, they did remind me of cranky neighbors or roommates that constantly nag at you to shut up and be quiet. These beasts are unstoppable, and now there is only one left. Survivors of these attacks banded together and formed city-states, under the protector-ship of Commanders. However, like Medieval and Renaissance Italy, these city-states no longer trust one another. People are trapped within their walled cities, trade in markets, go back to male and female spheres, are Claimed for marriage, and have little access to advanced technology unless they work directly for the Commander. Past and future collide in this fantasy and it’s brilliant.

      Action-packed with each chapter, bloodshed and fights and explosions, fear and love mix with plots for revenge, and a tracker or Cursed One looming around every corner — this book cannot be put down.

      Deception will be out August 2013! 

      Posted in books, Reviews 2013 | 2 Comments | Tagged book review, books, genre: dystopian, genre: fantasy, genre: post apocalyptic, genre: young adult, goodreads, review
    • Book Review: “Darker Still” by Leanna Renee Hieber

      Posted at 9:34 pm by Laura, on May 22, 2013

      Darker Still by Leanna Renee Hieber  10841336

      Publisher: Sourcebooks Fire
      Publishing Date: November 2011
      Genre: young adult, paranormal, gothic
      ISBN: 9781402260520
      Goodreads: 3.67
      Rating: 
      ★★

      I was obsessed.

      It was as if he called to me, demanding I reach out and touch the brushstrokes of color swirled onto the canvas. It was the most exquisite portrait I’d ever seen–everything about Lord Denbury was unbelievable…utterly breathtaking and eerily lifelike.

      There was a reason for that. Because despite what everyone said, Denbury never had committed suicide. He was alive. Trapped within his golden frame.

      Natalie Stewart, a mute and social outcast, works with her father in the Manhattan Metropolitan Museum of Art, which recently acquired a beautiful painting of the stunningly handsome Lord Denbury. Natalie is drawn to the painting, and it’s not until she meets Mrs. Northe that she is able to understand why. A series of terrifying dreams, a stream of murders, and the only way to stay sane is to fall into a painting, this twist on Oscar Wilde’s A Picture of Dorian Gray is magical to the core.

      While I loved this new perspective on Wilde’s classic, seeing what it would be like to be trapped mentally within a painting while the evil and physical portion corrupts in the real world, I found Natalie’s voice lacking. Hieber’s choice to write in a diary form is justified — that form of documentation was common for women in the Victorian era and is a common aspect of gothic literature (all the truth is revealed in a woman’s diary) — it was poorly executed. Who truly remembers every single detail and word said in a conversation? Normally things like this are paraphrased.

      The haunting aspects of this book are in Natalie’s dreams. She never witnesses murders, but is able to predict them and sees how they will be murdered while she’s dreaming. Her dreams also transport her to Lord Denbury’s painting, where he is alive and well and hoping to find a way out. This was very intriguing and I liked these dreams. The story was propelled forward then.

      Natalie’s attachment to Lord Denbury was quick and odd. There’s intrigue and then there’s extreme obsession. Hieber keeps writing that Natalie is “drawn” to him, that “fate” brought them together. But throughout, I couldn’t help but feel Natalie and Denbury were interested in each other sexually and that was it. There was nothing about his character that seemed interesting or romantic. Natalie was a rather dull protagonist as well.

      The heightened bits of this novel were the passion between Natalie and Denbury, and the nightmares that helped Natalie discover the mystery and magic of the painting. The plot was simple but dragged out,  the protagonist was a little boring, the love interest lacking in personality. But the idea of the book, and the neat twist to the classic, was neat enough to see where it went.

      Posted in books, Reviews 2013 | 0 Comments | Tagged book review, books, genre: paranormal, genre: romance, genre: young adult, goodreads, review
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    • Hello, I’m Laura!

      I'm a bookish bookworm and book hoarder. By day I'm a literary agent, and by night I'm forever rearranging my bookshelves. I could talk your ear off about Gothic literature, and in my past life people thought I'd become a professional musician. I have a fluffy black cat named Rossetti, I love to travel, tea is my drink of choice, British TV is the best, and I'm always down for chips-and-queso nights. Welcome to Scribbles & Wanderlust! Grab your favorite hot beverage and let's chat books!
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