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    • Book Review: “Strands of Bronze and Gold” by Jane Nickerson

      Posted at 8:13 am by Laura, on April 23, 2013

      Strands of Bronze and Gold by Jane Nickerson 13721341

      Publisher: Random House Children’s Books
      Publishing Date: March 2013
      Genre: young adult, gothic, historical fiction
      ISBN: 9780307975980
      Goodreads: 3.6
      Rating: 
      ★★★★

      When seventeen-year-old Sophia Petheram’s beloved father dies, she receives an unexpected letter. An invitation—on fine ivory paper, in bold black handwriting—from the mysterious Monsieur Bernard de Cressac, her godfather. With no money and fewer options, Sophie accepts, leaving her humble childhood home for the astonishingly lavish Wyndriven Abbey, in the heart of Mississippi.

      Sophie has always longed for a comfortable life, and she finds herself both attracted to and shocked by the charm and easy manners of her overgenerous guardian. But as she begins to piece together the mystery of his past, it’s as if, thread by thread, a silken net is tightening around her. And as she gathers stories and catches whispers of his former wives—all with hair as red as her own—in the forgotten corners of the abbey, Sophie knows she’s trapped in the passion and danger of de Cressac’s intoxicating world.

      Sophia leaves her brothers and sister in Boston to stay with her godfather, Monsieur Bernard de Cressac, in Wyndriven Abbey in Mississippi. A handsome, alluring, and wealthy man, de Cressac lures Sophia under his spell by lavishing her with attention and riches. But as Sophia learns more about de Cressac’s four dead wives, notices the lack of company from town, and is forbidden to leave without de Cressac’s permission, she begins to unravel a horrifying past. Trapped in a tangled web of passion and deceit, Sophia fights for freedom and escape to avoid becoming a fifth dead wife.

      Nickerson’s Bluebeard fairy tale retold is stunning. I thoroughly enjoyed the atmosphere of 1850s Mississippi Wyndriven Abbey — both enchanting and foreboding all at once. Bernard is similar in that nature, too charming to be real, too attentive to be safe. While Sophia is entranced with the Mississippi estate, the reader is on high alert for something amiss. That unease continues throughout the book, culminating in high suspense and terror.

      Sophia’s character growth throughout the book is phenomenal. Although Sophia (Nickerson, really) continuously pointed out how different current Sophia was to past Sophia, it was apparent without the added insight. She arrives in humid Mississippi under her godfather’s spell, adoring the clothes he purchases, the mesmerizing food she tastes, and the little gifts and outings Bernard showers upon her. By the end of the novel, she’s fierce, brave, and does not care about frivolous things. I enjoyed watching her grow up, even if the circumstances were horrifying and far from ideal.

      One aspect about the book, from a historical standpoint, that I liked was the incorporation of slavery and a Northerner’s opinion on it compared to a Southerner’s. This part of the book is up for some debate — was it portrayed accurately? Is Sophia too naïve? Is the dialogue appropriate? — but I think, considering Sophia’s lack of experience and intolerance of slavery, it’s entirely appropriate and portrayed rather well. In other words, her innocence lends to the representation.

      Suspenseful, enchanting, terrifying, magical, and gruesome, this book is definitely worth a read.

      Posted in books, Reviews 2013 | 2 Comments | Tagged book review, books, genre: gothic, genre: history, genre: young adult, goodreads, review
    • Book Review: “The Madman’s Daughter” by Megan Shepherd

      Posted at 2:03 pm by Laura, on April 15, 2013

      The Madman’s Daughter by Megan Shepherd 12291438

      Published: January 2013
      Publisher: Balzer + Bray
      Genre: young adult, gothic, adventure, sci-fi
      ISBN: 9780062128027
      Goodreads: 3.77
      Rating: 
      ★★★

      Sixteen-year-old Juliet Moreau has built a life for herself in London—working as a maid, attending church on Sundays, and trying not to think about the scandal that ruined her life. After all, no one ever proved the rumors about her father’s gruesome experiments. But when she learns he is alive and continuing his work on a remote tropical island, she is determined to find out if the accusations are true.

      Accompanied by her father’s handsome young assistant, Montgomery, and an enigmatic castaway, Edward—both of whom she is deeply drawn to—Juliet travels to the island, only to discover the depths of her father’s madness: He has experimented on animals so that they resemble, speak, and behave as humans. And worse, one of the creatures has turned violent and is killing the island’s inhabitants. Torn between horror and scientific curiosity, Juliet knows she must end her father’s dangerous experiments and escape her jungle prison before it’s too late. Yet as the island falls into chaos, she discovers the extent of her father’s genius—and madness—in her own blood.

      Inspired by H. G. Wells’s classic The Island of Dr. Moreau, The Madman’s Daughter is a dark and breathless Gothic thriller about the secrets we’ll do anything to know and the truths we’ll go to any lengths to protect.

      Juliet Moreau is a cleaning maid in King’s College, London, brought down from her place in aristocracy when her father performed illegal surgeries and disappeared. When she receives news of a possibility of his return, she seeks him out only to find her old servant Montgomery. After begging him to take her to her father, Montgomery and Juliet sail to the South Pacific and land on a remote island, filled with disfigured natives and an eerie sense that her father is hiding behind a monstrosity larger than she could ever dream of.

      Shepherd does an excellent job of maintaining interest as the book progresses. Each chapter is full of action, horror, and scientific curiosity. Each character, from Juliet to Montgomery, to Dr Moreau and the marooned Edward, from Balthazar to Alice, has something to hide. The suspense of their personal secrets, mixed with the dangers of the humid and wild jungle, make for a fantastic gothic read. It’s inspired me to read Wells’s The Island of Dr. Moreau, which normally I wouldn’t have read!

      However, what prevented me from giving the book four or five stars is the forced love triangle. Juliet is torn between Montgomery and Edward, and even in the most terrifying situations she mulls over her emotions. At the end of the book, after all twists and turns are revealed, this conflict is somewhat justified — to give in to animal instinct or to give in to human emotion? The story could have been much better if the triangle weren’t so emphasized or pronounced. The secrets and science and eerie quality of the island could have become more of a character itself — and it had plenty of opportunity to be a character — rather than a backdrop.

      According to Goodreads, this may be the first of a trilogy. I like the way it ended, and do not see a need for a second or third book, but it would be interesting to see what Shepherd has next.

      Posted in books, Reviews 2013 | 10 Comments | Tagged book review, books, genre: action/adventure, genre: gothic, genre: romance, genre: sci-fi, genre: young adult, goodreads, review
    • Books Save Lives: An Ode to YA’s Depiction of Tragedy

      Posted at 10:00 am by Laura, on April 11, 2013

      Check out my blog post over at Quirk Books!

      With excellent books from authors like John Green, Gayle Forman, and Lucy Christopher, why would anyone censor content that truly depicts what teens experience?

      I want you to think back to when you were sixteen. What did you listen to? What did you read? What hobbies did you have, and what did you and your friends do on the weekends? Did you ever fight with your parents? Did you ever have a break-up that felt like the world was going to fall to pieces that second? Were you ever told “you’ll get over it, it’s no big deal” whenever you were upset about something? Did you ever keep secrets from family or friends, and it ate at you late at night and it made you feel small and all alone?

      Whether or not you were a good kid with excellent grades and no drug record, chances are you knew someone who struggled in school, struggled with friends and grades, probably smoked, maybe they experimented, maybe they even took risks. And if you didn’t know someone in real life, you knew a fictional character that experienced all of that, and it opened your eyes to hardships in life.
      Young adult books teach, young adult books say “You’re not alone,” young adult books mirror reality. And it’s because of this terrifyingly perfect, realistic depiction of teen tragedy that several adults ban these books.
      Posted in books, Link, Update Post | 0 Comments | Tagged books, genre: young adult, personal
    • Defining Young Adult Literature

      Posted at 3:36 pm by Laura, on April 6, 2013

      I’m currently taking a genre study course on young adult literature, and we’re trying to find a way to define the genre, so that it encompasses current YA, classic YA, and all the subgenres of YA.

      We’re finding it to be incredibly difficult! But out class has agreed on these points:

      • YA must have a young adult protagonist (arguments about age continue…11-21, 13-23, 13-19?)
      • YA is a coming-of-age and/or first encounters novel
      • YA has characters and/or experiences that the reader can relate to

      Other aspects of our definition we argue over, such as:

      • respecting the intelligence of the reader (authors like Dessen and Green certainly do, but some other authors write less literary and more entertaining/simple language)
      • accessible language (some classic YA, like Jane Eyre seems to be categorized as lately, doesn’t quite meet this)
      • including “classic YA” (is it YA? Was it thrown in because they’re taught to YA students in school?)
      • are the characters or situations relatable at all?
      • character-driven, or plot-driven, or is it pacing: fast and slow?

      What do you think defines young adult literature? If you could define it in 1-3 sentences, what would be your definition of YA?

      Posted in books, library, publishing | 11 Comments | Tagged books, genre: young adult, library, publishing
    • Book Review: “The Hallowed Ones” by Laura Bickle

      Posted at 10:13 pm by Laura, on April 3, 2013

      The Hallowed Ones by Laura Bickle 13018514

      Publisher: HMH
      Publishing Date: September 2012
      Genre: young adult, fantasy, gothic, horror
      ISBN: 9780547859262
      Goodreads: 4.05
      Rating: 
      ★★★★★

      Katie is on the verge of her Rumspringa, the time in Amish life when teenagers are free to experience non-Amish culture before officially joining the church. But before Rumspringa arrives, Katie’s safe world starts to crumble. It begins with a fiery helicopter crash in the cornfields, followed by rumors of massive unrest and the disappearance of huge numbers of people all over the world. Something is out there…and it is making a killing.

      Unsure why they haven’t yet been attacked, the Amish Elders make a decree: No one goes outside their community, and no one is allowed in. But when Katie finds a gravely injured young man lying just outside the boundary of their land, she can’t leave him to die. She refuses to submit to the Elders’ rule and secretly brings the stranger into her community — but what else is she bringing in with him?

      Katie is looking forward to her Rumspringa with Elijah in three weeks. It’ll be the one and only time she can live by her own rules before deciding whether to be baptized into the Amish church. She’s already a bit rebellious, questioning the Elders instead of blindly obeying. But after a helicopter crash and a few Amish disappearances, Katie decides to take matters into her own hands. Once an Outside stranger enters her world, her little rebellions pile up. Katie, fully aware of the Darkness infiltrating her small community, implores the Amish to toss their prayers and passive ways and fight back.

      This was a terrifying book. I hardly slept. With each of Katie’s rebellions (questioning Elders, then buying comic books, then stealing Coke, breaking the quarantine, allowing a stranger to come in), a new horror strikes the page. One minute she is walking through a field, the next a white horse bursts through the trees carrying a saddle with a bloody boot still hooked in the stirrups. One minute she’s milking the cows, the next she enters a home drenched in blood from a family slaughter. Every sentence is agonizingly suspenseful, making the eagerness to turn the page both foreboding and exciting.

      Bickle clearly worked hard to get Amish culture correct in this book. There are moments when Katie explains a tradition or a way of life, but it flows so smoothly with the story I hardly noticed the stopping time for Amish Culture Lessons. I am also extremely happy with the way Bickle portrayed vampires. These vampires are the real thing. These vampires are the ones Victorians feared, the kind that spread like disease, they destroyed rather than seduced, that hypnotized, that cannot enter homes or holy ground, that can only be destroyed with stakes, garlic, and a beheading. These are the very first vampires in folklore, and they are fearsome.

      What’s fantastic is that Katie, and the Outsider Alex, rarely describes the vampires’ appearances. They are called “things” and “monsters” and “the Darkness.” Katie can see they were once human, but their movements, behavior, and red eyes show the most base, evil instinct of humanity: literal blood lust and desire to kill. She is awed, shocked, and frozen in fear, her mind incapable of looking at something that appears to be human and seeing such evil.

      That is a true a proper gothic vampire and gothic reaction. I applaud Bickle. I applaud her for making me  afraid of the dark this week, for making me happy that I’m not living near cornfields now, and for bringing terrifying vampires back into young adult literature.

      Posted in books, Reviews 2013 | 5 Comments | Tagged book review, books, genre: fantasy, genre: gothic, genre: horror, genre: young adult, goodreads, review
    • Amazon Buys Goodreads

      Posted at 10:36 am by Laura, on March 29, 2013

      I am not a happy camper.

      WARNING: While this post will link you to the news, the post will be filled with snark. Feel free to just click the links and ignore my fuming comments.

      The Twitter response is similar to my reaction and current feelings about it. As a future publisher and current bookseller, Amazon is the biggest threat out there. Of course there is resentment and anger.

      Book Riot, however, posed the four main questions most concerning Goodreads users:

      1. Why did Amazon buy Goodreads? Goodreads is a social platform. Amazon is the largest online retailer. *headdesk*
      2. Why did Goodreads sell? Because they want money. Lord.
      3. What can Goodreads users expect? Well, from what Book Riot listed, I hope it’s ONLY their predictions. I hope Goodreads doesn’t turn into a retailer. Or only link us to Amazon. Or other cluttered, advert-loaded crap like that.
      4. What does this mean for books, publishing, and the universe? Bad news for retail. Even worse news and a bit of a sticky situation with publishers. Yeah, yeah, yeah, this means books are on the rise and isn’t that great and wonderful, but Amazon just needs to leave things alone. Let. Stuff. Alone.

      Finally, Publishers Weekly contains a detailed article with comments from Amazon and Goodreads on the buy. Amazon sees Goodreads as a sales outlet (go away!).

      When pressed, Chandler said: “We don’t have any plans to change anything about the buy links in the short term, but in the long term we’re going to do what’s best for our users.”

      Chandler, I hope you realize your users love your site because it’s an online book club of sorts. No one is pressuring us to buy things 24/7. No, your site encourages discussion and reading. The second a retailer/buy button is thrown in, the experience will be cheapened and will be just like the comments forum in Amazon, B&N, and other retailers: crap.

      Grandinetti said the acquisition was “not about making Goodreads commerce enabled,” but, instead, about opportunities to improve the user experience of Kindle owners.

      NOT. EVERYONE. HAS. OR. WANTS. A. KINDLE. OR ANY OTHER TYPE OF E-READER, FOR THAT MATTER.

      In 2008 it acquired Shelfari, but there seems to be no plans to integrate Shelfari and Goodreads.

      You know what happened to Shelfari? It died.

      What are your thoughts, positive or negative, on the Amazon/Goodreads deal?

      Posted in books, Link | 2 Comments | Tagged amazon, books, goodreads
    • Book Review: “The Raven Boys” by Maggie Stiefvater

      Posted at 9:02 am by Laura, on March 28, 2013

      The Raven Boys by Maggie Stiefvater 13449693

      Publisher: Scholastic
      Publishing Date: September 2012
      Genre: young adult, fantasy, gothic
      ISBN: 9780545424929
      Goodreads: 4.08
      Rating: 
      ★★★

      “There are only two reasons a non-seer would see a spirit on St. Mark’s Eve,” Neeve said. “Either you’re his true love . . . or you killed him.”

      It is freezing in the churchyard, even before the dead arrive.

      Every year, Blue Sargent stands next to her clairvoyant mother as the soon-to-be dead walk past. Blue herself never sees them—not until this year, when a boy emerges from the dark and speaks directly to her.

      His name is Gansey, and Blue soon discovers that he is a rich student at Aglionby, the local private school. Blue has a policy of staying away from Aglionby boys. Known as Raven Boys, they can only mean trouble.

      But Blue is drawn to Gansey, in a way she can’t entirely explain. He has it all—family money, good looks, devoted friends—but he’s looking for much more than that. He is on a quest that has encompassed three other Raven Boys: Adam, the scholarship student who resents all the privilege around him; Ronan, the fierce soul who ranges from anger to despair; and Noah, the taciturn watcher of the four, who notices many things but says very little.

      For as long as she can remember, Blue has been warned that she will cause her true love to die. She never thought this would be a problem. But now, as her life becomes caught up in the strange and sinister world of the Raven Boys, she’s not so sure anymore.

      Gansey is on a quest to raise Glendower, a Welsh king with the mythical legend akin to King Arthur, from the dead. He has wealth, privilege, and intelligence, as well as a group of friends who strongly believe in the supernatural. Together, their heartbreak and sorrow spur them on this quest; they have nothing to lose and everything to gain. Blue, daughter of a psychic and cursed to kill her true love with a kiss, is drawn to these Raven boys, and can’t help but stumble into their adventure. But when the boys’ past begins to haunt them, and time bends out of shape, they wonder if this quest for Glendower is worth the risk…and inevitable death.

      To read this book, one needs to suspend disbelief. It is a fantasy of sorts set in the real world. There are no wizards and dragons, but a very strong faith in ghosts and legends. Psychic powers are strengthened in Henrietta due to the ley lines, where Gansey believes Glendower resides and where Blue knows the soon-to-be-dead walk to the afterlife. Years of research steeped in lore spur these characters on.

      At first I had difficulty finding this entertaining — the reactions to time stopping, to seasons changing in minutes, and to visions of the future weren’t as surprised as I’d expected. Rather, these characters seemed completely at ease instead of shaken. Too calm. But as the reader delves into the mind of each character, learning about their history and why they have such faith in finding something only spoken about in legend, they became more real. These boys are fully-fleshed characters with a dire need to prove themselves. Ronan comes from a broken family; Noah is the epitome of death; Adam is abused; and Gansey tries to solve everything with money, even though he doesn’t like those principles. They have nothing to lose in finding Glendower, and their desperation increases as events spiral out of control.

      The ending was rushed and jarring, and certainly ends on a steep cliffhanger. Thankfully the second book will be out in September 2013.

      Posted in books, Reviews 2013 | 2 Comments | Tagged book review, books, genre: fantasy, genre: gothic, genre: young adult, goodreads, review
    • Ally Condie Lands Deal for Two New Novels — GalleyCat

      Posted at 9:06 am by Laura, on March 26, 2013

      Looks like Ally Condie’s going underwater this time in two new novels! Thank you, GalleyCat, for the news!

      Matched trilogy author Ally Condie has inked a deal to publish two new novels with Dutton Children’s Books. The Penguin Young Readers Group imprint will release the first book in fall 2014.

      [The book] tells the story of Rio, who has waited her whole life for the opportunity to leave her safe, underwater city of Atlantia for life on the surface. But when her twin sister, Bay, shocks everyone and chooses Above first (only one family member may go), Rio is left with increasingly dangerous questions about the complex political and religious system constructed to govern the fragile divide between land and sea.

       

      Posted in books, Link, publishing | 0 Comments | Tagged books, news, publishing
    • Book Review: “Along for the Ride” by Sarah Dessen

      Posted at 9:19 pm by Laura, on March 25, 2013

      Along for the Ride by Sarah Dessen 9780142415566_AlongForTheR_CV.indd

      Publisher: Speak
      Publishing Date: June 2009
      Genre: young adult
      ISBN: 9780142415566
      Goodreads: 4.13
      Rating:
      ★★★★

      It’s been so long since Auden slept at night. Ever since her parents’ divorce—or since the fighting started. Now she has the chance to spend a carefree summer with her dad and his new family in the charming beach town where they live.

      A job in a clothes boutique introduces Auden to the world of girls: their talk, their friendship, their crushes. She missed out on all that, too busy being the perfect daughter to her demanding mother. Then she meets Eli, an intriguing loner and a fellow insomniac who becomes her guide to the nocturnal world of the town. Together they embark on parallel quests: for Auden, to experience the carefree teenage life she’s been denied; for Eli, to come to terms with the guilt he feels for the death of a friend.

      Ever since her parents’ divorce, Auden can’t sleep at night. She spends her night hours in 24-hour diners working ahead in school, focusing solely on her academics and making her professor mother proud. But when her step-mother Heidi invites her over for the summer before college, Auden decides to take a chance and see what change can do for her. She meets girls who surprise her with their intellectual depth — despite being into “girly things” — and runs into Eli, a fellow insomniac, on her nighttime strolls. With their help and guidance, Auden begins a quest to experience life a new way: living it through mistakes rather than perfect grades.

      Dessen has such skill in turning what could potentially be a light beach read into something exquisite, remarkable, and touching. Her books follow a similar formula: girl is different from others in some form, experiences a summer different from others, something happens to make her grow into herself, and there’s a boy in the mix. As simple as that is, each of her stories are vastly different, and every character is full of so much potential that is completely achieved by the end of the book.

      Auden is a perfectionist and an academic, socially outcast from everyone — but she likes it that way. Emotions are messy, and from her experience emotions are never good. Visiting her dad and Heidi, with their newborn Isby (Thisbe, though Heidi wanted to name her Isabel), awaken Auden to a whole new world she never experienced, or thought she could experience positively. She realizes people are not one-dimensional, what-you-see-is-what-you-get. Her new friend Maggie is the perfect example: Maggie knows everything about jeans, make-up, and fashion, but she also has good grades and will be going to the same prestigious college as Auden and loves to ride bikes and do jump tricks. Maggie came off as a girly girl, but Auden soon discovered the tomboy side to Maggie, and then the intellectual side. No one is simply a slacker, an academic, a boyish boy, a girlish girl. People are complex.

      Eli is a key character in Along for the Ride, as he not only helps Auden discover the childhood she never had, but opens her up to a whole new outlook on life. She in turn helps him overcome his grief and guilt over the loss of his best friend. By simply living life in the night hours, the two develop a special bond of give-and-take, sharing, and equality without the emotional turmoil Auden so easily equates to relationships.

      Dessen understands her audience. Summer is the perfect time for change and self-discovery. There is so much potential in those few weeks for a person to grow, to find love and friendship, to develop a new hobby or talent. Once again, Dessen accomplishes all of this in another great book.

      Posted in books, Reviews 2013 | 0 Comments | Tagged book review, books, genre: young adult, goodreads, review
    • Book Review: “Clockwork Princess” by Cassandra Clare

      Posted at 8:46 pm by Laura, on March 20, 2013

      Clockwork Princess by Cassandra Clare 6131164

      Publisher: McElderry
      Publishing Date: March 19, 2013
      Genre: young adult, fantasy, romance, action/adventure
      ISBN: 9781416975908
      Goodreads: —
      Rating:
      ★★★★★

      A net of shadows begins to tighten around the Shadowhunters of the London Institute. Mortmain plans to use his Infernal Devices, an army of pitiless automatons, to destroy the Shadowhunters. He needs only one last item to complete his plan: he needs Tessa Gray.

      Charlotte Branwell, head of the London Institute, is desperate to find Mortmain before he strikes. But when Mortmain abducts Tessa, the boys who lay equal claim to her heart, Jem and Will, will do anything to save her. For though Tessa and Jem are now engaged, Will is as much in love with her as ever.

      As those who love Tessa rally to rescue her from Mortmain’s clutches, Tessa realizes that the only person who can save her is herself. But can a single girl, even one who can command the power of angels, face down an entire army?

      Danger and betrayal, secrets and enchantment, and the tangled threads of love and loss intertwine as the Shadowhunters are pushed to the very brink of destruction in the breathtaking conclusion to the Infernal Devices trilogy.

      What starts off as an ordinary mission of slaying demons in Victorian London turns into a whirlwind of plot, disaster, and inevitable death for Will, Tessa, Jem, and the rest of the London Institute. Every bit of evidence connects Tessa to Mortmain and his desire to use her for his destruction of the Shadowhunter world. No matter how much Charlotte pleas for help, her cries fall on deaf ears. In the midst of love and heartbreak, death and destruction, Tessa realizes her full potential and what she has been trained to do since capture: to Change and save, even if it means risking her life.

      As an uber Clare fangirl (I remember the days when she was Cassandra Claire), I knew I would love whatever she wrote to end this trilogy. I could not side on teams — I love Team Will and I love Team Jem, and it did not matter who Tessa chose because I would still love the decision and be heartbroken for the other. But as a critical reader, I must applaud Clare on her twist to the cliché love triangle; that, in fact, this is not a love triangle but a bond between three that is so complex and yet so understandable that every reader could comprehend the characters’ actions. Clare sums it up so well in this passage:

      ‘Think now  and then that there is a man who would give his life, to keep a life you love beside you.’ Yes, [Will] would have done that for Tessa — died to keep the ones she needed beside her — and so would Jem have done that for him or for Tessa, and so would Tessa, he thought, do that for both of them. It was a near incomprehensible tangle, the three of them, but there was one certainty, and that was that there was no lack of love between them.

      While the Infernal Devices trilogy is more love-heavy than her Mortal Instruments series, it is no less action-packed. For every chapter of down-time, regrouping, meetings in halls, and whispers in bedrooms, there are two chapters for action, plot, anxiety, panic, and adventure. Each character had a voice in this book, from the Lightwood brothers to maid Sophie, from Will’s sister Cecily to Magnus. The jumps in plot and narrative are never jarring or confusion, as they overlap and fuse so well with one another to advance the story. We even get a chance to watch characters listen in through closed doors on other characters — and watch those other characters have that conversation on the other side of the closed doors. It was fun and fascinating and wonderful.

      More and more information about the Shadowhunter world is revealed in here as well. We get a taste of the culture, rituals, and meanings behind runes, books, and laws. I feel it is explained better in this series than Mortal Instruments, but Clare has dipped her toes in this world far longer at this point after her first publication. While Mortal Instruments carries more about the Shadowhunter travels and lots of information on Downworlders, Infernal Devices captures the Victorian culture and importance of rules and rituals, which works so nicely with explaining Shadowhunter rules and rituals too.

      Finally, as a lover of all things Victorian, I enjoyed the quotes at the beginning of each chapter and the numerous name-droppings of literary works the characters mention throughout the book. There are instances when Will truly did act like Sydney Carton or appear like Heathcliff, or when Tessa experienced a similar wandering through the moors like Jane Eyre. My appreciation for Charlotte’s name deepened as well (Charlotte Branwell, of Charlotte and Branwell Bronte), and all of Henry’s wacky inventions and scientific enthusiasm (at an age when science was becoming more exciting).

      I could gush about this book for forever. I don’t believe I need to share a photo of a page from the epilogue, stained entirely with my tears. (Note on the epilogue: Normally epilogues are poor things to make things tie together nicely. This was not. This epilogue was perfection and I am entirely pleased with it.)

      Posted in books, Reviews 2013 | 0 Comments | Tagged book review, books, genre: action/adventure, genre: fantasy, genre: history, 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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