Easy A - Emma Stone, Penn Badgley

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Showing posts with label Books - A or B Ratings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Books - A or B Ratings. Show all posts

Thursday, 28 February 2013

The Monstrumologist - Rick Yancey

Posted on 06:14 by Unknown
The Gist


The Monstrumologist
Buy it here and support our blog
Will Henry is an elderly man who just passed away. He knew nearly nothing about himself, thought he was older than he could have possibly been, and had no relatives of any kind. A mystery, until the director of the nursing home Will Henry had lived at finds his journals. He gives them to a local author, and that's where Will Henry's story, however unbelievable, starts to come out. Young Will Henry was an orphan apprenticed to an eccentric man known as a monstrumologist, who worked in the study and capture of monsters. He's used to late nights, strange visitors, and dangerous monsters. But he wasn't used to this new breed of monsters that comes in 1888, when he's only twelve. Huge, muscled, and with an appetite for human flesh, these monsters must be stopped at any cost, and Will Henry and his guardian Doctor Warthrop don't have much time to prevent the biggest massacre the world has ever seen, carried out by beasts that the world doesn't believe exist.

What We Think
Reviewed by Living Destiny
Number of Pages: 434
This book, man. This book. I'm not even going to bother with some witty intro, because this book.
The concept is fantastic. I've never heard of anything like it, especially not as a young adult novel, where most books consist of some weird romance that involves vampires, zombies or mermaids. A man who studies monsters. And that's the loosest description of this book. The monsters aren't anything common either. No werewolves or yetis or chupacabras. Lots of weird Latin names for beasts that sound terrifying. Told by an old man through his twelve year old self, presented to the reader by an adult author who reads the journals left behind. It ought to be confusing, but instead it's captivating. I spent a solid four hours laying on top of my dining room table, because I couldn't be bothered to even move while I was reading this book, let alone to put it down.
The writing style was awesome. The book was just so well written. I get really excited about really good books, so bear with me. The descriptions were real. It was like I was actually there, like I could see and smell and touch. I was immersed in the world of the novel. And sometimes, that was pretty disgusting. There were moments where I sincerely thought I was going to throw up, which is something I haven't done in at least four years, even when I'm sick. I don't have a weak stomach, but it was worded so precisely and in exactly the way I would have seen it, that I started to think I'd need a bucket nearby. But don't let that be off-putting, because it was incredible. If a book can affect you that much, that one factor alone makes it worth reading. And there's many more factors than just that. 
I will say that some of the language was a little fancy. That's the one downside. Lots of big words, even some that I wasn't quite sure of the meaning without the context. But the language made sense when considering the narrator. It's essentially the diary of a twelve year old boy from 1888, but written from the memory of the boy who was over 100. At his death, supposedly, the narrator was 131 years old. It makes sense that in that time he gathered up a lot of big words. So even if the large words are sometimes dense, they are fitting. Especially given the time period. 1888 is a long time ago, and the language was different back then. And that's another thing the author did well, was the time period. It seemed accurate, and I liked the choice to make it so far back, in a time when monsters were something that people would actually believe in. Nowadays, creatures of the dark are only seen in movies, and people don't seem to do as much believing in the things they can't see.
I loved the characters. Will Henry is amazing, both his twelve year old self and his 100-something year old commentary. He's a tough young kid, with no one left in the world and no one to turn to other than his father's boss, the monstrumologist. He's put through a tremendous amount of stress and terror, and he deals with it remarkably well, but in a way that is believable. He's dedicated to his new guardian, but still understands when the good doctor goes totally overboard. And the doctor was an interesting one. Doctor Warthrop is seriously passionate about his work. To the point where he stops eating and sleeping, and makes himself very ill. But that sort of passion is, in a way, inspiring. He's harsh, and perhaps a bit insane, but he's entertaining to read.
The pace of storytelling never lets up. It starts out exciting and it doesn't stop to get dull anywhere. It just continues to grow until the climactic battle, and finally it smooths into a satisfying ending, but it stays interesting. There were never points where I felt bored or uninterested. Rick Yancey, the author, certainly knows how to hold his readers. 
One last point. First and last lines are extremely important. They have to be powerful, or the book won't catch. Technically, the first line of this book is talking about the director of the nursing home, and it's interesting enough, but the first line of chapter one is better. The first line written in the journals. It automatically pulls you in, and holds you until the last line of the epilogue. The last line is actually a quote from earlier in the book, but it's so intense and a little creepy. It's one of those things that makes you stop and reconsider your entire life. Scary stuff.
I loved this book. I think I could talk about this book for about as long as the book itself, so I'll stop it here and just say this. I loved it. Without a doubt one of the best young adult books I've ever read.
Real Teen Rating ~ A+: Why are you still reading this, go buy this book now!
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Friday, 15 February 2013

Ripper - Stefan Petrucha

Posted on 05:56 by Unknown
The Gist


  Ripper
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Carver Young is an orphan. His parents left him when he was a baby, and fourteen years later he wants some answers. As an aspiring detective, he's sure he can figure out who his parents are. When his orphanage is being moved, and all the oldest kids must be adopted, Carver is taken in by a cantankerous gentleman named Hawking, a detective with the Pinkerton Agency. Carver is sure he'll be able to find his parents with Hawking's help, but in New York City in 1895, something bigger is out there for Carver. There's a murderer on the loose, and while the police force, detective agency, and all of New York is on the lookout, it could be up to Carver to stop him.

What We Think
Reviewed by Living Destiny
Number of Pages: 427
This is kind of a guy book. I mean, not to stereotype books to one gender or another. But it's certainly not the usual paranormal romance, high school life, fluffy love story that is generally marketed to girls. Even the cover looks nothing like the cheesy sort of thing that's most commonly written today. And I really have to mention the cover, because I love it. It's simple, eye-catching, intriguing. I know the rule is don't judge a book by its cover, but come on. We all do it. And the cover is the reason I picked this book up.
It's an interesting plot line. Serial killers and orphans. Always fun. It's set in 1895, which means it takes on the extra challenge of being historically accurate. It does a good job of that. None of the dialogue is too modern, the setting is definitively New York City in 1895. It's very believable, and actually in the back there's a little section that verifies the existence of some of the elements of the story during that time period. 
Also, it's incredibly well written. Not only is it time period-accurate, it draws you in. It has good pacing and excitement, and a few twists thrown in that I wasn't expecting. It's high action without being gory or absurd. And the characters aren't irritating, and I think so many characters in so many books get really annoying. Carver is a strong, intelligent young man. He gets emotional at times, but not so much as to be weak or whiny. It's understandable. He doesn't figure things out too quickly, like characters sometimes do, if the answer isn't obvious. If it's difficult to understand, he finds it difficult to understand. He's like a regular person, which is why he's so great. His friend Delia is also great. She wants to be a reporter, and gets adopted by two reporters. She's determined and independent, which is no small feat for a young woman in 1895. She's not quick to trust, but she thinks fast on her feet. Finn is a good character too. He's sort of the "bully", who's mean to Carver at the orphanage, and he and Carver get into tiffs pretty often, but they balance each other out. He's not the typical meat head bully, although he is physically strong and quick to get into a fight. He has an emotional range. It's refreshing. I really loved Carver's mentor, Hawking. He was mysterious and obtuse, but he really helped Carver to learn and investigate. He wasn't the most supportive character, but something about his sharp language and attitude made him lovable. Basically all the characters were fantastic. And Teddy Roosevelt is a character in it as well, because he was the police commissioner in New York at that time, so he's in the story, which I think is wicked cool.
I don't normally like historical fiction. And I'm not sure if this actually classifies as historical fiction, but it is set in history, so...I'm not sure. But I know that I thoroughly enjoyed this book. There were historical elements, with Roosevelt and references to, if the title didn't make it obvious, Jack the Ripper. All the gadgets Carver uses from the Pinkerton Agency seem so high tech, even though they probably aren't so fancy. The descriptions make you feel like you're really there, because the author has a very effective use of language. It makes me want to read more of his books, although looking it appears he mostly writes Nancy Drew graphic novels. Weird. Anyway, it's a good book. I've read it twice so far, and I'm thinking about reading it again. Very worth it, and one of the best books I've read recently.
Real Teen Rating~ A-: Read it!
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Posted in Books - A or B Ratings, Books *All*, Living Destiny Reviews | No comments

Sunday, 3 June 2012

The Great Gatsby - F. Scott Fitzgerald

Posted on 16:57 by Unknown
The Gist

The Great Gatsby
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Nick Caraway moved to West Egg and things in his life changed. Not just because of the careless, irresponsible people, but the over-the-top, party-every-night atmosphere of Long Island. He's a working man, and working men like him - without endless family money to fall back on - live in the much less fashionable West Egg, right across the Sound from East Egg, the place for wealthy people who don't have to work. Immediately he is alerted to the differences when his next door neighbor, Jay Gatsby, throws a party to which every person in West Egg and beyond goes to. At the other end of the Sound, on East Egg, Nick meets with a distant cousin, Daisy, her husband, Tom Buchanan, and a friend of their's Jordan Baker. Though Daisy is beautiful and exciting, she's not everything. No one from East Egg, or even West Egg, for that matter, seem to be all they appear, or all they want to be. Including, the mysterious Gatsby.

What We Think
Reviewed by Dream Catcher
Number of Pages: 180 
Let me tell you (though you probably don't need much telling) reading a book for class is no simple feat. I love reading. Everyone who's ever read anything I've written should know that. But somehow - and it's always been like this - reading a book for class lacks the usual shimmer of reading for yourself. But this book wasn't that way. I couldn't wait to read it everyday for class and discuss it with my American Lit. teacher. So great. This is one of my all-time favorites. I find myself wondering lately, though, if my love of the author has clouded my judgement as far as how I actually feel about the book. F. Scott Fitzgerald is awesome. But I think I love the book because it's truly a fantastic piece of writing, not just because it was written by Fitzgerald. Love.
What I love most about this book is what I'm going to address first. The writing style. Out of all the aspects of this book the writing style is my favorite. It's slightly poetic with enough description to understand your surroundings and be satisfied without ever being bored. He uses a lot of metaphor to get his point across, which I like. I really don't know what else to say...I've been putting off this review for awhile because, honestly, the hardest reviews to write are the ones you love. It's so much easier to rant about something you hate than describe your love for something. I dunno...I just love a lot of things without explanation. I guess with the Great Gatsby I should really just write about what I didn't like, as opposed to what I did, because it would make everything a lot shorter. Except there really wasn't anything I didn't like. Moving on...I'l just hurry up and get on with it. Now, I don't what to sound like a literary snob, talking about the symbolism of Daisy being names Daisy, or Jordan Baker being names for two car companies which relates to this which symbolizes that. I got all that from my discussions in American Lit. I would never have gotten any of it on my own, despite my love of metaphor. Nope. I take things pretty literally, in general. I found the whole symbolism thing fascinating, but I mostly really love the bare bones of a book like this; the love story. If Fitzgerald really meant for all that symbolism, then he's a true genius and you got to love him for that. If not, he's a romantic and you should love him anyway, because, in conclusion, his writing his spectacular. (That was the most random tangent-filled paragraph I've ever written...)
Yes, I am finally moving on to something else; characters. Nick is the main character and just an all-around loyal narrator. What I liked about his characters was his some times silent observation and simple truthfulness. He was a faithful friend to Gatsby and didn't like to make trouble where it wasn't needed, which was refreshing. He was a relatively straight-forward character; someone easy to like. Gatsby was another great character - though he was certainly more complex than Nick. With a mysterious past and a to-an-extent-unrequited love, he was a character you always rooted for, despite his occasional creepiness and bootlegging. He's a guy with a big heart and a lot of ambition. He's always one step behind everyone else, but so hopeful that the future will be better. Its impossible not to root for him. Daisy was a very...interesting character. At first I really liked her characters, in a weird way, because she was so out there. As my dad would say she's a bit of a space-cadet, like I said, someone who's a little out there. But as Fitzgerald reveals more about her character you really begin to understand who she is and how thoughtless she can be. His character development of her is really great in relation to the book as a whole. At the end he really makes you hate her. Tom Buchanan, on the other hand, is someone you hate consistently, and for good reason. He's a raging racist and a plain old jerk. Such a jerk. But you're really supposed to hate him, so on that front Fitzgerald did a great job again. Tom Buchanan is a truly nasty dude. The last real main character is Jordan Baker, and I really don't have much of an opinion of her. She was just kind of there; I didn't love her and I didn't hate her. She kind of annoyed me at the end but, again, she was supposed to. She was another straight-forward character. She served a purpose to the plot, so she was an important character, but I don't really have all that much to say about her. There were some other minor characters that played important roles in the story but are minor enough they just get some mentioning - Wolfsheim, a man who worked with Gatsby semi-illegally was a true-to-life interesting character. Mr.Wilson and his wife Myrtle were quite the pair. They weren't people so much as symbols for big ideas. All essential and all very unique. Well done.
I'm talk about the plot very briefly. Under all the symbolism and metaphor it really was just a simple love story. So maybe it wasn't the most creative story ever created but, keep in mind, this was written in the 20s - before there was such thing as stupid YA fiction. This is a story of real love - not trashy teen werewolf love. It felt real, which is what made the ending so sad. Its a tragically beautiful story.
Lastly I must talk about the beginning and the end, the title and the cover. Trivial things, perhaps, but I value them. The beginning is just Nick telling his back story with a little foreboding foreshadowing. When I first read that, I wasn't too pleased, because it didn't make me want to read more. I suppose it's needed and all...but it wasn't as impressive as I had hoped. The ending, however, makes up for that fact completely because it is so thoughtfully put together and thought-provoking. A great, great end to the book. The cover is very interesting, but considering the fact that its a classic, the cover doesn't really matter that much - neither does the title. It's reputation proceeds it. I really do like both though. But. In place of where I would outline the details of liking or disliking the cover and title, I have an interesting fact for you. Scott Fitzgerald had a relatively hard time coming up with a title for this, and after thinking of a few he wasn't crazy about he thought up The Great Gatsby, a title he was equally un-enthused about. But he really wanted to publish it so he asked his editor if he could change the title for the second printing of the book, and the editor agreed, thinking it wasn't going to be that popular. Much to their surprise, their book was a huge hit and by that time it was too popular and too well-known to change the title. Fitzgerald was not pleased. I think that's hilarious, though. I love weird facts like that.
Well. That's my review. The book's fantastic and everyone should read it, whether or not you have to for school. It's a classic for a reason; love stories like that are timeless. They never get old, and neither will this book.
Real Teen Rating ~ A+ : Why are you still reading this, go buy this book NOW!
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Wednesday, 21 September 2011

Delirium (Delirium #1) - Lauren Oliver

Posted on 21:21 by Unknown
The Gist







Delirium
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Lena Haloway lives in a world where love is a disease. An infection. She lives in a world where love has a cure. On her eighteenth birthday she, like everyone else, will get the Procedure. She will be cured of ever getting the disease. The deadliest of all deadly things. This is something everyone accepts. They believe love should be avoided and are glad for the procedure. Lena never really believed that. Until her mother died for love. Now? She can't wait for her procedure. She counts down the days until she can forget the pain of losing her mother and all the other pains love brings into life. But when her best friend Hana gets a little rebellious, Lena is forced to confront the underground world she never wanted to be a part of; forbidden music, forbidden parties, forbidden conversations. Along with that comes Alex. A boy. A handsome, mysterious, forbidden boy who takes an interest in her. But Lena wants no part of that either. The last thing she would ever want is to contract the deliria. The illegal, dangerous disease she's waited her entire life to be safe from. The delirium. It kills you both when you have it and when you don't.

 What We Think
Reviewed by Dream Catcher
Number of Pages: 441
I'd heard about this book a bit before I read it. You know, the usual thing a blogger tends to hear about a book; it's amazing. Every book has a least one fan that thinks it's absolutely fantastic - no matter how bad the book is. I wasn't sure what to think. Until I heard exactly what the book was about. A world without love. A fascinating concept. So the book immediately went to the top of my to-read list. And I kept hearing good things. So I took a chance and read it. Were all those fans gushing about Delirium right about it? WAS it amazing? YES.
As cheesy as that introduction may have been, it's true.  Starting with characters. Lena: our main character extraordinaire. Magdalena Ella Haloway. Frankly, she was a great main character. She is the exact product of growing up in a society like that. A strict rule-follower and proud of it. But then the deliria changes her. I loved her character completely. Usually main characters kind of get on my nerves. They complain too much, or they make ridiculously idiotic decisions (leading to their untimely downfall which they somehow survive past despite the fact they haven't changed at all), or they're too quick-to-judge, or too clueless. Lena wasn't this way. Lena never annoyed me. She complained, but not extensively. She make some not-too-smart decisions, but they weren't laughably stupid, just the-human-mistake type of decisions you can kind of understand. She was scared, but never TOO scared. I guess you understand my point by now. Everything in moderation. What was great was that the Lauren Oliver used character development. Lena grew throughout the story, and it made her more of a three-dimensional character, which is harder and harder to come by these days. So Lena was great. Alex. Equal part serious, determined, and all-around-likable. As the love-interest, these qualities are extremely important. It seems some authors somehow forget that, while you want love-interests to be "mysterious" (or whatever), you don't want to lose them completely in the thick fog of what's unknown. And there's always the book where you don't understand why the main character's in love with the guy. Nothing's more annoying than that. Obviously, that wasn't a problem in Delirium. I understood why she'd fall for him. He was what she needed and she was what he needed. Viola. The perfect match. I guess that's my roundabout way of saying his character was good, too. Hana. I wasn't sure whether or not I would like her at first. I thought she was going to be the practically-perfect-in-every-way, beautiful best friend character. To be honest, she turned out to be exactly that. But better than I expected. Because along with being practically perfect, she was a great friend to Lena and was always very supportive and unafraid. Loyal to the bitter end. Her bossiness was funny and her charm was, well, charming. Bet you didn't see that coming. She turned out to be an important character in the book, and she was a good one. A lot of the remaining characters were the same. I didn't mention them in the gist because they're really not worth mentioning in any gist. Rachel (Lena's older sister), Aunt Carol (Lena's aunt and guardian), Uncle William (Carol's husband) - all the same. They're all cured, you see. They're supposed to be the same. Bland. Unfeeling. Blank. They were obnoxious. But, of course, they were supposed to be. Along with being annoyed, though, I somehow felt bad for them. They had to live this monotonous life. Kind of sad. So the fact that I felt any sympathy at all shows they were all very well written. Two more people I have yet to mention are Jenny and Grace - Lena's cousins. Jenny was annoying but she was supposed to be. Grace was quiet and innocent. I loved her character, even if she wasn't in much of the book. The final, very important character in Lena's mom. You never actually meet her in the story, but she's described so much you feel like you know her. She was different from the other cured people;  strong and fearless. She was a character this book couldn't do without. So, as you've probably guessed, I thought the characters were fantastic. 
Briefly: Setting. PORTLAND. Loved that it was in Portland. I've been to Portland. Saw a Sea Dogs game a while ago. Anyways, I've been to Portland. It's cool to have gone to where this story takes place. Cool that it's not something as overused as NYC (though I can never resist NYC) but at the same time not some made-up town in the middle of the-author-conveniently-left-that-detail-out. It made the whole story seem more real. Like the government might declare love a disease at any moment. Really made me feel a part of the story.
Okay. First line. Here it is. "It has been sixty-four years since the president and the Consortium identified love as a disease, and forty-three since the scientists perfected a cure." This is a pretty good beginning line, I'd say. Really gets the point of the book across. No beating around the bush. At the same time it's a little detailed. Eh. I won't be nit-picky. It's a perfectly good beginning sentence. Ending line: AWESOME. Seriously. It's great. The perfect way to end the book. On that note, this book isn't really the end...two more books to come. I'm excited. The next one's called Pandemonium. Sounds intense. I cannot wait for it to come out. 
Don't worry. I'm almost done. Title. Delirium is the perfect name for the book. You might be getting tired of me saying how perfect everything in this book is, and I know I never really believe it when reviewers say this and that and everything was just dandy. But this book really was dandy. Read it. You'll see. So anyways, title was great. Cover. I really don't have much to say about it. It wasn't the worst cover ever, but it wasn't the greatest. I know they recently reprinted the book with a new cover (this of a girl staring dramatically at you) but I have the one that's blue with the author's name and the book title revealing the face of a girl. I think it's pretty good. It wouldn't get me to read it, but it certainly wouldn't drive me away. 
Moving on (finally) to writing. It was amazing. Poetic and beautiful. There were tons of similes, but never too many. She always just made everything sound graceful with them. They weren't humdrum, overused similes. They were different and special.  I dunno. Half of what made this book so great was that the writing wasn't boring or dull. It had a sort of sparkle. A Lauren Oliver sparkle, maybe. I don't know. But the writing was fantastic and I wish every book could be written in this style. I feel the need to include my favorite line. It's the type of thing that stays with you. Sticks in your memory. Makes you think. "I love you. Remember. They cannot take it."


Real Teen Rating ~ A+ : Why are you still reading this, go buy this book now!
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Posted in Books - A or B Ratings, Books *All*, Dream Catcher Reviews | No comments

Monday, 27 June 2011

Robopocalypse by Daniel H. Wilson- Advanced Copy

Posted on 11:31 by Unknown
The Gist











Robopocalypse
Buy it here and support our blog


In the future, robots have become part of our daily lives. They do jobs that make our lives easier and they live life with us. When Archos- the robot mastermind- rises up and starts to take over the world he starts the New War. The human race has never been more united and it will never be the same again.

What We Think
Reviewed by Shore Whisperer
I finally read this book. For the past year I have been stuck on cheesy romance novels, eventually that was going to have to change. This book was a little slow in the first chapter. The story is told through multiple perspectives and at multiple dates in time, but the first chapter is an introduction and sets a very simple plot line. The book can get confusing at first but once you're past that first chapter your home free. So here is a tip of advice: Don't stop reading because the first chapter is bad!!
Once the story of the New War starts up and you get into the different perspectives of the different contributers of the war the book picks up the pace. Once you get to this part you see what a phenominal writer Daniel Wilson is. He can write in so many different perspectives. In the book you have chapters narrated by little girls, adult women, old men, even robots. This just shows of how well he can actually write. Once I started the good part of the book I couldn't put it down. This book really pays off in the long run. Not only did I enjoy the writing but it turned a rom-com chick into a sci-fi geek. I couldn't get enough of it. Usually sci-fi is a little to weird and out there for me but not this. Not only does this book have great voice and a believable futuristic setting but it also deals with our current environmental issues, it is mentioned throughout the entire book and it really hits home how badly we take care of our world, and makes you want to do something to change that.
When I finally put this book down after hours and hours of reading I said that I felt like I had just finished reading a really interesting, scary history textbook. The way the story is written and the fact that it incorporates things that we would daily use is what makes this book so real. I seriously was scared of cars for a week and didn't want my brother to play with his mechanical toys because I thought that robots were going to attack us. I would highly recommend this book to anyone, it is truly one of the best books I have read in a while.
Real Teen Rating~ A+: Why are you still reading this go buy the book now!!!
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Sunday, 26 June 2011

Hourglass (Hourglass #1) by Myra McEntire- Advanced Copy

Posted on 13:45 by Unknown
The Gist









Hourglass
Buy it here and support our blog


Emerson sees things that aren't there. Not ghosts, exactly. Projections of people from the past. Or so it seems. But no one would believe her if she said they were images from the past. And they wouldn't believe her if she said the images were ghosts. She's just crazy. They label her, medicate her, and avoid her. Easy. Her brother, Thomas, and his wife Dru try their hardest to make her feel normal and completely accepted, but Emerson can't help but feel like she's too much of a burden - her and her visions. Too many people have tried to cure her - to no avail - for her to real believe in cures anymore. But when Emerson has to transfer to a new school - due to her old school scholarship being cut - Thomas tries one last time to find the perfect person with the right cure. He discovers the Hourglass. An Hourglass consultant - only a little older than Emerson and undeniably good-looking - comes immediately to their small southern town. Michael Weaver is handsome and mysterious, calm and collected. And the best thing is, he treats Emerson like a person. Not a crazy. He listens to her, believes what she says, and  - ridiculously - admits he can see what she sees. And neither of them are crazy; just special. But what is Emerson supposed to do? Believe this complete stranger? That would be crazy after all she's been through and every "cure" she's had to endure. But regardless of what is the smart thing, or the right thing, or the normal thing Emerson goes for it. She trusts him. But his reasons for helping her may not be what they appear, and Emerson may be more "special" than she could ever have imagined.

What We Think
Reviewed by Dream Catcher
Number of Pages: 397
I have been wanting to read this book for a long time. So when we received an ARC I got to read it first. Yay. Sad thing was, I read the first line, wasn't impressed, and put off reading it for awhile. My excuse? Too many other ARCs to read. Huh. Yeah, not like that was exactly a lie. But time went by (as it does) and I procrastinated (as I do) and here we are. I'm ashamed. But to be fair, I've been continuously working on project after project for various classes in preparation for the end of the year, AND there's finals to worry about...mer. Excuses, excuses, eh? But anyways, the point of all that was to say that the beginning could maybe use a little work. First line: "My small southern hometown is beautiful in the haunting way an aging debutante is beautiful." An interesting way to begin, right? Sure. Interesting, but it doesn't really make you think hey, this book is going to be the most epic thing I'll ever read. It sounds unique, certainly, but...I dunno I guess it's just not my type of thing. Maybe a little too formal sounding. I dunno. All personal opinion for beginnings. I thought it could have been better. 
Might as well say something about the ending, while I'm sort of on the topic. Kind of. Beginnings and endings are related. Yeah. I like the ending.  Good, good. What else is there to say about it really? It ends well in a way that isn't really a cliff-hanger but makes you want to read the second in the series. I'm not sure when that comes out, but it's probably not for a while considering I just read the ARC. Anyway, I thought the ending was good and made me want to keep reading into the next book.
PLOT. I actually really liked it. The whole crazy thing has appeal to me and my twisted mind. I'm joking. Kind of. But I really did love that aspect of it. I could totally see it coming without even reading past the back flap that she wouldn't actually have any mental illness. But as much as predictability annoys me...what she turned out to be kind of canceled out the predictability. That part of it was really cool and pretty unique. But I can't say anything because that would give the big secret away and ruin everything. Let's just say that the plot was good, but the characters made everything a little too easy to predict for my taste. I like not really knowing what's coming. And I was able to see most of the things coming from a mile away. But other than that I thought the plot was unique enough to  be good. So. Hooray.
Okay, characters now. And I'll start with Emerson, or Em. She was sarcastic and witty, which I appreciated, but what she described herself as didn't really match with what she did. Example? She said she was tough and frozen over and guarded. And she kind of was...but not particularly. Not more than the regular person, I think. So that was kind of weird. Also, there was this whole I'm-too-attracted-to-Michael thing. Which was annoying. She was always thinking about his lips or touching him or something weird. I hated that. I'm just thinking the whole time, SERIOUSLY YOU DON'T NEED TO TOUCH HIM, JEEZ. But that might just be me. Other than that I actually thought her character was really good. She was funny with her sarcasm and wit. Michael was an interesting character. He was polite...a little too polite at first. Awkwardly polite. But by the end he had completely grown out of that, and was NOT afraid to tell Emerson exactly what he was thinking. I'm not sure if that was a welcome change. I think it was. Yeah...yeah I think I liked him better in the end. He was a little corny for a chapter or two, but that was okay. If he had ended the book as a corny creeper then I would have welcomed the awkwardly-polite Michael back with open arms. But he didn't. So he is forgiven. He was pretty good, if a little aggravating (because he overreacted a little at stupid things). Thomas and his wife Drew were similar because they both had to take care of Emerson, to some extent. Thomas was sometimes not brotherly enough - a little too fatherly, which wasn't very realistic. Drew was motherly, but in a more natural way. I liked her character a lot, actually. She was spunky. Stern when she needed to be and a friend to Emerson when she needed to be. Emerson's bestie was a generic drop-dead gorgeous friend character. I liked her, but at the same time I realized that she wasn't very unique. General friend character. Kaleb comes in later and is a complete creeper. But I honestly loved his character. He was funny and witty, and I laughed aloud at some of his quotes. There were a few other characters, but I don't think they're important enough to mention. So overall I think the characters were really good.
I'll finish with the title and cover. LOVE LOVE LOVE that. The cover is amazing I think. Seriously great.  The optical illusion of it is amazing. It was what grabbed my attention in the first place. What made me want to get the ARC before I even read the synopsis. It is one of my favorite covers. Praise for Egmont USA publishing for that. Seriously. Title was great, too. Maybe not as great as the cover, but still cool. Hourglass. It sounds mysterious and intriguing. Love it. Cover and title get an A+ from me.
Overall I thought it was a good book. The plot was unique and the characters were funny and sarcastic. As I just ranted, the cover and title really grab your attention before you even know anything about the book, which is extremely good for a book and an author. The only thing I have to say is the beginning could have been executed better. All in all, though, I think it's a book worth reading. Maybe not immediately, but sometime you should definitely get around to reading it. I think the second in the series will be even better.

Real Teen Rating~ B+ : Wait for vacation.

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Forgotten by Cat Patrick- Advanced Copy

Posted on 13:11 by Unknown
The Gist












Forgotten
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London Lane has a special gift and most people would kill to have a "special" gift but not London.  This gift is that every night after she goes to sleep London forgets what has happened the day before and every other day before that.  The upside to her gift is the London can see into the future so she can remember who certain people are that are supposed to be in her future.  To remind herself of homework and what happened the day before London leaves notes for herself every night so in the morning she can read the note and know what happened the day before.  This isn't the ideal life but she gets by pretty well with her best friend and her mom by her side, that was until Luke decided to show up.  Luke, is a gorgeous new guy at their school and apparently her new boyfriend.  She can't remember who he is in the morning even with her notes as a guide and she can't remember any memories with him in the future.  As things get more complicated with Luke and she gets into a huge fight with her only friend London doesn't know who to turn to.  Instead of figuring out what to do London goes on a search for her father who left when she was a little kid and she has no idea where he went.  All during this time London has a disturbing dream of the future and it all takes place at a funeral leading her to want to know who was the one who the funeral was for.  As things unravel and London learns more about her past she realizes that she is hating her "gift" more and more each day.  


What We Think
Reviewed by The North Star
Number of Pages: 304
I was so pumped when I heard that we were getting this book as an ARC.  I had read the synopsis on Goodreads and had never heard of anything like it before.  A girl who knows nothing of her past and can't remember anything from the day before.  This was a plot line that I had never come across before and appreciated that from the first day of reading.  I also really liked the writing style that Cat Patrick brought to the table. The relationship between London and Luke was very believable and not to overdone or cheesy.  Yes, there were some cheesy parts that were hard to get through but for the most part it wasn't that bad and over-the-top like most teen fiction nowadays.
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Now, the actual characters.  London was an OK lead character, but at points could get annoying.  When her and her best friend were fighting she would make a big deal about it, when she knew that they were going to make-up in the end because she could see the future.  Janie a.k.a London's best friend really annoyed me.  She was my least favorite character in the entire book.  In the beginning she was OK and I really liked her as the best friend but once she got in a stupid fight with London I hated her because the fight wasn't about anything important and she really only should have been mad for a day at the most, but she kept hating London for months upon months.  Her character also did nothing for the story and could have been removed all together.  Luke, who was my favorite character in the entire book was very likable.  He seemed sincere in his feelings for London and I really wanted them to end up together and make-up whenever London would yell at him.  Another thing that I didn't like about London (and most YA novels/series nowadays) she would flip out at Luke for no apparent reason.  He would do something that is sort-of bad and she would treat the problem like he had killed someone and disposed of the body on her doorstep.
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The thing that I really loved about this book besides the plot all of the twists that it had.  For the most part the beginning of the book was straight forward but as you get closer to the end Cat Patrick throws all of these surprises that really made this book good. Before these twists were added I was going to give the book a C because nothing that big was happening.  After these variations that were added towards the end made me keep reading and then I really wanted to finish the book and pick-up the next one instantly (which I couldn't sadly).
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Overall, this was an above average book that was a fun read but had some major character flaws.  The plot was original and much appreciated!  If you see it in the book store and have a gift card, I would buy it but nothing to see-out this very second. 


Real Teen Rating~ B: Read it but there's no rush

Reviewed by ShoreWhisperer

One good thing that appealed me to the book is that I didn't despise the female protaganist which is what I usually do. I really liked London. She didn't complain, she was very level headed and didn't act like she was the only person that mattered in the universe. She was greatful for her perfect boyfriend, who in real life would not exist and that pleased me because most times all the girls do is complain about them or swoon constantly over them. London was different.

Luke, was cute but was definitly not my favorite guy character. He was so very stereotypical I could probably find the exact same character with a different name in multiple young adult novels. I get the fact that young adult novels all have the same aspects but to make a really good young adult novel that appeals to teenage girls you have to have a male love interest that has something different about him and makes him appealing and in some loving way not perfect. Luke just didn't make the cut, although he was cute, he was just too cookie cutter.

As for the plot it was confusing as to what London's strange talent was until the third or fourth chapter where you could just infer. All this was annoying but it was for the sake of the book so it was ok. The whole book was told from London's perspective so every chapter was literally a blank page for her. So to get that message across and make the reader infer was a good sacrifice. The actual story as it got farther in was intriguing and made you want to keep reading which is a plus. I literally read this book in one day, I couldn't put it down because I wanted to know what happened. The writing was on the easier side so it was definitly not a dificult read but it was good none the less.

London's special talent will be what makes this book stand out because otherwise it would be just like any other young adult novel. There aren't really any other books that go deep into the psychological side of things and that definitly deserves a place on the young adult section of the bookshelves.Hopefully there will be more books that address the pyschological sides of people because that could be a new hit.

Real Teen Rating ~ B- : Read it but there is no rush.
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Sunday, 29 May 2011

Abithica by Susan Goldsmith- Advanced Copy

Posted on 16:42 by Unknown
The Gist












Abithica
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Abithica doesn't know what she is. She only knows that she gets thrown into other peoples bodies and takes control of them for a while. Their life is in her control. Then she is suddenly gone from their life and has taken over another person. The only word she can use to describe herself is parasite. When she is thrown into the life of Sydney Turner she bites off more than she can chew. She is now suddenly involved with an evil cult that she has not even heard about before. Then to top of all of her new problems there is Lane and his love for her and being a parasite to Abithica has one rule and one rule only DON'T fall in love.

What We Think
Reviewed by ShoreWhisperer
Number of Pages: 288
This book was intense from the beginning. There was alot of confusion, mostly because Abithica didn't know where she was or who she was. Everything was hazy until the third or fourth chapter when answers started coming. That was one of my complaints. I can understand the importance of not knowing what or who Abithica is really but sometimes that became a real hassle and it even took away from being able to comprehend the book. Also, there are alternate chapters that really aren't in the view of Abithica and even though they are labled it still added to the confusion of the book.
There were characters that were introduced half way through the book and that added to the confusion too. Alot of the characters didn't have alot of character development. Only the immediate characters were really developed well and when they were it was nice they were so complex and real. I feel like if the characters were developed a little better overall and made the book a little longer then it wold be more satisfying. I know that there are upcoming books in this series hopefully there will be more characterization.
Finally the topics dealt with were old but still nice. Abithica has the ulitimate choice. Should she let herself love or should she live her life the way she always has. It could ultimatly help her find herself or it could destroy her. Then the light touches of the good verses bad helped shadow this book with little bursts of wisdom. I thoroughly enjoyed this book after a while and I couldn't put it down. This is an ultimate goal of a good book but it also showed some good insight into how humans live. It was entertaining on many levels.
Real Teen Rating~ B: Read it but there is no rush
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Tuesday, 24 May 2011

Queen of the Dead by Stacey Kade - Advanced Copy

Posted on 15:31 by Unknown
If you have not read The Ghost and The Goth, then read at your own risk, this contains spoilers!


The Gist























Queen of the Dead
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Alona Dare, miss popular of the school, and Will Killian, resident goth-boy, have been spending a lot of time together.  That may have something to do with the fact that she's newly dead and he can see the dead. Since being run over by a bus, Alona has been helping Will aid the dead in moving to the other side, by fulfilling their strange last requests.  They have a good system going, until one night while helping a particularly irritated old ghost, their well-worn routine is interrupted by mysterious ghost seer Mina.  She's the first seer he's ever met, and Will is instantly curious to know her, but Alona isn't so quick to trust this cranky, exotic stranger.  Probably because she's a ghost, and Mina really hates ghosts.  Add this to the fact that Alona's parents are moving on with their lives and leaving her behind, and the looming 'friends or more than that' question between her and Will., and what's left is one cranky and hurt Alona who's willing to do anything to get what she wants/  And that can only lead to trouble.  


What We Think
Reviewed by Living Destiny
Number of Pages: 266
This book is the sequel to The Ghost and The Goth, also by Stacey Kade (duh), which came out last summer.  As dorky as it is, I've been eagerly awaiting this book since I finished the first one.  In fact, when the author agreed to send us an advanced copy, I'm pretty sure Dream and I jumped up and down shouting 'yes!' (which garnered us some very interesting looks).  So yes, as silly as this book sounds, I was looking forward to reading it.  Quite a bit.
Before I say anything about the actual content, I have to say: the cover art is awful.  Really, truly bad.  The background is bland, the people look too forced in their poses, and the boy looks kind of ugly.  The whole thing is just totally unappealing.  It's not the sort of art that makes me want to read a book, or even pick it up off a book display in stores.  Ok, now that that's over, I can focus on the story itself.  Since it's the second in a series, the plot does spill over from the last book.  Will and Alona are the same people although I liked them a little less in this book than the first.  Well, that actually isn't true.  It just bothered me that Alona was so selfish, bratty and impulsive.  More so than usual, anyway.  But then she redeemed herself by being very selfless, even if she was still slightly annoying.  And Will was irritating at points because he was too trusting of some things.  But in the end he was his capable, intelligent self, and I appreciated him for it.  Mina, the biggest new character, I didn't like much at all.   She, like Alona, was selfish and bossy, but while with Alona it's somehow ok; on Mina it's just obnoxious, and I really wanted to punch her in the face most times.  She wasn't likable at all, which is ok because she wasn't meant to be.  The actual storyline of this book was super interesting.  I know, with a name like Queen of the Dead it sounds like a super-cheesy, overdone young adult book that's trying too hard.  But it isn't!  It introduced some new philosophies on ghosts - what they are, how they work, what should be done with them - that strongly differed from Will's which made for an exciting clash.  There was this crazy twist about halfway through that's multiplied by at least five near the end.  I'm pretty sure my jaw actually hit the floor.  I'm still not sure how I feel about it, whether I like it or not.  It's just so...gah!  GAAAAH!!!  Yea, it's sort of shocking, if you couldn't tell.  But even besides the major twists, the book never got dull.  It held my attention for the whole story.  The fact that it's told from both Will and Alona's points of view helps it stay interesting, because it can easily tell two different aspects of the story in first person.  I liked the whole mystery about WIll's dad and his littler adventures (for lack of a better word), and the continuation of Lily's story with Will and Alona's.  In fact, I liked this more than I liked the first book, maybe because it seemed like it had more substance.  For whatever reason, it was better than The Ghost and The Goth, and was an excellent second-in-a-series book.  It may sound goofy, it may look goofy, and sure, it IS a little goofy, but it's surprisingly entertaining, and I'm already longing for book three.  
Real Teen Rating~ B+: Wait for vacation.
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Monday, 23 May 2011

Blood Magic by Tessa Gratton- Advanced Copy

Posted on 16:41 by Unknown
The Gist












Blood Magic
Buy it here and support our blog


Silla has had one of the most traumatic years of her life.  After being the one to find both of her parents dead in the living room, being broken up with by her boyfriend and not being able to focus on the most important thing in her life, the school play.  To top it all off the police have come to the conclusion that her father murdered her mother and then took his own life shortly after, but Silla knows deep down in her heart this is not true and her father was a sweet, innocent man who could hurt no one especially his own wife.
Nick absolutely hates everything about his life and wishes that it would just go away for a while.  His mother is out of the picture and his father has found a new wife and not one that Nick is fond of.  His father and new stepmother also decide that it is time to move and so Nick packs up, leaves every single one of his friends that it took him so long to make and leaves.
Nick is positive that this is going to be the worst year of his entire life...that is until a trip to the local cemetery finds him talking to Silla and falling in love from the minute he sees her.  Not to mention the fact that right before he walked over she had been slitting her wrists over a dead leaf.  The minute Silla leaves Nick tries to find out everything about her from his only friend in the school and goes on a quest.
That night in the cemetery Silla wasn't slitting her wrists because she was depressed and done with life it is because she was performing magic, and the main ingredient in a spell is blood so, the most logical place in her head is to take it from her wrists, and she wasn't exactly planning on having company in the first place.
As Nick and Silla grow closer to one another they find out that they have more in common than they thought and someone is trying to steal the spell book that they hold so close to them and will literally kill anyone who gets in their way of obtaining the book.

What We Think
Reviewed by The North Star
Number of Pages: 405
We first got this book as an ARC and it was my turn to get the next ARC and I couldn't have been more excited.  I had seen the book cover and short synopsis on Goodreads previously and loved everything about it.  From page one I knew that I was going to really like this book.  I really enjoyed the plot line of the book because it was something different.  Nowadays, the common thing to write about is vampires, werewolves and fallen angels and pure magic has been kind of pushed to the side.  This was also a different type of magic because to perform any spell you had to sacrifice some of your own blood.  I had never heard of this concept and found it really intriguing and it made me want to turn the page at the end of every sentence.  This concept also kept me up in the middle of the night trying to finish one more chapter because I was so desperate to know what was going to happen to the characters.
That brings me to the next topic of characters.  The interesting thing about this book was the fact that it would switch off between three speakers, Silla, Nick and mysterious letters.  Silla was a strong main girl character who I could relate to.  The things that she had to go through in the book I couldn't even imagine holding up as well as she did and I can only imagine crawling up into a little ball and never coming out of my room if I lost my boyfriend and my parents all within the same week.  In that way she was a strong character and clearly new her limits and when enough was enough.  The one thing that did bother me about Silla was that at points she got annoying.  She would complain a little too much about not being able to see Nick because he would turn away to walk home and she would instantly miss him and want him to come back when she was going to see him in a hour or two.  This seemed a little needy but other than that she was a strong character.  Now onto Nick who I liked better than Silla.  Nick was sarcastic  funny and all around a great character.  I couldn't find one thing that I didn't like about him and I was always excited when I saw that a passage of his was coming up.  It seemed like it truly loved Silla and at points she seemed to not trust that they were actually in love but he never doubted his feelings for her and was always there for her if she needed him to be.  Now as a couple the two of them got on my nerves.  They had their moments of "aw" that I thought were cute but most of the time they were just making-out.  I get it if you want to kiss the person, but why does it have to be ALL the time.  When they weren't together they would think about kissing and Silla would only dream of kissing him.  She didn't dream of him as a person all she dreamed of was kissing his soft lips and the second he would leave she would wish they could have kissed once more.  This was also a problem that Nick faced.  When he was alone in his house he would wish Silla was there so he could kiss her and he couldn't wait until he saw her again so that he could kiss her.  Maybe, some people like all the kissing and excessive talk of kissing but I thought it was awkward and only made them weaker characters.   
The last thing I am going to talk about is the cover of the book.  The cover of this book is brillant and whoever designed it I applaud you! It is eye-catching and if I saw it on the shelves in stores I would buy it in an instant and I never get tired of it.  After, reading the book I really appreciated the cover and all of the hidden things that it holds that you don't realize until you read the book.
In the end this was a great read and had fun twists that you don't think will happen and when they do you are completely shock.  This is something I now appreciate about Tessa Gratton as an author and after reading this book I am super excited to read the sequel The Blood Keeper when it comes out! Recommend this book to any YA lover.

Real Teen Rating~ B+ : Wait for Vacation.

Reviewed by ShoreWhisperer
This book was interesting. It was a little slow and confusing in the beginning but altogether a very well put together book.  It was very prominently and Young Adult novel. It has all the elements of it, the dark gothic feel, the attractive guy, the troubled girl. What else could you ask for?  There was a couple of things that bothered me though.
One: as North said they talked WAY to much about kissing... yes Nick is cute and all but please spare me the  gory details of a teenage girls fantasies. It was seriously all they thought about after that first kiss and then its all they did afterwards. I don't think that there was one scene where they didn't end up kissing. Now for a Young Adult novel you can usually get away with that but for some reason it just stuck out like a sore thumb in this book. Nick and Silla just didn't seem the type to makeout all the time.
Two: Nick was way to brooding for my liking. Yes, Edward Cullen is the biggest brooder of all time but when you are somewhat in between not brooding and brooding it just doesn't work. Sometimes I felt like his brooding didn't fit and that he was not realistic at all. He was way to oblivious to his new stepmother and lashed out at her at points that didn't make sense at all and that confused me.
That was what I disliked most about the book. Something that really caught me in this book was the use of symbols. Especially ones that were common in gothic literature in the 1800's. I thought it made the book unique. The crows were very powerful, the cemetery, the old victorian house, the blood and gore. All of it made it seem dark and gothic which is more than some of the "gothic" books you read today give you.
Finally, the old story in the book was fascinating. Most times I don't look forward to reading the older sections of books when they have them, the flashbacks can be tedious to read but the narrator was just so wonderfully evil that it made it fun to read. All the wrongdoings and imperfections in the story was captivating to me and I enjoyed it thoroughly. All the characters were developed wonderfully and everything seemed well done in this book. It was a good read.
Real Teen Rating~B+ : Wait for Vacation.
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Monday, 2 May 2011

Die For Me by Amy Plum- Advanced Copy

Posted on 20:16 by Unknown
The Gist









Die For Me
Buy it here and support our blog



Kate Mercier hasn't been the same since her parents died in a car accident. She still has her sister, Georgia, but nothing can replace what her parents were to her. To try and take their minds off the accident, Kate and Georgia move to Paris, France, to live with their grandparents. Georgia goes back to normal almost instantly - out at clubs almost every night, dozens of new friends, everyone she knows at her beck and call. But Kate can't shake the crippling grief that came along with the death of her parents. She lies in bed for weeks, not having the energy or enthusiasm to care to get up. Finally, after having enough of watching her sister wallow in sadness all day, Georgia convinces her to get out of the house. Grudgingly, Kate agrees and goes to read in a nice little cafe. There, everything changes. Because that little cafe is where she first sees Vincent Delacroix. Handsome and mysterious, Kate is immediately drawn to him, despite her reluctance to let herself feel real emotions again. But there's something different about Vincent. Kate learns, much to her dismay, that he's a revenant, with a vague past and dark destiny. He's cursed with living forever and dying over and over to save other people's lives. And Kate doesn't know if she can deal with seeing him die over and over - even if she knows he's going to come back. After her parents she doesn't know if she can take the repeated heartbreak that death in her life would bring. But maybe love in life again might be worth it.


What We Think
Reviewed by Dream Catcher
Number of Pages: 341
I'm not sure what I expected when I picked up this book. I had mixed feelings about the cover and the title and cover and the synopsis sounded like just about every other YA novel I'd ever read. Girl's life isn't satisfactory, she meets an amazingly handsome and mysterious (usually brooding) teenage guy and her life magically becomes something out of a happily-ever-after-included fairy-tale. Ugh. But I had some faith in it for some reason. A good feeling about it. A random feeling, but still something. So I decided it was probably going to be either going to be really cheesy or really, really good. It was neither.
I'll start with something nice. The idea of it. The concept. The synopsis on the back of the book I read was annoyingly vague. I hope I did a little better than that with the gist. The only thing they said about Vincent was that he was handsome and mysterious with a "destiny".  "Destiny" could mean anything. I have a destiny. That doesn't mean I'm an immortal revenant who dies for everyone. But, bad summaries aside, the idea of what they were - revenants - was certainly interesting. Not quite angels or zombies or vampires. None of that. Something new. And to that I say FINALLY. Someone finally realizes that there's maybe another thing in this world to write a YA book about, other than vampires. Sheesh. Finally. So I really liked the whole revenant thing. Sounds like a new age in YA fiction. And (to my knowledge) who started it? Amy Plum. That's right. Finally. I worship at her feet for that. Something new to write about. What a novel concept. Love it.
So now I'll move on to plot. Similar to idea but different. Here's where the difference comes in: I wasn't as thrilled with the plot. Yeah, not so much. I mean, sure, there was a little something there. But it was a romance. And, generally, romance are focused more on ROMANCE (uh, duh) and less focused on plot twists... and such. That wasn't entirely the case here, but...it was close. It was mostly Kate having a vicious inner battle with her want for love and her fear of getting hurt. So a lot of I like him...but I can't! and I want to be with him...but I can't! Ah, the drama! For a book that was basically a romance the plot was fantastic. But overall, it was just okay...maybe a little better than okay.
Here comes my favorite part of the review: CHARACTERS. They can make or break the book in most readers' minds. Certainly mine. Seriously, though, when's the last time you've heard of someone liking a book but hating the characters? NEVER. Because characters rule the world. Well, a reader's world. Maybe. Anyway, I move on to  say something review-like, as opposed to my seemingly-endless rants about the aspects of a book in general. Beginning with the main protagonist, Kate. Let me first point out that she has the most nicknames of any character I've ever read about. Katya, Katie-Bean, Katie-Lou, Katie, Mon Ange. Ugh. Don't even get me started on that last one. Ugh. 'My angel'? Give me a break. Ugh. That's where the romance gets to be a little too much for me: disgustingly affectionate pet-names. But back to Kate herself. One word to describe her would be indecisive. She'd make up her mind then change it then change it then change it. And change it. At times it could get a little tiresome. She also needs some new shock-absorbers or something. Because whenever Vincent would tell her anything - no matter how tame the topic - she'd go into shock, or start crying, thinking she couldn't handle it. But other than that she was a good character. Very articulate, to say the very least. There was a lot of character development with her - which was great. In the end she was much stronger and even a little wiser. So overall she was a good main characters that was actually very likable. Vincent next. Hmmm. I really don't know what to say about him. I loved him in the beginning. He wasn't corny or cliché. He was charming and sweet. But as the book progressed he got to be a little sappy. It was almost as if Amy Plum had watched a few too many Hallmark movie marathons while writing the book and Vincent took the brunt of it, becoming an almost-sickening immortal combination of all of those heart-throbs in the movies. Well. It wasn't THAT bad. But I liked him a lot more in the beginning than the end. Sorry, Vincent. Just to be clear, it's not like I DIDN'T like him in the end. I still really liked his character. He was just VERY romance-y at the end, but that's okay. He means well. And Kate and him really are good for each other. Cute together. Moving on: Jules. Vincent's best friend and fellow revenant. I don't really know why, but I really liked his character. He was kind of a creep,  but in an almost lovable way. Like a I'm-a-revenant-who-cares-about-you-despite-my-earlier-jerkiness way. I always loved the sections of the book he was in. I just thought he was really funny; someone who really cares about you but also loves having a good laugh - sometimes at your expense. I dunno, I really liked him. Next: Ambrose, a fellow dead-man-walking and friend to Vincent and Jules. He's kind of like Jules in the way that I loved his character but wasn't sure why. He's just all-around likable, I guess. Very genuine. He was always very welcoming and nice.  He was a great character. Then there was Charlotte and Charles: twin revenants. Charlotte was really nice and almost delicate ( paying no mind to her mastery of karate). She was very likable and a great addition to the story. Charles was important, but at the same time he was just kind of there. He was funny, then a complete jerk. Basically he was a contradiction. But I think that was the point. So great job there. Hmm. How about Jean-Baptiste? Yes, he was also interesting. He was the wise, older leader revenant. He was a jerk, too, but at the same time you knew it was only so that he could protect his fellow revenants. So for that I have to respect him at least a little. Overall, I think of him as an almost-complicated, very mysterious character. Absolutely needed and well-portrayed in the writing. SO MANY CHARACTERS. Uh...Gaspard next because it'll be quick. He was a twitchy revenant who I found to be very random and almost completely not needed.  Maybe he'll be of more importance in the second book. If not, it's a shame, because he's the type of character that could be really interesting with his sad past - before being a revenant. I hope he plays more of a part in the next book. Then there's Jeanne. The completely human cook to the revenants. She was also kind of random, but her doting grandmotherly ways were charming and I honestly liked her character a lot. Georgia was superficial and had a temper (not to mention she was kind of clueless when it came to judging character) but overall she was vital to the story. She was a loyal sister and story-starting raiser-of-spirits (and by spirits I mean the feeling kind, not the ones that float around haunted houses because that would really just make no sense at all). She was very real, which makes a great character (whether or not you like them or are even supposed to like them). As a whole the characters were very well-written. They came to life; they were very real, and I liked reading about them.
Since I'm saying how very well-written the characters were, I might as well go on about the writing itself next. This is always hard to review. The writing style of any book is a personal opinion that varies greatly from person to person. Someone could love the way so-an-so author writes, but someone else could completely hate it. But I guess everything in a book is like that. So here I go! I thought the writing was really very good. Like I said above, Kate was very articulate, and the book was in first person, so it was a very put-together, mature-sounding style. Sometimes it got to be a little much and the put-together quality just became stiffness. But that was only occasionally, and overall it was great. Refreshing and different from other YA novels. Good, good.
Okay, I have to say something about the setting. Paris. The city of lights. Or is it love? No, French is the language of love. That's it. Eh, either way it really fits in with the story nicely. I liked how it was all in Paris - because I've wanted to go there for a long time - but I did find it to be a tad random. But that's just because I haven't read many books set in a country other than the one I've lived in. But come to find out, Amy Plum lives in France, so maybe the Paris setting isn't so random after all. I just found that out a few days ago. The whole time I was reading I was thinking well, this is really cool...but what's with Paris? Now it all makes sense, and I think that the unique setting was a nice touch. Very exotic. 
Now on to the beginning. There's a prologue. Sometimes an author - or a story - can get away with a prologue. Can pull it off and make it sound right and needed to make the story complete. Sometimes. Sadly, here it just seemed pointless. No, it didn't just seem pointless, it WAS pointless. It was a short prologue; a paragraph or two. It was a very lack-luster beginning. If I were the publisher, or the editor, or the author I'd take out the prologue and just start the book off at chapter one. The annoying thing isn't that the prologue is short or superfluous (which it still is), it's that the entire prologue appears later in the book, word for word. I hate that. I mean, you couldn't have come up with a few more sentences to make up for ones you've already used? Oh well. Maybe it's just me. But I found that annoying. Okay, moving on, the first line is, "The first time I had seen the statue in the fountain I had no idea what Vincent was,". It was okay. It's not brilliance, but it certainly didn't turn me away. I think she could do better. The way it is, it's a little cliché.
Similarly, the ending. And by ending, I could either mean the last 50 pages or so, or the very last line. I might as well mention both. The last 50 pages (or so) were just okay. Leading up to a climactic point that wasn't all that climactic. What I mean is, for a climax, I wasn't exactly jumping at every chance to read. The last few pages were the cheesiest parts of the book. The part that made me not like Vincent as much as in the beginning. It was just a little too romancey, ooey-gooey-lovey-dovey for my taste. But that might just be me. The last line was really good. Disregarding the chapter as a whole, the last paragraph was a good ending to the book. It's kind of mysterious. I like mysterious. It's not a cliff-hanger, but it definitely makes me want to read the next book, to see what happens with Kate and Vincent. I am actually pretty excited to read the next in the series (I'm going to have to wait a while, seeing as I just read this ARC), so I guess that means the ending couldn't be that bad. All in all, the ending was okay, maybe a little more than okay. 
I'll finish with something purely superficial: the cover and the title. Now the cover I have on my ARC and the cover that's going to be on the actual book. Mine has a dramatic-looking Kate-girl riding a florescently red boat upon dark Paris waters. Yeah. Very dramatic. At first I hated it. But it's really grown on me. Sadly, now I like it more than what the cover is actually going to be! Ah, well. You win some you lose some. The new cover is mostly red and pink. A completely new Kate-girl is standing with her back to us, wearing a long RED dress.  There's a lot of curly-cue things embellishing the title. The thing with this one is that it doesn't really have anything to do with the actual story. At least the other one made a whole lot of sense when you read the book. Oh, well. Either way, the cover isn't the GREATEST but I still think it'd be intriguing in a bookstore. So that's good. The title is even better, I think. Again, at first I thought it was a little over-the-top, a little too dramatic. But now I think it's great. A little dark, a little mysterious. Just the type of thing a teen likes. So I really think that was well done. 
There. Viola! Review completed. Overview alert! Here it comes. The idea was FANTASTIC but the plot lacked pizazz and some originality. The characters and writing were the best parts of the book, which is really good, considering those are two of the most important parts of what makes a book enjoyable. The setting was kind of random but added something unique and spunky to the story. The beginning was good, but could've been better; same with the ending. Cover and title grew on me and now I love and accept them. THERE. So by now I think you know how I liked the book. I'll stop with the never-ending rant in a moment. One last thing. I think you should go to Amy Plum's website, http://www.amyplumbooks.com, (easy enough to remember) and go to extras. Then click on the link that says Vincent's Point of View. I read it just a few hours ago, and I think it's really cute. And cool to see things from his perspective. Don't worry, it's not eons of pages long. But I enjoyed it.  Okay, and I have to say this: (forgive my unforgivable corniness) REVENANTS are to DIE for!


Real Teen Rating ~ A- : Read it!
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Saturday, 16 April 2011

By The Time You Read This I'll Be Dead - Julie Anne Peters

Posted on 10:38 by Unknown
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By The Time You Read This...
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Daelyn Rice wants to die. She’s tired of being bullied and called the freak.  She wants out.  She’s tried to kill herself countless times, and every time she failed.  She needs a surefire exit strategy.  And she finds one online.  Called www.through-the-light.com, the site is for ‘completers’, and people who genuinely want to die.  They receive a completion date, get ideas on how to die, and can post about what happened to them that made them want to die.  Daelyn starts distancing herself from her parents and the world, making her way towards the way out.  But then she meets Santana, a boy she can’t wrap her head around.  She makes it very clear she doesn’t want anything to do with him, but he just won’t leave.  It’s too late for Daelyn to be saved, especially by some boy pretending to like her.  No one would actually like her enough to talk to her.  If only he would understand that and let her make her exit in peace.  

What We Think
Reviewed by Living Destiny
Number of Pages: 200
I wasn’t really sure if I liked Daelyn or not.  She was incredibly cynical.  I mean, I’m cynical, yes, but Daelyn took it to a whole new level.  She trusted no one.  If someone tried to talk to her at all, she would think of some diabolical, underlying reason for it.  It could never just be because they wanted to talk to her, it had to be because they wanted to make fun of her or abuse her.  It was equally annoying and interesting.  I can’t imagine actually thinking like that, and I’m not an overly trusting person.  I definitely felt bad for her, though.  Her life was horrible.  She describes it mostly through the entries she makes on the through-the-light forums, and it sounds awful.  She’s teased for being fat, her parents don’t exactly help, and she moves all the time during her childhood because her parents hope it will help her (which it doesn’t).  The only other really big character was Santana.  Unlike Daelyn, I know exactly what I think of Santana.  I loved him.  He was such a goofy person, always telling jokes and trying to get Daelyn to like him.  He’s one of those characters that I look at and think, ‘if he was real he’d be my best friend.’  He’s that likable.  Also, one of the smaller characters really stuck out for me.  Her name was Emily, and she was a girl in Daelyn’s school who was trying to be friends with Daelyn.  She is an outcast (like Daelyn), but very sweet.  She seems a little naïve, but she has a big heart, and I liked her a lot too.  So now the plot.  The whole ‘this is about a suicidal chick’ thing is sort of a turn off.  And I admit when I would read it I’d get a little depressed.  But I think it’s good too, because everyone can relate to it.  I mean, let’s tell the truth here: everyone has felt like they want to die at one point or another.  It’s just how life goes.  There are those terrifying moments of depression where you just want the pain to end, and you start to think about how easy it would be to just exit stage left, and start over.  Anyone who says they’ve never felt that is flat out lying.  Seeing it written out somehow makes it easier to cope with.  The concept of a website for suicidal people is strange, but I liked it.  Also, I liked all the details about Daelyn’s life, and how her reasons for attempted suicide were included.  As the story goes on she opens up more, and you learn all the lurid details about her experiences with bullying.  The way the story was written was interesting.  Daelyn pretty much never spoke in the book, so a lot of it is what she’s thinking.  I like that because it gives a huge amount of insight into the mind of a depressed girl, which was a good way of telling the story.  If it had been told any other way, I don’t think I’d feel informed enough.  I was satisfied with the ending too.  It wasn’t totally perfect, but nothing ever ends perfectly (except in fiction books), so I appreciated how it was realistic.  This book is a flash of hope in a dark tunnel, and in a bizarre way it made me feel better about my life.  It’s meant for high schoolers, and I think that most high schoolers would enjoy it, but I’m sure there are lots of adults who would like and understand it too.  In spite of its dark topic choice, this book was incredibly enjoyable, and I really liked it.  
Real Teen Reviews~ B+: Wait for vacation
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