So my dad is a big YA reader and he often asks me for recommendations. Last week I texted him, "Loved Born Wicked, it's like Little Women if the girls were witches." But I realized that assessment doesn't come close to describing how amazing this book is.
In Born Wicked, Jessica Spotswood has created a brilliant and believable alternate history. New England was once governed by witches, but by the late 1800's the Brotherhood rules the province. Women have been stripped of all rights and witchcraft is the highest crime, punished by life-long imprisonment. Before their seventeenth birthday, girls must declare their intention to either marry or join the Sisterhood, a convent of devout women.
Cate Cahill is approaching her seventeenth birthday and in making her choice she thinks only of what will keep her sisters safe. Because Cate and her two younger sisters are witches. Since their mother's death it has fallen to Cate to protect them from the Brotherhood and ensure their magic remains a secret. But when Cate falls for Finn, the subversive scholar, Cate must choose between love and safety.
I love the relationship between the three sisters. The affection and rivalry between them feels so real. I'm also a fan of the hot kissing scenes (closets! gazebos! feathers!) and Finn is definitely a swoon-worthy love interest. Oh and I loved the ending! Actually, it broke my heart, but it broke my heart so effectively. I can't wait for the sequel.
I'm most impressed with how Spotswood built the suspense and secrecy. Among the corsets, gas lamps, and horse-drawn carriages the tension was as thick as in any spy novel. Cate is compelled to protect her sisters and cannot trust anyone with their secret. Each time her magic is revealed, my heart hammered in my chest, because it was inevitable someone would betray her and every character has secrets of their own.
The Brotherhood is also eerily familiar in today's political climate. Watching Congress hearings on contraception, the Brotherhood's supremacy doesn't seem so far-fetched. And that is Spotswood's brilliance. She's given us a fun novel in a historical setting with magic, kissing, and political undertones so subtle I didn't really think about them until days after I'd finished the book. Born Wicked is first and foremost a magical and romantic read, but like all great novels, I know I'll find a lot more to think about upon rereading it.
Oh, and for those in the Houston area, Jessica will be at Blue Willow Bookshop on Wednesday 2/22 as part of the Breathless Reads Tour. I can't wait to meet her!
Where I rant about my drug of choice: YA books with strong female protagonists.
Showing posts with label review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label review. Show all posts
Monday, February 20, 2012
Friday, October 28, 2011
Charlotte Shines in A NEED SO BEAUTIFUL by Suzanne Young
So I want to gush and tell you about how beautiful this book is, but I have this strict No-Spolier policy. Actually it's more of a moral-code than a policy, but still. The ending is one of my favorite parts of this story, but I'm not going to tell you about it, except to say I loved how Suzanne Young didn't wimp out in A Need So Beautiful. She set up a battle between light and dark and followed her own rules. I might have already said too much. I'll stop.
Ok, so since I'm not going to talk about the ending, I'll tell you about my other favorite part of A Need So Beautiful-- Harlin. See what I did there? We just switched from a meaningful spiritual ending to a hot guy on a motorcycle. I'm not the type to usually develop crushes on fictional characters. First, it makes me feel pervy to crush on minors, and second, even though I'm still waiting for my Hogwarts acceptance letter, I DO remember they're not real. Most of the time.
But Harlin? It's hard not to crush on the bad boy with a good heart. Charlotte and Harlin's romance is so perfect because not only is it hot, but I beleived they're truly in love. So often YA romances are either about two people who fall in love and know each other well but never touch, or two people who get hot and heavy but never talk. Charlotte and Harlin's relationship is a realistic blend. They care about each other and share hopes and fears, but also share some smokin's scenes.
Young started out as a contemporary writer and her strength there shines through. Although I liked the unique paranormal element, the realtionships are the strength of this story. And not just between Chralotte and Harlin. Charlotte's relationship with her troubled best-friend is both heart-breaking and inspiring. I also might have gotten a little choked up at the scenes with Charlotte's foster family.
I'll definitely be reading the sequel, A Want so Wicked when it comes out this summer.
Give Away!
Oh, and I haven't blogged for two weeks, so to make good on my promise, I'm giving away a copy of A Need So Beautiful. All you have to do is leave a comment on this post before 12pm Central time on Friday 11/4/11 saying you want a book and I'll randonly pick one lucky winner to receive a copy.
Winner! Random.org chose #1, so that means Karen is our winner! Congratulations, Karen!
Ok, so since I'm not going to talk about the ending, I'll tell you about my other favorite part of A Need So Beautiful-- Harlin. See what I did there? We just switched from a meaningful spiritual ending to a hot guy on a motorcycle. I'm not the type to usually develop crushes on fictional characters. First, it makes me feel pervy to crush on minors, and second, even though I'm still waiting for my Hogwarts acceptance letter, I DO remember they're not real. Most of the time.
But Harlin? It's hard not to crush on the bad boy with a good heart. Charlotte and Harlin's romance is so perfect because not only is it hot, but I beleived they're truly in love. So often YA romances are either about two people who fall in love and know each other well but never touch, or two people who get hot and heavy but never talk. Charlotte and Harlin's relationship is a realistic blend. They care about each other and share hopes and fears, but also share some smokin's scenes.
Young started out as a contemporary writer and her strength there shines through. Although I liked the unique paranormal element, the realtionships are the strength of this story. And not just between Chralotte and Harlin. Charlotte's relationship with her troubled best-friend is both heart-breaking and inspiring. I also might have gotten a little choked up at the scenes with Charlotte's foster family.
I'll definitely be reading the sequel, A Want so Wicked when it comes out this summer.
Give Away!
Oh, and I haven't blogged for two weeks, so to make good on my promise, I'm giving away a copy of A Need So Beautiful. All you have to do is leave a comment on this post before 12pm Central time on Friday 11/4/11 saying you want a book and I'll randonly pick one lucky winner to receive a copy.
Winner! Random.org chose #1, so that means Karen is our winner! Congratulations, Karen!
Labels:
A Need So Beautiful,
give away,
review,
Suzanne Young,
YA
Tuesday, September 27, 2011
Middle Grade That Makes You Think: WHEN YOU REACH ME by Rebecca Stead
When I told my critique partner, Kate Karyus Quinn, that I was rewriting my YA urban fantasy as middle grade, she recommended When You Reach Me by Rebecca Stead. She asked me if I'd read A Wrinkle in Time by Madeleine L'Engle because it would help to understand When You Reach Me.
Had I read A Wrinkle in Time? Only about five or six times. It's one of my all time favorite books. It's the book that made me want to be a writer. So with that caveat, my expectations were set pretty high for When You Reach Me and it did not disappoint.
A Wrinkle in Time is Miranda's favorite book too and she carries it with her everywhere she goes through New York City in 1979. Miranda is a latch-key kid of a single mom who works hard and is competing to strike it rich on the $20,000 Pyramid, a popular 1970's game show.
The book starts off slowly, but Miranda's authentic voice drew me in immediately. When You Reach Me reads like a quiet mystery, but when Miranda receives a note that could have only come from the future, the science fiction elements to the story unfold.
I love time travel, I love intelligent twelve-year-old girl protagonists, and I love smart books that give you all the little pieces to a large puzzle that fit so neatly yet surprisingly together in the end. Stead has created a masterpeice of a smart but simple story. Miranda's voice and her experience feel so real and honest that the speculative aspects of the story feel real as well. This book made me think hard about paradoxes and the theories behind time travel without it ever feeling like a science fiction book.
If you liked A Wrinkle in Time or any time travel story, or are thinking of writing middle grade, I couldn't reccomend this book more.
Had I read A Wrinkle in Time? Only about five or six times. It's one of my all time favorite books. It's the book that made me want to be a writer. So with that caveat, my expectations were set pretty high for When You Reach Me and it did not disappoint.
A Wrinkle in Time is Miranda's favorite book too and she carries it with her everywhere she goes through New York City in 1979. Miranda is a latch-key kid of a single mom who works hard and is competing to strike it rich on the $20,000 Pyramid, a popular 1970's game show.
The book starts off slowly, but Miranda's authentic voice drew me in immediately. When You Reach Me reads like a quiet mystery, but when Miranda receives a note that could have only come from the future, the science fiction elements to the story unfold.
I love time travel, I love intelligent twelve-year-old girl protagonists, and I love smart books that give you all the little pieces to a large puzzle that fit so neatly yet surprisingly together in the end. Stead has created a masterpeice of a smart but simple story. Miranda's voice and her experience feel so real and honest that the speculative aspects of the story feel real as well. This book made me think hard about paradoxes and the theories behind time travel without it ever feeling like a science fiction book.
If you liked A Wrinkle in Time or any time travel story, or are thinking of writing middle grade, I couldn't reccomend this book more.
Labels:
A Wrinkle in Time,
middle grade,
Rebecca Stead,
review,
smart,
When You Reach Me
Monday, September 19, 2011
IMAGINARY GIRLS by Nova Ren Suma
Hello my Junkies, how I've missed you! Check back tomorrow for a book give-away in apology/punishment for my absence.
Have you read Imaginary Girls by Nova Ren Suma? Have you? Hmmm?
This is one of those stories that's difficult to summarize or even place into a genre without giving too much away. Nova Ren Suma classifies it as magical realism and that works for me.
The book is narrated by Chloe and she is the protagonist, but the story isn't so much about her as much as it's about her older sister, Ruby. Actually Chloe's whole life, her whole world, is not so much about Chloe as much as it's about Ruby.
Chloe idolizes Ruby and is convinced Ruby can do anything. And Ruby does. She has the whole town wrapped around her little finger. Chloe loves her for it and Ruby would do anything for her.
This book has a surreal, dream-like quality to it. But much like the reservoir in the small town, danger lurks beneth the calm surface.
Ruby terrifies me. Chloe loves her and trusts her, but Ruby is a little too powerful and too unstable for me to be comfortable. And that's what's so great about this story. We swim along, floating on Suma's beautiful writing, but in the back of our mind we know darkness is closing in.
Imaginary Girls has some of the things I love most in books: an unreliable narrator, a dysfunctional family, and a touch of magic.
It's a great read. Check back tomorrow for a chance to win a copy.
Have you read Imaginary Girls by Nova Ren Suma? Have you? Hmmm?
This is one of those stories that's difficult to summarize or even place into a genre without giving too much away. Nova Ren Suma classifies it as magical realism and that works for me.
The book is narrated by Chloe and she is the protagonist, but the story isn't so much about her as much as it's about her older sister, Ruby. Actually Chloe's whole life, her whole world, is not so much about Chloe as much as it's about Ruby.
Chloe idolizes Ruby and is convinced Ruby can do anything. And Ruby does. She has the whole town wrapped around her little finger. Chloe loves her for it and Ruby would do anything for her.
This book has a surreal, dream-like quality to it. But much like the reservoir in the small town, danger lurks beneth the calm surface.
Ruby terrifies me. Chloe loves her and trusts her, but Ruby is a little too powerful and too unstable for me to be comfortable. And that's what's so great about this story. We swim along, floating on Suma's beautiful writing, but in the back of our mind we know darkness is closing in.
Imaginary Girls has some of the things I love most in books: an unreliable narrator, a dysfunctional family, and a touch of magic.
It's a great read. Check back tomorrow for a chance to win a copy.
Labels:
Imaginary Girls,
magical realism,
Nova Ren Suma,
review,
scary,
YA
Wednesday, July 6, 2011
Kaede kicks ass in HUNTRESS by Malinda Lo
The ancient world in Huntress is dying. The seasons won't change, the sky is a constant shade of grey, crops are dried up, and people are starving. Kaede and Taisin are two teenage girls in an academy training to be sages. Taisin is a gifted sage from a humble birth, while Kaede has remained in the academy despite any magical ability because she is the chancellor's daughter.
When the King receives an invitation from the Fairy Queen, Taisin's visions and a prophecy determine that Kaede and Taisin must accompany Prince Con into the world of fairy. Taisin's only worried about one thing: in her vision, she's in love with Kaede and sages must take a vow of celibacy. Taisin wants more than anything to be a sage and is determined to not let any feelings get in her way.
Huntress by Malinda Lo is a splendid fantasy full of both intense adventure and a sweet romance. The love story in this book feels so genuine and pure. I kept reading late into the night just to see more interaction between these two girls.
Huntress is technically a prequel to Ash, Lo's retelling of Cinderella. Although I loved Ash as well, I feel like Huntress is the stronger book and is easy to read completely on its own. If you like Graceling by Kristin Cashore ( I love it!) then I think you'll enjoy Huntress as well.
And for you writer-types, Lo does something interesting with point-of-view. Huntress is told in 3rd person omniscient-ish. We see inside several characters' heads. I hadn't read a contemporary book that pulls this off until now.
So, check out Huntress and let me know what you think!
Ooh, also. I just read this epilogue-ish short story by Malinda Lo here.
When the King receives an invitation from the Fairy Queen, Taisin's visions and a prophecy determine that Kaede and Taisin must accompany Prince Con into the world of fairy. Taisin's only worried about one thing: in her vision, she's in love with Kaede and sages must take a vow of celibacy. Taisin wants more than anything to be a sage and is determined to not let any feelings get in her way.
Huntress by Malinda Lo is a splendid fantasy full of both intense adventure and a sweet romance. The love story in this book feels so genuine and pure. I kept reading late into the night just to see more interaction between these two girls.
Huntress is technically a prequel to Ash, Lo's retelling of Cinderella. Although I loved Ash as well, I feel like Huntress is the stronger book and is easy to read completely on its own. If you like Graceling by Kristin Cashore ( I love it!) then I think you'll enjoy Huntress as well.
And for you writer-types, Lo does something interesting with point-of-view. Huntress is told in 3rd person omniscient-ish. We see inside several characters' heads. I hadn't read a contemporary book that pulls this off until now.
So, check out Huntress and let me know what you think!
Ooh, also. I just read this epilogue-ish short story by Malinda Lo here.
Labels:
Huntress,
kick-ass heroine,
love story,
Malinda Lo,
review
Tuesday, June 21, 2011
From bimbos to badasses in BEAUTY QUEENS by Libba Bray
A plane full of beauty pageant contestants crashes on a deserted island. It's an awesome premise, but in Beauty Queens, Libba Bray does so much more than give us Lord of the Flies in heels.
Bray's smart and hilarious writing takes us deep into the psyche of our ensemble cast of teen beauty queens. Each girl has her own reasons for entering the pageant and each girl has her own demons to conquer on the island as she comes into her own. It is a truly ensemble cast, but Petra is my favorite. She might be the one with the biggest secret, but she is also the girl who has the clearest sense of who she is. Beauty Queens is somehow both campy and deep, it delivers a strong message and yet is light-hearted and hilarious.
If you took LOST, James Bond, Glee, Clueless, The Heart of Darkness, added some feminist-flavored rum, and put them in a blender, Beauty Queens would be the fruity cocktail you'd enjoy by the pool.
I loved Bray's use of footnotes in the novel and many of them had me literally laughing out loud. Example: "Che Guevara, the Argentine Marxist revolutionary who later became a best-selling t-shirt icon."
Although they might start off as superficial pageant contestants, Beauty Queens is full of strong heroines, some of which become pretty bad-ass. It's great fun to see the girls use their beautifying skills to survive on the island and confront any dangers that come their way. I love this book and I think anyone who's ever seen an advertisement for a beauty product should read it.
Bray's smart and hilarious writing takes us deep into the psyche of our ensemble cast of teen beauty queens. Each girl has her own reasons for entering the pageant and each girl has her own demons to conquer on the island as she comes into her own. It is a truly ensemble cast, but Petra is my favorite. She might be the one with the biggest secret, but she is also the girl who has the clearest sense of who she is. Beauty Queens is somehow both campy and deep, it delivers a strong message and yet is light-hearted and hilarious.
If you took LOST, James Bond, Glee, Clueless, The Heart of Darkness, added some feminist-flavored rum, and put them in a blender, Beauty Queens would be the fruity cocktail you'd enjoy by the pool.
I loved Bray's use of footnotes in the novel and many of them had me literally laughing out loud. Example: "Che Guevara, the Argentine Marxist revolutionary who later became a best-selling t-shirt icon."
Although they might start off as superficial pageant contestants, Beauty Queens is full of strong heroines, some of which become pretty bad-ass. It's great fun to see the girls use their beautifying skills to survive on the island and confront any dangers that come their way. I love this book and I think anyone who's ever seen an advertisement for a beauty product should read it.
Tuesday, June 7, 2011
Holly Black knows how to make readers feel smart in RED GLOVE
I read because I like to feel smart. Sure, I read as an exercise in escapism. I read to step into someone else's shoes and to learn about the world around me. I read to laugh. I read to cry. Sure, whatever.
I love books that make me feel smart. I'm not talking about reading Plato's Republic and then annoying my friends with Socratic quotes. Not that kind of smart. I love figuring things out. I love that "aha!" moment, when I'm pretty sure I've solved the mystery. I love that light bulb moment so much, that I'll sometimes put a sticky note on the page where things finally came together. That way, later when someone asks "When did you figure out the BIG MYSTERY?" I can say, "HA! I knew all the way back on page 98." (No one's ever asked, but you know, just in case).
BUT! Here's the thing. As much as I love feeling smart, I also love being tricked. And this is where Holly Black is most brilliant. She's weaved so many mysteries, twists, and turns into Red Glove that while I'm patting myself on the back for figuring one thing out (sticky note ready) BAM! Someone sneaks up behind me and whacks me on the head with a shovel. (Not literally, you know what I mean).
Red Glove is the second book in Holly Black's magical mobster Curse Workers Series. But Red Glove is so much more than a sequel to White Cat. As Kiersten White eloquently points out, Red Glove avoids all the second book pitfalls and is the "perfect middle book."
Cassel's brother is murdered and he has to figure out who killed him, while hiding his powerful curse, and shaking off both the mob and the feds who are breathing down his neck trying to recruit him. The thing is, Cassel is a pretty screwed up guy. With an emotion-worker for a mom, he doesn't trust his own feelings, let alone those of others. His family is full of criminals and killers, and although he doesn't want to be like them, he doesn't know how to be anything else. He doesn't trust his own sense of right and wrong. Lies come more easily than the truth. His self-loathing is so complete, he can't believe anyone would like him unless they're being conned, worked, and/or lied to.
Black does a brilliant job of letting the reader figure some things out long before Cassel does. He's so lovably screwed up, he can't see what's right in front of him. But at the same time, Cassel is so busy lying, hiding, and conning, we never see the end coming. Dark and heartbreaking, with thrilling set-ups and cons, Red Glove's best con is the one Black pulls on the readers.
**Ok, so I know I'm breaking my own rules by raving about a book with a male protagonist. But, I wouldn't mess with ANY of the women in this book, they're all pretty kick-ass in their own right. And, they're my rules and I can break them if I want to. So there.
I love books that make me feel smart. I'm not talking about reading Plato's Republic and then annoying my friends with Socratic quotes. Not that kind of smart. I love figuring things out. I love that "aha!" moment, when I'm pretty sure I've solved the mystery. I love that light bulb moment so much, that I'll sometimes put a sticky note on the page where things finally came together. That way, later when someone asks "When did you figure out the BIG MYSTERY?" I can say, "HA! I knew all the way back on page 98." (No one's ever asked, but you know, just in case).
BUT! Here's the thing. As much as I love feeling smart, I also love being tricked. And this is where Holly Black is most brilliant. She's weaved so many mysteries, twists, and turns into Red Glove that while I'm patting myself on the back for figuring one thing out (sticky note ready) BAM! Someone sneaks up behind me and whacks me on the head with a shovel. (Not literally, you know what I mean).
Red Glove is the second book in Holly Black's magical mobster Curse Workers Series. But Red Glove is so much more than a sequel to White Cat. As Kiersten White eloquently points out, Red Glove avoids all the second book pitfalls and is the "perfect middle book."
Cassel's brother is murdered and he has to figure out who killed him, while hiding his powerful curse, and shaking off both the mob and the feds who are breathing down his neck trying to recruit him. The thing is, Cassel is a pretty screwed up guy. With an emotion-worker for a mom, he doesn't trust his own feelings, let alone those of others. His family is full of criminals and killers, and although he doesn't want to be like them, he doesn't know how to be anything else. He doesn't trust his own sense of right and wrong. Lies come more easily than the truth. His self-loathing is so complete, he can't believe anyone would like him unless they're being conned, worked, and/or lied to.
Black does a brilliant job of letting the reader figure some things out long before Cassel does. He's so lovably screwed up, he can't see what's right in front of him. But at the same time, Cassel is so busy lying, hiding, and conning, we never see the end coming. Dark and heartbreaking, with thrilling set-ups and cons, Red Glove's best con is the one Black pulls on the readers.
**Ok, so I know I'm breaking my own rules by raving about a book with a male protagonist. But, I wouldn't mess with ANY of the women in this book, they're all pretty kick-ass in their own right. And, they're my rules and I can break them if I want to. So there.
Labels:
boys,
Curseworkers,
Holly Black,
Red Glove,
review
Tuesday, May 31, 2011
Fancy is Wicked in SLICE OF CHERRY by Dia Reeves
Hello! So, a few weeks ago Blogger was doing funny things and ate my post on Divergent by Veronica Roth. But I've been too lazy incredibly busy to rewrite it. So, I'll sum up. You should read it. Divergent crawled inside my head and stayed there for days. Fans of The Hunger Games will love it.
OK then, onward and upward!
I loved Bleeding Violet by Dia Reeves and I was excited about Slice of Cherry. I'd heard it was darker, bloodier, and even better than Bleeding Violet. And guess what? They were right! These people who say these things: so smart!
It's not a sequel, but Slice of Cherry takes place in Portrero, the same town as Bleeding Violet, and Hanna and Wyatt make a cameo. Slice of Cherry is about Kit and Fancy, daughters of an incarcerated serial-killer known as the Bone-Saw Killer. And the apple doesn't fall far from the tree. The girls can't fight the desire to cut and kill (well, it's not like they try hard).
All Fancy wants is for her and her sister to be together and be allowed to be themselves, even if that means an occasional homicide. Reeves has this way of combining blood, murder, sex, and a light-hearted playfulness into a book that is difficult to put down but creates this uncomfortable squishy spot inside you.
I'd find myself rooting for Fancy and her murderous desires, only to be disgusted with myself for doing so. Through their special abilities in the dangerously magical world of Portrero, Kit and Fancy turn murder into a game. Although it made me squeamish at times, I loved how remorseless Fanny is. She doesn't apologize for who she is. Ultimately this is a book about being true to yourself, sticking by your family, and searching for what it means to be "good."
There are some books where you love the world and the characters so much, you want to dive into the book and live the characters' lives. This is not one of those books. Reeves does an excellent job of making Portrero and the girls' world feel disturbingly real, but I'm really glad it's not.
If you want to read a book you can feel in your gut, I highly recommend Slice of Cherry.
OK then, onward and upward!
I loved Bleeding Violet by Dia Reeves and I was excited about Slice of Cherry. I'd heard it was darker, bloodier, and even better than Bleeding Violet. And guess what? They were right! These people who say these things: so smart!
It's not a sequel, but Slice of Cherry takes place in Portrero, the same town as Bleeding Violet, and Hanna and Wyatt make a cameo. Slice of Cherry is about Kit and Fancy, daughters of an incarcerated serial-killer known as the Bone-Saw Killer. And the apple doesn't fall far from the tree. The girls can't fight the desire to cut and kill (well, it's not like they try hard).
All Fancy wants is for her and her sister to be together and be allowed to be themselves, even if that means an occasional homicide. Reeves has this way of combining blood, murder, sex, and a light-hearted playfulness into a book that is difficult to put down but creates this uncomfortable squishy spot inside you.
I'd find myself rooting for Fancy and her murderous desires, only to be disgusted with myself for doing so. Through their special abilities in the dangerously magical world of Portrero, Kit and Fancy turn murder into a game. Although it made me squeamish at times, I loved how remorseless Fanny is. She doesn't apologize for who she is. Ultimately this is a book about being true to yourself, sticking by your family, and searching for what it means to be "good."
There are some books where you love the world and the characters so much, you want to dive into the book and live the characters' lives. This is not one of those books. Reeves does an excellent job of making Portrero and the girls' world feel disturbingly real, but I'm really glad it's not.
If you want to read a book you can feel in your gut, I highly recommend Slice of Cherry.
Labels:
Bleeding Violet,
Dia Reeves,
review,
Slice of Cherry
Wednesday, April 20, 2011
Amelia predicts you'll love THE VESPERTINE by Saundra Mitchell
I'm usually not a fan of historical fiction. It's difficult for me to care about problems that don't exist today, like tight corsets and strict courting rules. But Saundra Mitchell's writing is so pure and so real, I was sucked back in time.
Within the first few pages of The Vespertine, we know Amelia is "ruined." Then the story jumps back a few months and we watch her ruination unfold. I found myself (even with my staunch apathy towards courting rules of the past) constantly worried about Amelia's reputation. Each time she bent the rules, I'd think, "Amelia! Your virtue! Protect your virtue!" Somehow Mitchell's amazing words turned me into a Victorian grandma.
I think that's what I loved most about this book. Mitchell creates a world so solid, so complete, that I was both shocked and exhilarated by Amelia's daring when she touched a boy's bare hand or asked for his address.
And really, I don't think the story would work as well in any other time period. Amelia sees the future in the sunset. She doesn't know when or where the images she sees will unfold, only that they will. In a time when spiritualism was all the rave, Amelia's gift makes her very popular in Baltimore....until she's blamed for the tragedies she foresees.
I love how the characters readily accepted the supernatural occurrences in the novel. And that makes sense, really. There was so much we didn't know and didn't understand about our world in the Victorian era. Now, we'd be concerned with the hows and whys, but back then, not knowing was just part of life.
Mitchell somehow manages to write both a beautiful and fast-paced story. She also doesn't pull any punches, this is truly a gothic novel with its fair share of devastation.
I see in the vespers...you'll love it!
Within the first few pages of The Vespertine, we know Amelia is "ruined." Then the story jumps back a few months and we watch her ruination unfold. I found myself (even with my staunch apathy towards courting rules of the past) constantly worried about Amelia's reputation. Each time she bent the rules, I'd think, "Amelia! Your virtue! Protect your virtue!" Somehow Mitchell's amazing words turned me into a Victorian grandma.
I think that's what I loved most about this book. Mitchell creates a world so solid, so complete, that I was both shocked and exhilarated by Amelia's daring when she touched a boy's bare hand or asked for his address.
And really, I don't think the story would work as well in any other time period. Amelia sees the future in the sunset. She doesn't know when or where the images she sees will unfold, only that they will. In a time when spiritualism was all the rave, Amelia's gift makes her very popular in Baltimore....until she's blamed for the tragedies she foresees.
I love how the characters readily accepted the supernatural occurrences in the novel. And that makes sense, really. There was so much we didn't know and didn't understand about our world in the Victorian era. Now, we'd be concerned with the hows and whys, but back then, not knowing was just part of life.
Mitchell somehow manages to write both a beautiful and fast-paced story. She also doesn't pull any punches, this is truly a gothic novel with its fair share of devastation.
I see in the vespers...you'll love it!
Labels:
love story,
review,
Saundra Mitchell,
The Vespertine
Thursday, April 7, 2011
Annah is a fighter in THE DARK AND HOLLOW PLACES by Carrie Ryan
The Dark and Hollow Places by Carrie Ryan is by far my favorite book in the Forest of Hands and Teeth series. And Annah is my favorite of the three heroines. She's the strongest, but also the most damaged.
While Mary and Gabry both grew up in relative safety, Annah has been fighting to survive since she was five years old. Both Mary and Gabry took risks while figuring out what they wanted out of life. (Sometimes these risks made me want to yell at them and say, "No! Just stay put! There are zombies out there! What are you thinking?!!! Ahhh!!!")
Annah, on the other hand, is less reckless but her world is so much more dangerous. Everyday is a struggle to survive. She doesn't need to take stupid risks to decide what she wants, she already knows. She wants to be safe and she wants to be loved. But in a world consumed by death, where even the living have lost their humanity, this might be too much to ask for.
I found The Dark and Hollow Places to be significantly darker and more terrifying than The Forest of Hands and Teeth or The Dead-Tossed Waves. Ryan explores the cruelty of human nature and what we're capable of once order is stripped away--ideas just touched on in the previous two books. At times, I didn't know if I was more scared of the Unconsecrated or the Recruiters.
And boy are there some scary scenes! In real life, I'm totally scared of the dark. Who knew that reading about the dark would make me so terrified? I had to stop and catch my breath a few times, I was gasping and panting while reading, I was so scared. (Note: I'm a wuss)
Don't worry, though, it's not all doom, gloom, and fear. I also think the love story in this book is the best of all three. Unlike with Mary and Gabry's romances, it was clear from the start who Annah belonged with. And there's nothing more satisfying than watching two characters learn to love themselves so they can begin to love each other.
I loaned my copy of the book to a student and when she finished, she told me, "And I'm so glad she fell in love with him because...well...yeah."
"Yeah," I said.
Sometimes sixteen-year-olds say it best.
You will not be disappointed in the conclusion to this amazing series.
While Mary and Gabry both grew up in relative safety, Annah has been fighting to survive since she was five years old. Both Mary and Gabry took risks while figuring out what they wanted out of life. (Sometimes these risks made me want to yell at them and say, "No! Just stay put! There are zombies out there! What are you thinking?!!! Ahhh!!!")
Annah, on the other hand, is less reckless but her world is so much more dangerous. Everyday is a struggle to survive. She doesn't need to take stupid risks to decide what she wants, she already knows. She wants to be safe and she wants to be loved. But in a world consumed by death, where even the living have lost their humanity, this might be too much to ask for.
I found The Dark and Hollow Places to be significantly darker and more terrifying than The Forest of Hands and Teeth or The Dead-Tossed Waves. Ryan explores the cruelty of human nature and what we're capable of once order is stripped away--ideas just touched on in the previous two books. At times, I didn't know if I was more scared of the Unconsecrated or the Recruiters.
And boy are there some scary scenes! In real life, I'm totally scared of the dark. Who knew that reading about the dark would make me so terrified? I had to stop and catch my breath a few times, I was gasping and panting while reading, I was so scared. (Note: I'm a wuss)
Don't worry, though, it's not all doom, gloom, and fear. I also think the love story in this book is the best of all three. Unlike with Mary and Gabry's romances, it was clear from the start who Annah belonged with. And there's nothing more satisfying than watching two characters learn to love themselves so they can begin to love each other.
I loaned my copy of the book to a student and when she finished, she told me, "And I'm so glad she fell in love with him because...well...yeah."
"Yeah," I said.
Sometimes sixteen-year-olds say it best.
You will not be disappointed in the conclusion to this amazing series.
Monday, March 21, 2011
I love Donia in DARKEST MERCY by Melissa Marr
So, it's like really hard to talk about the last book in a series without spoiling the preceding books. So, if you haven't read them yet, go read the first four Wicked Lovely books by Melissa Marr, like now. Of course I won't spoil Darkest Mercy, because that would be sick and wrong.
Now, Donia was one of my favorite characters from Wicked Lovely, so I was super excited to see her on the cover of Darkest Mercy. I have to admit, though, I was a little nervous to read the last book in this awesome series, because I knew war was brewing and I feared a blood-bath.
Also, when I read Radiant Shadows many moons ago, I screamed at the last line of the epilogue. Devlin tells Seth, "Try not to die, brother." Ahh!
I love Seth! And really, he is near and dear to so many faeries that he's the perfect target for Bananach to start some trouble. So yes, I was worried, but once I started reading, of course I couldn't stop.
Melissa Marr blew me away once again with her brilliant prose. What I loved about this final book, was its sense of humor. We know these characters so well now and Marr slipped in all these inside jokes and great one-liners. And Niall--oh how I love Niall--even when he's on the brink of madness and overwhelmed with grief, is pretty darn funny.
Marr uses so many point of views, I lost count. But because we know almost all the characters so well, it was never dizzying. We are introduced to two new faeries, Far Dorcha and Ankou. And in the way only Marr knows how to craft characters, they are both dark and frightening, yet likable.
Darkest Mercy focuses a lot on forgiveness. And as a reader I felt like I had to forgive some characters, for their actions in the previous books and for their trespasses in the course of this final installment.
I loved this book. Donia was as strong as ever and Seth continued to serve as the moral compass for the faerie courts. But there were some devastating parts. The senseless death of war was deeply felt. There were bloody battles and grief.
But Marr also has a marvelous knack for bringing her characters to the brink of doom and then getting them out of it in a way that feels natural. Darkest Mercy is dark and bloody, but it's also the most hopeful of all five books. I love the emotional ride of Darkest Mercy. Read it!
Labels:
Darkest Mercy,
faeries,
love story,
Melissa Marr,
review,
Wicked Lovely
Monday, February 21, 2011
Not so little-- SISTERS RED By Jackson Pearce
My, what big eyes you have!
I loved Jackson Pearce's modern retelling of "Little Red Riding Hood." In Sisters Red, Scarlett March lives for two things, hunting werewolves and protecting Rosie, her younger sister. Rosie owes Scarlett her life and forgoes school and all the trappings of a normal life to join her sister in the hunt. But unlike Scarlett, who feels most complete when she's sinking her hatchet into a wolf's belly, Rosie longs for more.
The book alternates between the two sisters' perspectives. At first Scarlett was my favorite. She's the strong one, the fighter. But as I read, I kept rooting for Rosie's happiness, even if it was at the expense of her sister's.
It took me a second to adjust to the world Pearce created. The story takes place in our world, in Atlanta, Georgia. But Scarlett and Rosie aren't really a part of the world you and I know. They live in a cottage in the woods, and walk everywhere, and don't work or go to school, and have a woodsman for a neighbor, and hunt werewolves, and don't have cell phones. (do you have any idea how many of their problems would've been solved if they had freaking cell phones?)
But, once I figured out the whole fairy-tale world within our world thing, I was hooked. And that's a huge part of the story. Rosie wants to be part of our world so badly, while Scarlett is stuck in her own world of the hunt.
Sisters Red is bloody and ferocious as the two heroines kick some major wolf ass. Oh, I wish I could tell you my favorite ass-kicking part! But it's at the end. And a big spoiler. So, read it and you'll see.
I also loved the romance in this book. I liked how the love wasn't TOO forbidden. It felt right for the characters to be together and they didn't get all dramatic about the reasons they *shouldn't* be. I liked that. Their love felt real.
Ooh, and also, Ms. Pearce, you are the Queen of red herrings! I'm very impressed. At first, I knew. Then I was, oh wait, I'm wrong. But it turns out, I was right! Sneaky, sneaky. (Sorry Junkies, if you're confused, just go read it already).
So, if you like books with girls hacking up evil werewolves with hatchets, sisterly love, hot romance with kissing in the rain, and kick-ass girls who say, "I won't wait for the woodsman to save me." Then, what are you waiting for?
Oh, and have you seen Jackson Pearce's amazing blog? She does these great videos that are both funny and informative.
I loved Jackson Pearce's modern retelling of "Little Red Riding Hood." In Sisters Red, Scarlett March lives for two things, hunting werewolves and protecting Rosie, her younger sister. Rosie owes Scarlett her life and forgoes school and all the trappings of a normal life to join her sister in the hunt. But unlike Scarlett, who feels most complete when she's sinking her hatchet into a wolf's belly, Rosie longs for more.
The book alternates between the two sisters' perspectives. At first Scarlett was my favorite. She's the strong one, the fighter. But as I read, I kept rooting for Rosie's happiness, even if it was at the expense of her sister's.
It took me a second to adjust to the world Pearce created. The story takes place in our world, in Atlanta, Georgia. But Scarlett and Rosie aren't really a part of the world you and I know. They live in a cottage in the woods, and walk everywhere, and don't work or go to school, and have a woodsman for a neighbor, and hunt werewolves, and don't have cell phones. (do you have any idea how many of their problems would've been solved if they had freaking cell phones?)
But, once I figured out the whole fairy-tale world within our world thing, I was hooked. And that's a huge part of the story. Rosie wants to be part of our world so badly, while Scarlett is stuck in her own world of the hunt.
Sisters Red is bloody and ferocious as the two heroines kick some major wolf ass. Oh, I wish I could tell you my favorite ass-kicking part! But it's at the end. And a big spoiler. So, read it and you'll see.
I also loved the romance in this book. I liked how the love wasn't TOO forbidden. It felt right for the characters to be together and they didn't get all dramatic about the reasons they *shouldn't* be. I liked that. Their love felt real.
Ooh, and also, Ms. Pearce, you are the Queen of red herrings! I'm very impressed. At first, I knew. Then I was, oh wait, I'm wrong. But it turns out, I was right! Sneaky, sneaky. (Sorry Junkies, if you're confused, just go read it already).
So, if you like books with girls hacking up evil werewolves with hatchets, sisterly love, hot romance with kissing in the rain, and kick-ass girls who say, "I won't wait for the woodsman to save me." Then, what are you waiting for?
Oh, and have you seen Jackson Pearce's amazing blog? She does these great videos that are both funny and informative.
Labels:
Jackson Pearce,
kick-ass heroine,
love story,
review,
Sisters Red,
werewolves
Thursday, February 10, 2011
Gateway Drugs
So as part of my day-job, I teach a remedial reading class to 11th graders. Many English teachers would be disgusted with such a task, but I like it for a lot of reasons. I get to play matchmaker with teens and books. The class I teach is all about pairing students with high-interest books at their level. The program comes with loads of great books, but students also find themselves attracted to all those other books on my shelves.
I thought I'd share with you some of the books I've recommended and that have been successful with my reluctant readers. Now, this is by no means a comprehensive list and I'm not a librarian. The ALA has a complete list of YA for reluctant readers which is much better than my silly anecdotes.
The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins
I pitched the book to my class and then started a sign-up sheet for who wanted to read it first. A few tried but it was too hard for them. But one student was determined. He was hooked by the concept and every day he'd check in with me to make sure he was understanding it. "So, she goes in her sister's place?" "So, Peeta is the boy with the bread?" "So, Haymitch is drunk?" I would nod, and smile and my heart would swell with pride that he's understanding a book above his level and at the same time I'd get to relive the amazing story with him.
anything by Sharon Draper
I had three girls who read Romiette and Julio, Tears of a Tiger, and Forged by Fire. Whoever read a book first would then ask the other one "so, where are you?" and the other girl would yell at her not to spoil it. One of these girls hated reading, hated me, hated the class. she'd never even read a picture book (or so she said) but she loved sharon Draper's books. She wanted to write her a letter. So we wrote Sharon an email and she wrote back! This student smiled for the first time all year when I handed her the printed out email from Sharon.
13 Reasons Why by Jay Asher
Draper got those three girls hooked and they wanted more. I figured out they liked the edginess and readability of Draper's books, so I told them about 13 Reasons Why. Of course I prefaced it with a worried face and said, "hmm, I don't know, it has some language, and some sex, maybe I should ask your parents first..." that really got them clamoring. To girls fought over who would read it first, so they alternated days and each had a post-it note to save their place. They'd get mad when the other one had read farther than them. The book is short, the chapters are short, and the emotions are raw. Perfect for reluctant readers.
City of Bones by Cassandra Clare
I had a student who read at grade-level but said she just didn't like to read. Twilight was the only book she'd ever finished. I handed her City of Bones and she gobbled up the series. She wanted more. She said she wanted darker. I handed her Wicked Lovely by Melissa Marr. She made a face when I told her it was about faeries. "Trust me," I said. She came back the next day and handed me the book. "What you don't like it?" I asked. "No. I finished it. Is there another one?" Yes, yes there is. I knew then that she was hooked (insert evil laugh here). She's read half the books on my shelves.
Wake by Lisa McMann
The lyrical style and time-jumps can be tricky for some readers, but the short sections are much less an intimidating than a 30 page chapter.
Perfect Chemistry by Simone Elkes
The Draper girls are seniors this year and no longer my students. But sometimes they stop by and ask "got anything good?" (I really do feel like a drug dealer) They devoured Perfect Chemistry.
When I first started trying to push books on teens, I'd just try to get them to read my favorite books. but that's not how it works. I have to figure out what THEY like and find something easy enough. Not all YA is accessible for emerging readers. Many of the books I LOVE are too subtle, require the reader to make too many inferences, and are just plain too long to keep the attention of a reluctant reader. But that's ok, I love the challenge of finding something for them.
What about you junkies? Which books have you seen start an addiction?
I thought I'd share with you some of the books I've recommended and that have been successful with my reluctant readers. Now, this is by no means a comprehensive list and I'm not a librarian. The ALA has a complete list of YA for reluctant readers which is much better than my silly anecdotes.
The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins
I pitched the book to my class and then started a sign-up sheet for who wanted to read it first. A few tried but it was too hard for them. But one student was determined. He was hooked by the concept and every day he'd check in with me to make sure he was understanding it. "So, she goes in her sister's place?" "So, Peeta is the boy with the bread?" "So, Haymitch is drunk?" I would nod, and smile and my heart would swell with pride that he's understanding a book above his level and at the same time I'd get to relive the amazing story with him.
anything by Sharon Draper
I had three girls who read Romiette and Julio, Tears of a Tiger, and Forged by Fire. Whoever read a book first would then ask the other one "so, where are you?" and the other girl would yell at her not to spoil it. One of these girls hated reading, hated me, hated the class. she'd never even read a picture book (or so she said) but she loved sharon Draper's books. She wanted to write her a letter. So we wrote Sharon an email and she wrote back! This student smiled for the first time all year when I handed her the printed out email from Sharon.
13 Reasons Why by Jay Asher
Draper got those three girls hooked and they wanted more. I figured out they liked the edginess and readability of Draper's books, so I told them about 13 Reasons Why. Of course I prefaced it with a worried face and said, "hmm, I don't know, it has some language, and some sex, maybe I should ask your parents first..." that really got them clamoring. To girls fought over who would read it first, so they alternated days and each had a post-it note to save their place. They'd get mad when the other one had read farther than them. The book is short, the chapters are short, and the emotions are raw. Perfect for reluctant readers.
City of Bones by Cassandra Clare
I had a student who read at grade-level but said she just didn't like to read. Twilight was the only book she'd ever finished. I handed her City of Bones and she gobbled up the series. She wanted more. She said she wanted darker. I handed her Wicked Lovely by Melissa Marr. She made a face when I told her it was about faeries. "Trust me," I said. She came back the next day and handed me the book. "What you don't like it?" I asked. "No. I finished it. Is there another one?" Yes, yes there is. I knew then that she was hooked (insert evil laugh here). She's read half the books on my shelves.
Wake by Lisa McMann
The lyrical style and time-jumps can be tricky for some readers, but the short sections are much less an intimidating than a 30 page chapter.
Perfect Chemistry by Simone Elkes
The Draper girls are seniors this year and no longer my students. But sometimes they stop by and ask "got anything good?" (I really do feel like a drug dealer) They devoured Perfect Chemistry.
When I first started trying to push books on teens, I'd just try to get them to read my favorite books. but that's not how it works. I have to figure out what THEY like and find something easy enough. Not all YA is accessible for emerging readers. Many of the books I LOVE are too subtle, require the reader to make too many inferences, and are just plain too long to keep the attention of a reluctant reader. But that's ok, I love the challenge of finding something for them.
What about you junkies? Which books have you seen start an addiction?
Tuesday, February 8, 2011
I want to smooch ANNA and the FRENCH KISS by Stephanie Perkins
I don't read much contemporary YA. I mean, I'm not a teen, and I spend ALL day in a high school. So I get my share of the drama, the awkwardness, the gossip, the cattiness, the bullying, the bad decisions, and all the icky coming-of-age-ness. I generally don't want to read about that stuff unless there's a decent dose of magic, paranormal creatures, dystopian societies, and/or zombie apocalypses.
But enough of my fav authors who write about all those speculative things raved about Anna and the French Kiss by Stephanie Perkins that I had to pick it up. I'm so glad I read this book, because I'd forgotten about all the exciting things about being a teenager.
Secret crushes! First kisses! Delightfully awkward throat-clearing while your leg brushes his and you pretend you're paying attention to the movie and not stealing glances at him in a dark movie theater!
Perkins does a brilliant job of filling us with the tingly ache of falling in love. I held my breath along with Anna as she shared her boarding school bed with Etienne. (oh, not like that! Remember that feeling? That 17-year-old feeling that if you could just sleep, JUST SLEEP, with him then your world would be complete? Sigh)
I was afraid Anna and the French Kiss would be too light and fluffy, but I was relieved to find genuine characters with real problems and a wonderfully believable romance. And even though she didn't beat-up vampires or kick zombie-ass, Anna is still a strong heroine who holds her own.
So, my challenge to you junkies: What other YA contemporaries do you recommend?
But enough of my fav authors who write about all those speculative things raved about Anna and the French Kiss by Stephanie Perkins that I had to pick it up. I'm so glad I read this book, because I'd forgotten about all the exciting things about being a teenager.
Secret crushes! First kisses! Delightfully awkward throat-clearing while your leg brushes his and you pretend you're paying attention to the movie and not stealing glances at him in a dark movie theater!
Perkins does a brilliant job of filling us with the tingly ache of falling in love. I held my breath along with Anna as she shared her boarding school bed with Etienne. (oh, not like that! Remember that feeling? That 17-year-old feeling that if you could just sleep, JUST SLEEP, with him then your world would be complete? Sigh)
I was afraid Anna and the French Kiss would be too light and fluffy, but I was relieved to find genuine characters with real problems and a wonderfully believable romance. And even though she didn't beat-up vampires or kick zombie-ass, Anna is still a strong heroine who holds her own.
So, my challenge to you junkies: What other YA contemporaries do you recommend?
Tuesday, February 1, 2011
I fell in love with THE REPLACEMENT by Brenna Yovanoff
OK Junkies, I'm breaking my own rules to tell you about how awesome The Replacement by Brenna Yovanoff is, even though the main character is a boy. But the girls in this book kick so much ass that I really think it makes up for it.
Mackie Doyle isn't like the rest of the people in Gentry, his small and gloomy town. Actually, Mackie isn't even human. His parents know it. His sister knows it. His best friend knows it. Half the town might suspect it, but NO ONE talks about it.
In Gentry, babies sometimes get sick and die. But the bodies in the tiny coffins aren't really the grieving parents' offspring. They're replacements.
The creatures who live beneath the slag heap steal human babies and replace them with their own sick children. The replacements all die in their cribs. All except Mackie.
Thanks to his sister's love, Mackie has survived and grown into a teenager. But he lives in fear that the town will learn his secret and persecute him. He does his best to blend in, to be invisible. He doesn't want to think or talk about the truth anymore than the next citizen of Gentry.
But when Tate's younger sister dies, she knows the corpse is not her sister. Tate challenges Mackie to acknowledge who he is and how he can help.
One of the things I love about this book is that Mackie is not a typical hero. He's not brave, or strong, or selfless, or any of the things we expect our heroes to be. Mackie is sickly, poisoned by the iron in the world around him. Sometimes he can barely walk into a room without swooning, let alone fight off bad guys. Also, all Mackie wants is to blend in, be left alone, and survive. He stonewalls Tate to protect himself and at first he won't stick out his neck for anyone.
So that's where the girls come in. Erin, Mackie's sister, will do anything to protect Mackie. She puts herself in danger to save him and her strong love is what has kept him alive in a world his body rejects. And Tate definitely earns the title of kick-ass heroine. I don't want to spoil all the ways she kicks ass, but let's just say she's not afraid to hurt someone in order to protect herself and save her sister.
Tate is fierce. She won't keep quiet, she won't put up with Mackie's crap. She won't back down. I love her.
The Replacement is a dark, creepy story. I mean, how much creepier can you get than dead babies? But there are also tons of universal themes. I think every teenager has felt the urge to just fit in and be unnoticed, the strong desire to be just like everyone else. And I know I've definitely felt like an outsider in my own family and maybe even wondered, was I replaced at birth?
Read The Replacement. You won't be disappointed.
Mackie Doyle isn't like the rest of the people in Gentry, his small and gloomy town. Actually, Mackie isn't even human. His parents know it. His sister knows it. His best friend knows it. Half the town might suspect it, but NO ONE talks about it.
In Gentry, babies sometimes get sick and die. But the bodies in the tiny coffins aren't really the grieving parents' offspring. They're replacements.
The creatures who live beneath the slag heap steal human babies and replace them with their own sick children. The replacements all die in their cribs. All except Mackie.
Thanks to his sister's love, Mackie has survived and grown into a teenager. But he lives in fear that the town will learn his secret and persecute him. He does his best to blend in, to be invisible. He doesn't want to think or talk about the truth anymore than the next citizen of Gentry.
But when Tate's younger sister dies, she knows the corpse is not her sister. Tate challenges Mackie to acknowledge who he is and how he can help.
One of the things I love about this book is that Mackie is not a typical hero. He's not brave, or strong, or selfless, or any of the things we expect our heroes to be. Mackie is sickly, poisoned by the iron in the world around him. Sometimes he can barely walk into a room without swooning, let alone fight off bad guys. Also, all Mackie wants is to blend in, be left alone, and survive. He stonewalls Tate to protect himself and at first he won't stick out his neck for anyone.
So that's where the girls come in. Erin, Mackie's sister, will do anything to protect Mackie. She puts herself in danger to save him and her strong love is what has kept him alive in a world his body rejects. And Tate definitely earns the title of kick-ass heroine. I don't want to spoil all the ways she kicks ass, but let's just say she's not afraid to hurt someone in order to protect herself and save her sister.
Tate is fierce. She won't keep quiet, she won't put up with Mackie's crap. She won't back down. I love her.
The Replacement is a dark, creepy story. I mean, how much creepier can you get than dead babies? But there are also tons of universal themes. I think every teenager has felt the urge to just fit in and be unnoticed, the strong desire to be just like everyone else. And I know I've definitely felt like an outsider in my own family and maybe even wondered, was I replaced at birth?
Read The Replacement. You won't be disappointed.
Labels:
Brenna Yovanoff,
creepy,
kick-ass heroine,
love story,
review,
The Replacement
Wednesday, January 12, 2011
MATCHED by Ally Condie lives up to the hype
I don't know why I'm always surprised when I fall in love with the latest hyped-up, buzzed-about YA novel. I guess all you bookish people on the interwebs are pretty awesome and I should really learn to trust you. And because y'all are so awesome, one of my goals for the new year is to spend more time with you and blog more. I really feel like the guy at work who calls in sick EVERY Monday and then on Tuesday in the lunch room, everyone asks if he's feeling ok and he just looks away, nods, and changes the subject.
Soooo anyways....Matched! It's awesome! You should read it.
Ally Condie creates a dystopian world reminiscent of the classics. The Society incinerates history, art, and literature a la Fahrenheit 451. Similar to A Brave New World, citizens are controlled through extreme division of labor, regimented recreation, and mandated drugs. The pervasive technology, misinformation, a mysterious and far away war, and the ever-present sense of being watched reminded me of Nineteen Eighty-Four.
But Matched leaves the classics in the dust and gives us what they don't: a strong heroine, passionate romance, and hope.
We meet Cassia on the eve of her Match banquet, where she'll find out who the society has matched her with for marriage. The other 17-year-olds meet their matches from other cities and provinces via video phone. But Cassia's screen is black because her match is in the same room. It's her best friend, Xander. She's thrilled, but when she takes her microcard home to learn more about her match, another face flashes on the screen. Cassia confides in the only person she can, her grandfather, and he asks if she ever wonders...
Cassia's rebellion starts small and is thrilling to watch as it grows. In the beginning, she honestly believes the Society knows best, but slowly she pulls back the curtain to catch a glimpse of the man behind the wizard.
The Society differs from other dystopian governments in that it seems to actually believe it's acting in its citizens best interests. For me, a good-intentioned but misguided fascist government is way more terrifying than a malicious one. Cassia is savvy, intelligent, and tough enough to outsmart the oppressive Society. And it's so much fun watching her do it.
Cassia experiences her first real choice and gets a small taste for freedom, which leaves her willing to risk everything for more. Classic dystopian novels present characters with a life in which happiness and fulfillment are impossible. Matched is wonderfully brave in that contentment is easily attainable for Cassia within The Society's walls. Cassia knows she could have a loving marriage, a job she likes and is good at, and a happy healthy family if only she shuts up and goes along with The Society's plan for her.
But she's courageous enough to not settle and want more: true love. And isn't that what all the best stories are about? The battle for true love?
I read Matched during my ski vacation and I found myself on a chair lift, anxious to get back to see how Cassia will get herself out of trouble. Matched is hard to put down and I recommend it to any fans of YA and/or Dystopia.
Soooo anyways....Matched! It's awesome! You should read it.
Ally Condie creates a dystopian world reminiscent of the classics. The Society incinerates history, art, and literature a la Fahrenheit 451. Similar to A Brave New World, citizens are controlled through extreme division of labor, regimented recreation, and mandated drugs. The pervasive technology, misinformation, a mysterious and far away war, and the ever-present sense of being watched reminded me of Nineteen Eighty-Four.
But Matched leaves the classics in the dust and gives us what they don't: a strong heroine, passionate romance, and hope.
We meet Cassia on the eve of her Match banquet, where she'll find out who the society has matched her with for marriage. The other 17-year-olds meet their matches from other cities and provinces via video phone. But Cassia's screen is black because her match is in the same room. It's her best friend, Xander. She's thrilled, but when she takes her microcard home to learn more about her match, another face flashes on the screen. Cassia confides in the only person she can, her grandfather, and he asks if she ever wonders...
Cassia's rebellion starts small and is thrilling to watch as it grows. In the beginning, she honestly believes the Society knows best, but slowly she pulls back the curtain to catch a glimpse of the man behind the wizard.
The Society differs from other dystopian governments in that it seems to actually believe it's acting in its citizens best interests. For me, a good-intentioned but misguided fascist government is way more terrifying than a malicious one. Cassia is savvy, intelligent, and tough enough to outsmart the oppressive Society. And it's so much fun watching her do it.
Cassia experiences her first real choice and gets a small taste for freedom, which leaves her willing to risk everything for more. Classic dystopian novels present characters with a life in which happiness and fulfillment are impossible. Matched is wonderfully brave in that contentment is easily attainable for Cassia within The Society's walls. Cassia knows she could have a loving marriage, a job she likes and is good at, and a happy healthy family if only she shuts up and goes along with The Society's plan for her.
But she's courageous enough to not settle and want more: true love. And isn't that what all the best stories are about? The battle for true love?
I read Matched during my ski vacation and I found myself on a chair lift, anxious to get back to see how Cassia will get herself out of trouble. Matched is hard to put down and I recommend it to any fans of YA and/or Dystopia.
Labels:
Ally Condie,
Dystopia,
love story,
Matched,
review
Friday, November 19, 2010
Books that kick ass despite being about boys
When I started this seldom-updated blog, my mission was to write about books featuring strong girls. Not so much in opposition to books about boys, as much as in opposition to books about weak girls who are saved by boy strong boys.
But because of this mission, I often refrain from gushing about a book that knocks my socks off simply because it's not about a strong heroine. But I just read T.H. Mafi's post and was totally inspired.
So for this post, I'm going to share with you my story of how I met my "magical friend" and give you my official list of "Books About Boys that Rocked My World."
Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone came out when I was in high school. Of course I didn't read it. It's a children's book and I was a teenager and thus stayed away from anything that could pin me as a child.
I had heard all about Harry Potter, who hadn't? But it just seemed so silly. I even saw the first movie, but was not all that impressed. It was long and had this silly sport on broomsticks.
I didn't start reading Harry Potter until grad school. I was student-teaching in an 8th grade class and found that every student had Potter on the brain. They talked about muggles and Quidditch, and I just didn't get it. It was like a different language. I couldn't relate.
So, in an effort to be a better teacher, I started reading Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone. I was hooked. Any scrap of free-time was now filled with Hogwarts.
I was earning my masters while student teaching. I was the busiest and most exhausted I'd ever been in my life and all I could think about was getting home to bed with my cat and some tea so I could be swept away to Hogwarts.
I was amazed by how immersed in that other world I became. I was shocked by how strongly I felt for these characters. (I'm still not over Sirius). It was truly magical. And it was the gateway drug.
Harry Potter led to Lemony Snicket which led to The Golden Compass and all of a sudden this huge world of YA literature opened up to me. My childhood ambition to be a children's fantasy writer was reignited.
I was teaching and writing my masters's thesis, while wishing I could write about kids with magical powers. But my career was already set, so I didn't give writing much *serious* thought. Plus, how does anyone go about becoming a "writer" anyway? I was going to be a teacher.
Eight years later and that ambition has not faded, but grown. As much as I love my students, I wish I could spend more time writing stories for them to get lost in instead of preparing them for state tests. So I lead a double life, teaching and writing.
Part of me wishes that I had read Harry Potter when I was in high school. Maybe I would have recognized my dream then. Maybe I could have chosen a sensible path to writer-dom and majored in literature and gotten my MFA or gone into publishing or...something. Maybe things wouldn't seem so hard now. Or maybe I needed my adult brain to understand and appreciate the best children's literature.
All I know is, today a student mentioned "Harry Potter's owl" and I felt an immediate tightening in my chest. I know Hedwig's fate and like most parts of this next Potter film, I'm both anticipating and dreading it.
So, in celebration of the latest Potter film, here is--in no particular order--my list of
Books About Boys that Rocked my World
The entire Harry Potter Series by JK Rowling (if you don't like it, then we can't be friends. That simple)
The entire Percy Jackson and the Olympians series by Rick Riordan (I've heard it criticized for being too similar to Potter. But in the same vein, Potter can be criticized for being similar to Lord of the Rings or Star Wars. It's the epic hero's journey, people! The greatest story ever told (over and over again). So, to the critics I say: shut up and go read some Joseph Campbell)
The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay by Michael Chabon (not YA, and not a strong girl to be found, but a damn good book)
Looking for Alaska by John Green (if you consider yourself a fan of YA and have not read this, then you need to correct that problem immediately)
The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian by Sherman Alexie (people say boys don't read. Have you tried giving them this?)
Middlesex by Jeffrey Eugenides (ah-may-zing. Can't really say if it's about a boy, and ain't that the point? this is a contemporary hero's journey)
The Road by Cormac McCarthy (some make fun of it for being pretentious, but that doesn't make this novel any less brilliant)
Me Talk Pretty One Day by David Sedaris (not a novel, but another book that pushed me over he edge and got me to actually sit down and start writing)
That's my list. What's yours?
But because of this mission, I often refrain from gushing about a book that knocks my socks off simply because it's not about a strong heroine. But I just read T.H. Mafi's post and was totally inspired.
So for this post, I'm going to share with you my story of how I met my "magical friend" and give you my official list of "Books About Boys that Rocked My World."
Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone came out when I was in high school. Of course I didn't read it. It's a children's book and I was a teenager and thus stayed away from anything that could pin me as a child.
I had heard all about Harry Potter, who hadn't? But it just seemed so silly. I even saw the first movie, but was not all that impressed. It was long and had this silly sport on broomsticks.
I didn't start reading Harry Potter until grad school. I was student-teaching in an 8th grade class and found that every student had Potter on the brain. They talked about muggles and Quidditch, and I just didn't get it. It was like a different language. I couldn't relate.
So, in an effort to be a better teacher, I started reading Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone. I was hooked. Any scrap of free-time was now filled with Hogwarts.
I was earning my masters while student teaching. I was the busiest and most exhausted I'd ever been in my life and all I could think about was getting home to bed with my cat and some tea so I could be swept away to Hogwarts.
I was amazed by how immersed in that other world I became. I was shocked by how strongly I felt for these characters. (I'm still not over Sirius). It was truly magical. And it was the gateway drug.
Harry Potter led to Lemony Snicket which led to The Golden Compass and all of a sudden this huge world of YA literature opened up to me. My childhood ambition to be a children's fantasy writer was reignited.
I was teaching and writing my masters's thesis, while wishing I could write about kids with magical powers. But my career was already set, so I didn't give writing much *serious* thought. Plus, how does anyone go about becoming a "writer" anyway? I was going to be a teacher.
Eight years later and that ambition has not faded, but grown. As much as I love my students, I wish I could spend more time writing stories for them to get lost in instead of preparing them for state tests. So I lead a double life, teaching and writing.
Part of me wishes that I had read Harry Potter when I was in high school. Maybe I would have recognized my dream then. Maybe I could have chosen a sensible path to writer-dom and majored in literature and gotten my MFA or gone into publishing or...something. Maybe things wouldn't seem so hard now. Or maybe I needed my adult brain to understand and appreciate the best children's literature.
All I know is, today a student mentioned "Harry Potter's owl" and I felt an immediate tightening in my chest. I know Hedwig's fate and like most parts of this next Potter film, I'm both anticipating and dreading it.
So, in celebration of the latest Potter film, here is--in no particular order--my list of
Books About Boys that Rocked my World
The entire Harry Potter Series by JK Rowling (if you don't like it, then we can't be friends. That simple)
The entire Percy Jackson and the Olympians series by Rick Riordan (I've heard it criticized for being too similar to Potter. But in the same vein, Potter can be criticized for being similar to Lord of the Rings or Star Wars. It's the epic hero's journey, people! The greatest story ever told (over and over again). So, to the critics I say: shut up and go read some Joseph Campbell)
The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay by Michael Chabon (not YA, and not a strong girl to be found, but a damn good book)
Looking for Alaska by John Green (if you consider yourself a fan of YA and have not read this, then you need to correct that problem immediately)
The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian by Sherman Alexie (people say boys don't read. Have you tried giving them this?)
Middlesex by Jeffrey Eugenides (ah-may-zing. Can't really say if it's about a boy, and ain't that the point? this is a contemporary hero's journey)
The Road by Cormac McCarthy (some make fun of it for being pretentious, but that doesn't make this novel any less brilliant)
Me Talk Pretty One Day by David Sedaris (not a novel, but another book that pushed me over he edge and got me to actually sit down and start writing)
That's my list. What's yours?
Saturday, November 13, 2010
Rooting for the dark side in PERSONAL DEMONS by Lisa Desrochers
For some reason, the cover of Lisa Desrochers's Personal Demons didn't strike me as YA. And being the idiot I am, this prevented me from reading it at first. Even the hubby saw the book on my nightstand and said, "What? You're reading porn now?" (Ok, hubby is definitely NOT an expert on all things literary). All I'm saying is, listen to your mom and don't judge a book by its cover.
Personal Demons is the best angel/demon book I've read. I loved that we got two perspectives: Fanny, the heroine's, and Luc's, the demon who's trying to tag her soul for hell.
I also loved that--unlike most paranormal romances--we don't spend half the book trying to figure out what kind of paranormal creature the hot new guy at school is, and what he wants. We know on page 2 that Luc is a demon and he wants Fanny's soul in hell. Fair enough.
It's hard for one's personal theology not to influence the reading of a book about hell, demons, angels, and heaven. Luc is such a steamy character and the chemistry between him and Fanny is so hot, that it didn't take long for me to root for the demon. Even when Luc himself hesitates in marking Fanny for eternal damnation, I was thinking, "Come on! Just drag her to hell! You can burn eternally together!" Maybe more devout readers didn't go that far.
This book definitely gets better and better, the farther you get into it. At first I was annoyed because Fanny's brain seemed to turn to mush when she was around Gabe and Luc (the two hot "new" guys in town). I kept thinking, "OK, no one's THAT hot that you can't form coherent sentences." But then I realized that it was Gabe's angelic and Luc's demonic powers that set Fanny's hormones
and thoughts all a flutter.
Then Luc started acting funny too and I thought, "OK, in his thousands of years of existence, this dude has to have seen a pretty girl, what's his deal?" And this is the best part. Luc acts strange around Fanny because she has a power that blows both his and Gabe's abilities out of the water. You know I love me a powerful female.
The potential of Fanny's power and the spicy hot scenes with Luc kept me up at night reading. Again, it was kind of strange rooting for Fanny to turn to the dark side. "Come on Fanny, sleep with the demon already! Commit the mortal sin of lust! An eternity in hell is SO worth it! He's so hot!" This is definitely one of the sexiest YA novels I've read in a while.
Personal Demons does not read as young as other YA books, but since I'm a grown-up reading YA, I really didn't mind. But if you're a 15-year-old looking for a story with prom, cheerleaders, and tons of teen angst, then this might not be the book for you. Other than that, I'd recommend Personal Demons to any fan of the paranormal romance genre.
I can't wait to see what Fanny does with her power in the sequel, Original Sin.
Personal Demons is the best angel/demon book I've read. I loved that we got two perspectives: Fanny, the heroine's, and Luc's, the demon who's trying to tag her soul for hell.
I also loved that--unlike most paranormal romances--we don't spend half the book trying to figure out what kind of paranormal creature the hot new guy at school is, and what he wants. We know on page 2 that Luc is a demon and he wants Fanny's soul in hell. Fair enough.
It's hard for one's personal theology not to influence the reading of a book about hell, demons, angels, and heaven. Luc is such a steamy character and the chemistry between him and Fanny is so hot, that it didn't take long for me to root for the demon. Even when Luc himself hesitates in marking Fanny for eternal damnation, I was thinking, "Come on! Just drag her to hell! You can burn eternally together!" Maybe more devout readers didn't go that far.
This book definitely gets better and better, the farther you get into it. At first I was annoyed because Fanny's brain seemed to turn to mush when she was around Gabe and Luc (the two hot "new" guys in town). I kept thinking, "OK, no one's THAT hot that you can't form coherent sentences." But then I realized that it was Gabe's angelic and Luc's demonic powers that set Fanny's hormones
and thoughts all a flutter.
Then Luc started acting funny too and I thought, "OK, in his thousands of years of existence, this dude has to have seen a pretty girl, what's his deal?" And this is the best part. Luc acts strange around Fanny because she has a power that blows both his and Gabe's abilities out of the water. You know I love me a powerful female.
The potential of Fanny's power and the spicy hot scenes with Luc kept me up at night reading. Again, it was kind of strange rooting for Fanny to turn to the dark side. "Come on Fanny, sleep with the demon already! Commit the mortal sin of lust! An eternity in hell is SO worth it! He's so hot!" This is definitely one of the sexiest YA novels I've read in a while.
Personal Demons does not read as young as other YA books, but since I'm a grown-up reading YA, I really didn't mind. But if you're a 15-year-old looking for a story with prom, cheerleaders, and tons of teen angst, then this might not be the book for you. Other than that, I'd recommend Personal Demons to any fan of the paranormal romance genre.
I can't wait to see what Fanny does with her power in the sequel, Original Sin.
Labels:
angel,
demon,
hell,
Lisa Desrochers,
love story,
Personal Demons,
review
Saturday, September 25, 2010
Evie tases her way to normal in PARANORMALCY by Kiersten White
So, sometimes when there's tons of hype surrounding a book, I'm tempted to automatically discount it. It can't be THAT good right?
So I'd heard Paranormalcy by Kiersten White was funny. I'd heard Evie, the teen heroine, used a pink sparkly taser to "bag and tag" vampires. I'd heard the book poked fun at the whole paranormal romance genre.
Guess what? The peoples on the interwebs were right!
One quick stop at Kiersten White's amazing blog will confirm that this chick is funny. Paranormalcy has the same light-hearted tone as White's blog, which is awesome.
Paranormalcy reminded me of the movie Clueless, in a way. The main character and plot seem very superficial at first. But it's written so intelligently that you can't help but laugh and root for the heroine as she learns to be less selfish and discovers something deeper about herself and about life.
I loved how White threw in a few jabs at YA vampire romances. The opening scene is hilarious as Evie tases a vamp and rants about how ridiculous it is that vampires think they're sexy. She even uses the word "shimmery" to describe a vampire in an ironic way and I couldn't help but think of that as a direct poke at a certain franchise. I also loved when, towards the end of the book, a vampire tells Evie, "Why on earth would a vampire go to high school?" Hilarious!
The romance is so sweet and refreshing. There was no I-love-you-but-kind-of-want-to-kill-you, No I-love-you-but-our-love-will-probably-destroy-the-universe, and No I-love-you-but-I'm-so-damaged-from-my-hundred-year-old-past-so-I'm-really-mean-to-you.
It was more like, I-really-like-you-I-hope-your-dad-doesn't-catch-us-making-out-on-the-couch and then some I-think-I-love-you-but-I hope-you-accept-me-for-who-I-am-with-all-my-weirdness.
White shows us that we can have a paranormal novel with NORMAL teens. We can read about teens who get grounded, love shopping sprees, eat pizza, and go to prom. They also happen to have paranormal abilities and, you know, murderous faeries hunting them.
If you love paranormal romaces, or hate them, read Paranormalcy. You won't be disappointed.
I can't wait for Supernaturally!
So I'd heard Paranormalcy by Kiersten White was funny. I'd heard Evie, the teen heroine, used a pink sparkly taser to "bag and tag" vampires. I'd heard the book poked fun at the whole paranormal romance genre.
Guess what? The peoples on the interwebs were right!
One quick stop at Kiersten White's amazing blog will confirm that this chick is funny. Paranormalcy has the same light-hearted tone as White's blog, which is awesome.
Paranormalcy reminded me of the movie Clueless, in a way. The main character and plot seem very superficial at first. But it's written so intelligently that you can't help but laugh and root for the heroine as she learns to be less selfish and discovers something deeper about herself and about life.
I loved how White threw in a few jabs at YA vampire romances. The opening scene is hilarious as Evie tases a vamp and rants about how ridiculous it is that vampires think they're sexy. She even uses the word "shimmery" to describe a vampire in an ironic way and I couldn't help but think of that as a direct poke at a certain franchise. I also loved when, towards the end of the book, a vampire tells Evie, "Why on earth would a vampire go to high school?" Hilarious!
The romance is so sweet and refreshing. There was no I-love-you-but-kind-of-want-to-kill-you, No I-love-you-but-our-love-will-probably-destroy-the-universe, and No I-love-you-but-I'm-so-damaged-from-my-hundred-year-old-past-so-I'm-really-mean-to-you.
It was more like, I-really-like-you-I-hope-your-dad-doesn't-catch-us-making-out-on-the-couch and then some I-think-I-love-you-but-I hope-you-accept-me-for-who-I-am-with-all-my-weirdness.
White shows us that we can have a paranormal novel with NORMAL teens. We can read about teens who get grounded, love shopping sprees, eat pizza, and go to prom. They also happen to have paranormal abilities and, you know, murderous faeries hunting them.
If you love paranormal romaces, or hate them, read Paranormalcy. You won't be disappointed.
I can't wait for Supernaturally!
Labels:
kick-ass heroine,
kiersten white,
love story,
paranormalcy,
review,
taser
Saturday, September 11, 2010
Janie does it in her sleep in WAKE by Lisa McMann
Like any good addict, I have crazy dreams. I fly, I swim, I bounce around from place to place. I was a little disappointed with Inception and how normal the dreams were.
In Wake by Lisa McMann, Janie is sucked into people's dreams. I loved the lyrical style of the book, especially the beginning when we slip in and out of people's dreams with Janie. Our dreams can be very intimate and revealing, but McMann didn't hold back in describing the sleeping images flashing through teenagers' heads.
I also enjoyed the love story. Cabel is my new literary crush, who knew scars could be so sexy?
I really enjoyed the first half of the book. But the second half started becoming too unbelievable for me.
SPOILER ALERT!
I just didn't buy that Cabel was an undercover teenage cop. The way that was handled came across as very unbelievable to me. Sure, I can believe a girl can slip into someone's dreams and control them, but I can't believe law enforcement would behave that way.
But the well written dream sequences and the realistic romance were enough for me to enjoy Wake.
The sequel, Fade, on the other hand is a different story. As a high school teacher, I can be very picky about the way high school is portrayed in YA. High schools are already dramatic conflict-flled places, we don't need over-the-top and outlandish crimes to be committed in order for teenagers to experience conflict and feel unsafe.
I thought Fade was completely unrealistic. I get it, it's a fantasy, but if the story is based in the real-world, I need something real in that world to hold on to.
There are teachers who do horrible things. We didn't need the over-the-top, sensationalized villainy in order for Janie to be in danger. I think the story would've been scarier if the high school setting was more realistic.
I also didn't buy the conflict between Cabel and Janie. It wasn't consistent with Cabel's character and teenagers aren't usually that cognizant of their feelings and why they behave the way they do.
I liked Wake, but was disappointed with Fade. I won't be reading Gone unless someone convinces me it has at least one foot in reality.
In Wake by Lisa McMann, Janie is sucked into people's dreams. I loved the lyrical style of the book, especially the beginning when we slip in and out of people's dreams with Janie. Our dreams can be very intimate and revealing, but McMann didn't hold back in describing the sleeping images flashing through teenagers' heads.
I also enjoyed the love story. Cabel is my new literary crush, who knew scars could be so sexy?
I really enjoyed the first half of the book. But the second half started becoming too unbelievable for me.
SPOILER ALERT!
I just didn't buy that Cabel was an undercover teenage cop. The way that was handled came across as very unbelievable to me. Sure, I can believe a girl can slip into someone's dreams and control them, but I can't believe law enforcement would behave that way.
But the well written dream sequences and the realistic romance were enough for me to enjoy Wake.
The sequel, Fade, on the other hand is a different story. As a high school teacher, I can be very picky about the way high school is portrayed in YA. High schools are already dramatic conflict-flled places, we don't need over-the-top and outlandish crimes to be committed in order for teenagers to experience conflict and feel unsafe.
I thought Fade was completely unrealistic. I get it, it's a fantasy, but if the story is based in the real-world, I need something real in that world to hold on to.
There are teachers who do horrible things. We didn't need the over-the-top, sensationalized villainy in order for Janie to be in danger. I think the story would've been scarier if the high school setting was more realistic.
I also didn't buy the conflict between Cabel and Janie. It wasn't consistent with Cabel's character and teenagers aren't usually that cognizant of their feelings and why they behave the way they do.
I liked Wake, but was disappointed with Fade. I won't be reading Gone unless someone convinces me it has at least one foot in reality.
Labels:
dream,
Fade,
Gone,
Lisa McMann,
love story,
review,
Wake
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