Showing posts with label review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label review. Show all posts

Monday, July 6, 2020

Review Tour: Annie's Choices by Tricia McGill

Title: Annie's Choices

Series: Settlers Series #4    
Pages: 326
Date Published: April 19th, 2020
Publisher: Ebound Canada
Format: Kindle
Genre: Historical Romance

Synopsis:
Annie, at eighteen, is the eldest Carstairs girl. She has lived out at Bathurst west of the Blue Mountains, where she was born just after her Mama, Bella a
nd Papa, Tiger settled there back in 1824. After visiting her brother Tim and his wife Jo just before Christmas 1843, Annie decides to stay in Port Philip, seeking adventure much as her brother did when he set out with Jo the previous year. Annie has inherited her mother’s independent streak, a character trait that sometimes leads her to make the wrong choices.

Jacob O’Quinn works for her brother, and the likeable young carpenter catches Annie’s eye. Jacob is quiet and reserved in his manner, having spent his life with his widowed mother. When handsome Zachary McDowell, the complete opposite to steady Jacob comes along, he sweeps Annie off her feet. Heedless of advice given by others, Annie makes a choice that turns out to be the worst she could ever make.

Restless, Annie decides to return to her home, and Jacob makes the decision to escort her. The journey back across the mountains proves to be a lot more eventful than she assumed it could ever be. The road itself may have seen improvements through the years but there will always be unexpected incidents to turn life around on its axis. A suspected murder brings the might of the law down on the shoulders of the young couple.

~My Thoughts~
Annie Carstairs is young and looking for love. She isn't sure if it will come in the form of Jacob, the muscle-bound hunk working for her brother Tim, or the enchanting and mysterious Zachary who seems to be the only one that might be able to see her as a woman and not as her brother's kid-sister. 

Poor Annie. Such a headstrong young woman who believed she knew everything. It was mildly  extremely infuriating how Annie really did not take even the simplest precautions around unknown people, especially men. She had a bit of a haughty attitude about her actions, and her brother's lack of control over her that made her a bit less than a sympathetic narrator. It's unsurprising then, when the product of her actions start to trend towards the calamitous and make life difficult for her.

The character development could have been a bit stronger in my opinion. Right away, I was introduced to approximately 10 characters in the first few pages so it was difficult to keep them all straight, particularly as I hadn't read the other three books in the series. However, I was able to get a sense of them more or less eventually. Annie, as the protagonist, was the most fleshed out, but I did not feel I really got to know her as much as I wanted to. I felt like an observer of her actions, not a visitor in her head to understand her thoughts and feelings. This led me to be a bit more critical of her - I found myself screaming in my head, "What's wrong with you woman!?" much more often than I found myself cheering her on. Still, you spend the whole book on a journey of self-discovery with her and you can't help but grow to feel sympathetic. 

I won't tell you which of the two men our heroine ends up with, but I think an accurate summary might be that slow and steady wins the race. Particularly if the slow and steady one happens to have plenty of muscles and be an intriguing and intelligent guy. Fans of historical fiction, particularly Australian colonial books, will find lots to like in this book and the others in the Settlers series.
~Try an Excerpt!~

Straightening her back Maggie stared straight ahead, as she said, “It could only be him—no other man was seen with her at any time.”


“That is a ridiculous lie,” Annie shouted as she stood and glared at Maggie. This time when Jacob went to touch her arm, she shook him off. “Jacob only knew the girl during the time we travelled from Sydney to Bathurst so it is out of the question that he could be responsible. I am well aware that Jacob knew who the likely father of the baby was, and I can vouch that he would never have touched a young innocent like Fannie in such a way. He is the type of man who would console her in her time of trouble, and that is what he was doing when that woman...” She stabbed a finger towards Maggie. “When she saw him with her.”


The judge angrily bashed his hammer on his desk and ordered quiet as the court exploded into uproar. “Sit down, Madam, and wait your turn,” he ordered, as he glared at Annie, before turning back to Maggie. “Miss Fitzsimmons, I will ask you another question and I wish you to be very sure of what you say. You are suggesting that Jacob O’Quinn could in some way be involved in the death of Fannie Doyle?”


For a brief moment, Maggie looked flustered as she glanced at her mother and then back at the judge. Biting on her bottom lip she said, “Not really, sir.”

~Meet Tricia!~ 

Award winning author Tricia McGill was born in London, England, and moved to Australia many years ago, settling near Melbourne. The youngest in a large, loving family she was never lonely or alone. Surrounded by avid readers, who encouraged her to read from an early age, is it any wonder she became a writer? The local library was a treasure trove and magical world of discovery through her childhood and growing years. Although her published works cross sub-genres, romance is always at their heart. 

Tricia’s love of animals has always shown up in her books. Tricia devotes as much time and money as she can spare to supporting worldwide conservation groups and is passionate about supporting those who do all they can to preserve our wildlife for future generations. She also volunteers for a local community group that helps disabled adults and children to connect to the internet with provided computer equipment. When people ask what she does in her spare time, she is heard to ask, “Spare time, what is that?”

 Tricia will be awarding a $25 Amazon or Barnes and Noble GC to a randomly drawn winner via a Rafflecopter giveaway during the tour.

Tuesday, December 23, 2014

LGBT Tuesday REVIEW! Letters for My Sisters

Letters are most definitely a lost art. In a world of texts and tweets and Instagrams, very rarely does anyone sit down to spend the time writing a letter.
So when they do write, it means that the letter is important and that the letter writer has something to say, something to stop and think about.
Letters for My Sisters: Transitional Wisdom in Retrospect is a gesture of hope and support from trans women, showing how their own experiences with transitioning shaped their lives for the better or worse. It is the goal of this book and its authors (and I think they succeeded wonderfully!) to guide future generations of trans women through the process by giving fun (or scary) anecdotal advice and reassurances about the future.
LFMS-Front-Cover
The first letter, Deanne Thornton’s “The Tao of Transition,” was particularly meaningful to me. While not trans-identified, I do identify with the feeling of being different, being something your friends and family might be ashamed of,  and I well remember that sucker-punch to the gut when you first realize that you are different.
I also remember the denial, the…”No, that’s not me…I’m not different, I’ll get over this, maybe…”...It is a feeling that many struggle with as they first make an attempt to understand their complicated web of emotions when coming out (even to themselves). One of the things that kept coming up for me as I read each story was a moment of “Yeah, that’s right!” and “Wow, me too,” which really vibed well with me.
This experience resonated with what co-editors Andrea James and Deanne Thornton say in the introduction: “For too long now, we have let others define and describe us … No matter how well-meaning, they do not understand us, and frame us in their own misunderstandings.”
But it was so much more meaningful, personal, and REAL to get an understanding of these ideas through the source, someone who has actually experienced it, and not just someone who has studied and analyzed it.

At the same time, some of the ideas had never occurred to me before.
Consider “Exhibit Closed Until Further Notice” by Devon, in which she tells a story about receiving too much attention after transitioning. I never thought about how one’s social grapevine can contribute in a pseudo- or not-so-positive way by bringing people out of the woodwork who either want a token trans friend, or are using a transition as their own personal TLC show — for entertainment or a way to prove just how “accepting” and “gender-blind” they are.
And although I know about some of the bad that the grapevine can bring, it’s always fascinating — in a sort of twisted way, I admit — to hear about all the weirdoes and strange people that can glom onto you or search you out because they think that you can fill some of their odd sexual kinks or desires just because you are trans…um…No you can’t!
One of the more fascinating ideas (brought up by the lovely Kay in “Mid-20’s Observations”) was the different ways society treats you as a woman versus a man. (Relevant sidenote: I’m a feminist and huge equal rights activist [on all levels: sex, gender, and race, among others…]). When Kay began presenting as a woman, she seems to have gotten smacked in the face with some of the odder (yet very common) forms of sexism or chivalry…depending on the context.
Men offering women rides home is common, and can be very scary, as Kay found out. But while, in our society, women tend to be looked at, men tend to be listened to — and losing that sense of being heard and valued when speaking was one of the losses that came with being a woman for her. It shouldn’t, but sadly it is.





Themes of each narrative were varied, yet similar. Choice is a biggie and having the ability to make informed decisions about your body and life is a luxury not everyone will have from an early age. I enjoyed the introspective nature of Brenda’s story “Reasons,” in which she talked about the importance of choosing to transition only at the appropriate time and for the appropriate reasons.
While some people may know they are in the wrong body from a very young age,Brenda cautions others not to transition just because you are feeling depressed, or conflicted. This is a life-altering decision, for the most part it’s for the very best benefit of the individual involved-just ensure that the transition isyour choice and that you are going to be 100% happier with the woman you will become.
Altogether, Letters to My Sisters is a great, personal, and illuminating read. I recommend it not only for trans (and other LGBQ’s) people, but for anyone looking to really gain an understanding of the process of transitioning from a trans female’s point of view.
Most of the stories are a page or two, all ringing with the same clarity of purpose, the same confusion instilled in the authors at an early age that had to be worked through, and the same revelation and path towards the future. Yet each piece is unique in its own way and special for the individual within the story.
There’s a certain level of humanity, of courage and bravery, fear and anguish, as well as just a hope for the future that sticks in your mind and will stay with you long after you have finished reading each piece.

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Mini Reviews: Before, Between, and The Coven

Title: Before
Author: Cambria Hebert
Series: Heven and Hell #0.5
Synopsis: 
What if your life was charmed and everything in it was perfect…Before.This is the story of my past. Of what things were like for me when everything was normal. Of what every teenager’s life is like. Clothes. Parties. Boys and summer vacation. What’s so wrong with that? I liked it. I was happy. Until things changed. I changed.I didn’t know that lies and secrets were about to take over my existence. I didn’t know there was someone out there, someone meant just for me. I didn’t know that I was about to go on a journey, a journey that would lead me to the girl I am today.This is the beginning of the worst year of my life. Would I go back and change things? Erase everything that has happened to go back into these moments? Not a chance.This is a story of before.
My Review:
I got this book free from Amazon, so I really shouldn't complain...but it was just so effing short! I kid you not, it is about 10-15 pages and is more of a teaser than anything of substance.  I guess it is definitely something that will inspire a reader to go out and get the first book because they are intrigued by this little clip. I have read Masquerade, book one in the series, so I actually appreciated it because it gives depth and more of the story that you never get in the book, but I was still disappointed because of how seriously short it is. You only get a quick glimpse into the main character Heven's mind as she was before the accident that scarred her forever. I like seeing a different side of Heven than the morose one who appears in Masquerade, but I only get a quick flash of that girl and if I hadn't read Masquerade before it I probably wouldn't appreciate all the little nuances of Heven's old personality. To be honest, I'd only read this if you are wondering whether or not to read Masquerade...It is a nice teaser, but doesn't really give you anything to go on other than...What Happens Next?!?!?
~~~

Title: Between
Author: Cambria Hebert
Series: Heaven and Hell # 1.5

Synopsis:
I grew up in a comfortable house with two parents and a white-picket fence. My brother, Sam, and I used to play with sticks in the backyard and pretend they were swords. There were always cookies on the table and milk in the fridge. Then, one day, things changed.Sam changed. Life was never the same again. Sam left. My parents abandoned him when he needed them most, and I was left to survive in a house that was merely a shell of what it used to be. Mom cried all the time and Dad expected me to fill the void my brother left behind. But mostly, all we did was pretend. We pretended that things weren’t messed up. We pretended that Sam never existed.Until I changed, too. Now, everything’s a mess and I’m so confused. It’s like there are two different people trapped inside one body—my body—and one of them wants out. I do things. Bad things and I don’t know how to stop. I’m not sure I want to. The only way I can be normal again is if I find Sam. He’ll know what to do. He has to.
My Review:
To be perfectly honest, the description of Between is almost as long as the novella is. It was so short that I finished it in less than 10 minutes, I kid you not. Like Before, it seems like it is just a teaser, something to get you to buy the larger novels. Yet...it works. If I hadn't already been given a copy of Charade by Cambria Hebert, I would probably have immediately run out and bought it because of how intriguing of a character Sam's brother Logan is. He's been hurt so many times, first when his brother was forced to leave, then when the same thing happened to him. You can tell he loves his brother, but there's this kind of insidious darkness to him that gives you pause. I'm going to go out on a limb and say that there are problems with him in the the next book and how he deals with Hevan. I would hate to see what Sam does to Logan if he tries to hurt Hevan, but it looks like that's where this is going. I'm kind of hopefull for him...he doesn't SEEM evil..but you can tell that something might be twisted. Between is a stab in the gut for those who don't have their copy of Charade yet. It makes you want to drop everything and jump on the Heaven and Hell bandwagon, and who would blame you? With characters like Sam, Logan, China, and Hevan, Cambria writes a really compelling and fascinating series that has a lot of originality to it. Check out Between if you need that little nudge to get yourself to buy the series!
~~~
Title: The Coven
Author: Cate Tiernan
Series: Sweep #2

Synopsis:
Cal, now Morgan's boyfriend, helps her accept the truth: Wicca is in Morgan's blood. As Morgan learns more about Wicca, she realizes that she needs to find out more about her parentage. The answers are there, but she doesn't know how to find them.
My Review:
I think I'm going to include the majority of the Sweep series in my "mini-reviews" section. They are all about 180 pages, and though that is slightly more than the typical novella or short story, I don't feel like giving the time for a full review of each book. The review would practically be as long as the books are! Anyways, The Coven starts right where Book of Shadows leaves off (literally...there is no re-cap, no details about what happened before). It's a good thing that I'm planning on reading the series straight through or I would probably forget everything that happened in the last book. Morgan seems to be well on her way to becoming a witch. During circles at the newly formed Cirrus Coven, she is able to harness the magic better than any of the other novitiates, and spreads healing magic and joy through her friends. Unfortunately this power leads to two HUGE complications in Morgan's life. For one thing, her best friend is so overcome by jealousy that she literally turns into the villain of the story, and Morgan also starts to wonder why her parents never told her that she was a witch. Obviously if she is a blood witch, then they have to be....but why are they so secretive about it? And what happened to make the family so anti-witchcraft? All I can tell you guys is that there are some major shockers in this book. If you aren't on the lookout you will be completely blindsided and as shocked as Morgan is about some of the big reveals. Another huge plot point in the book was Cal and Morgan's relationship. I am tempted to say it moves too fast, but it really doesn't. The whole series moves as quick as lightning, and this is already book two, so I was happy when Morgan and Cal finally dealt with some of the electricity that's been bouncing off them since day one. They really are cute and sweet, but I have a few misgivings about Cal. He just seems a little...sneaky? I don't know what it is really. I should love him, but his mom makes me hesitate, and it bugs me how much he seems to know but doesn't share with the rest of the coven. Oh well...we shall see won't we? I'm probably making stuff up in my mind because I'm crazy and love to do that...lol... I give The Coven 4 Keys. It was short but sweet, and if the first three books were pressed together to make one book, I would gladly give it a five-er...

Hope you guys enjoyed these little flashes into some excellent novellas and short stories! I plan to do this a lot, especially with anthologies of short stories, because I feel like sometimes those kinds of little nuggets of awesomeness are lost in the shuffle and bustle of reviewing bigger, more popular books. Thanks for checking me out and have an amazing Tuesday!

Thursday, June 7, 2012

Review: Paranormalcy by Kiersten White

Title: Paranormalcy
Author: Kiersten White
Series: Paranormalcy #1
Pages: 335
Publisher: HarperTeen
Date Published: September 1, 2010
Format: ARC
Genre: Paranormal (YA)
Source: The Amazing Zooey from Dahl's Doll

Synopsis:
Weird as it is working for the International Paranormal Containment Agency, Evie’s always thought of herself as normal. Sure, her best friend is a mermaid, her ex-boyfriend is a faerie, she's falling for a shape-shifter, and she's the only person who can see through paranormals' glamours, but still. Normal. Only now paranormals are dying, and Evie's dreams are filled with haunting voices and mysterious prophecies. She soon realizes that there may be a link between her abilities and the sudden rash of deaths. Not only that, but she may very well be at the center of a dark faerie prophecy promising destruction to all paranormal creatures.So much for normal.
My Review:
I've become a bit burned out with regards to paranormal YA books lately. I find myself only reading books in series that are already established or are written by authors that I've read and enjoyed before. It just takes so much out of you if you're reading a constant barrage of books that are about the same things, with only moderately different characters, all.the.fricking.time. Which is why I'm so excited I gave Paranormalcy a try. It's got a lot of the familiar themes and characters of the paranormal genre, but with a certain...frantic hilarious energy behind it. It combines the fluff of a chick lit novel with the mystery and adventure of a thriller, mixed with lots and lots of different types of supernatural creatures.

Evie has been working for the IPCA, a paranormal detective and policing agency, since practically before she can remember. She's always thought she was a human specially trained to capture and take down supernaturals, but lately things have been changing. She's starting to get the feeling that there is more to her powers than just being able to see through supernatural glamours. Now something is taking out the supernaturals and she has the sneaking suspicion that it has something to do with her. All Evie's ever known has been neutralizing paranormals for the IPCA. She's lived within the compound for so long she barely remembers what life is like outside of fighting. It takes the break-in of one see-through shape changer to turn Evie's world on it's head and get her to actually start thinking about what she's being used to do at the IPCA.

I thought that one of the best aspects of the book was the originality of the creatures/characters. Not only was Evie a supernatural mystery, but there really aren't any cliched "type characters" There's no brooding vampires, rowdy werewolves, etc. Instead we get a foul mouthed mermaid, and fairies that would rather kill you than dance among the flowers.  Personality-wise, Evie is actually really charming and adorable. There's a lot more than meets the eye when it comes to her. She is strong, due to her supernatural birthright, but she's got her weaknesses.  These weaknesses can be the bad kind (fairies stalk her) to the hilarious kind (she's partial to pink, shopping, and zebra print). She really loves all the normal things that teenagers get to experience, because she's grown up in the compound and has never had the chance to go to school, or drive a car, or anything that teens usually do. This leads to some pretty hilarious quotes when she finally get's her chance..due to her belief that lockers and classes are actually cool.
“Yes, I have a driver's license."
I leaned back against the wall, sighing. "Man, that must be so cool."
"It ranks right up there with lockers. In fact, sometimes I put my license inside my locker, and it's so cool I worry that the whole thing might explode with the sheer coolness of it all.”
As you can probably tell from that quote, the banter in the novel is fab. Banter and snark is one of the biggest things that get me to warm up to a novel. That and pure friction between love interests. You can feel the heat and chemistry bubbling up between Evie and Lend like it's dancing around in mid-air wearing a sarong. Though I was a tad distracted by Lend's name...Lend. What is that? I mean it's original..but I LEND my books out...I don't lust after a Lend.But once you get over the name it really is smooth sailing. I loved that their relationship developed naturally over the course of the book and there was none of that "we're soulmates!" bullcrap that makes me roll my eyes and want to throw the book across the room. I did love that the one thing that brought Evie back from the edge was her love for Lend. I felt like that made it more real and believable.
I give Paranormalcy 4 Keys! It was a really great beginning to what could be a fabulous Urban Fantasy YA series. It's flirty, it's cute, and it mixes both the dark and the light side of paranormal fiction to create something new and original. You can tell it is geared towards the younger side of the young adult spectrum, and the "first love" theme really makes it appealing to those pre-teens...but as a reader WELL out of her pre-teen years I can still say that I really enjoyed it and am seriously looking forward to the rest of the series.

Monday, June 4, 2012

Review: A Stroke of Midnight by Laurell K. Hamilton

Title: A Stroke of Midnight
Author: Laurell K. Hamilton
Series: Merry Gentry #4
Pages: 416
Publisher: Ballantine Books
Date Published: November 28, 2006
Format: Mass Market Paperback
Genre: Paranormal Romance
Source: Bought

Goodreads Description: 
After a barely thwarted assassination attempt, Princess Merry NicEssus (a.k.a. Los Angeles private eye Meredith Gentry) -- ignores the counsel of her aunt Andais, Queen of Air and Darkness, and decides to hold a press conference inside the fairy mounds: a dangerous move for all humans and sidhe involved. As the session is ending, two dead bodies are discovered -- one sidhe, one human. While police and FBI agents swarm the area, Merry's cadre of hunky sidhe guardians must not only track down the killer or killers and pacify the temperamental Queen; they also must find a way to impregnate Merry so that she can become the next Unseelie ruler. But as her sensual experiences begin to affect everyone around her in amazing ways, Merry realizes that with new powers come new responsibilities -- and new temptations. 


My Review:
Though I have reviewed several books from this series before, it has been a while and I want to make sure all of you readers know what you're getting into when you start a Merry Gentry book. This series is not for the gentle minded and those with weak stomachs. Laurell K. Hamilton is one of the few who can incorporate sadism and sensuality in the same paragraph and have you: the straigh-laced, stay at home mom with a strong christian background, longing for threesomes with seven foot tall, blue/purple/green/etc men with hair down to their ankles.At the same time, if you aren't ready for extreme magical orgies mixed with violent bloody torture (not usually all at once, but it could happen...) then you will be completely thrown by this series, and especially this book. Though books 1-3 had their fair share of heavy-breathing and babymaking scenes, A Stroke of Midnight is where you either sink into the darkness and make love to the monsters right along with Merry, or you run away screaming to find a lighter, happier book and never touch another Laurell K. Hamilton novel again.

Apparently because Merry is descended from fertility deities, she can bring the courts back to power not through blood and battle like it was in the past, but through sex and love (awwwww).This leads to lots and lots of metaphysical and literal sex with pretty much any guard who has ever been hurt before, so Merry can come along and literally kiss away their boo-boos. I will say that it's in this book where I kind of see what people mean about there being too much sex. Obviously you're going to be expecting some sex when the plot revolves around getting the princess pregnant, but I feel like this one had some overkill sex scenes. Plot tends to take a back-seat to the dirty dirty hotness of Merry banging all the guards, and almost gets lost along the way. I mean, they are trying to solve the murder of a cook and a photographer, but then they get distracted by having hot lightning sex up against the wall in the same room where the body is. I'm just saying that that particular scene and several others seem a bit excessive. Since I love the characters and how emotional and deep everyone is, I haven't been bothered by the almost constant procreating in the past, but it is a little odd that one woman can heal the hearts and minds of every magical being in the Unseelie sithen...or is it? I guess if she is blessed by their god, in fact IS their goddess incarnate, then it's believable. I guess I'm just getting tired of keeping track of who all she's screwed back into their powers. 

One thing I really don't understand is everyone being upset at the descriptions in the book. Laurell takes the time to explain the entire scene. And I mean the ENTIRE scene. It never bothered me before, in fact, actually helped me feel that awesome "video" feeling you get when you read a book that has excellent descriptions. But I have heard over and over again that people hate the descriptions. In a world that's entirely different than our own where characters can have skin and hair the color of molten gold or rainbows...shouldn't there be description? I love having the scene set and a definitely portrait of every character because I find it easier to love them and identify with them when I get an amazing pictures. You become so involved, so completely enwrapped in these people's lives that everything feels like it's happening to you. And I belive that lot of that emotion is due to the fact that you "see" everything and everyone in such vivid detail.

Speaking of that emption...I swear to GOD that the most epic, romantic, heart-breaking, and meaningful scene of all time is halfway through this book. I don't want to give away anything to those of you who want to start the series on their own, but it is SO amazing. I practically had tears in my eyes.  Doyle and Frost (the two men Merry loves above all else...her court, her life, her family...NOTHING is more important than these two) are down on the floor, kneeling together before Merry. Emotion writ across both their faces as they mourn the loss of their true love and these centuries-old, uber-strong, he-men crumble because they can't live without the love of their lives... *shudders*  It's one of those moments that has you curling up in a ball and hugging yourself because it was SO amazing that you just can't deal with it. The feeling is almost indescribable. It's like falling in love, flying down a hill on a bike, leaping off a cliff, the taste of fresh baked cookies,  and the comfort of staying in love with someone for 40 years all rolled up into one super amazing emotion of pure joy. THAT my dear readers, is how the scene made me feel. You just know, unconditionally, that this is the scene that forever alters these characters and this series's storyline, and you just revel in how amazing it is. I honestly got chills that wouldn't leave for half an hour, and this is the like...fifth time I've read this book. 

I give A Stroke of Midnight 4 Keys. I honestly love this series. Sure, there is a lot of sex. Sometimes even enough to have me skimming the sexy, orgy chapters so we can get to the plot. But there is so much political intrigue, mixed with mythological rebirths and such a depth to the characters that they are more realistic than your very own best friends. Though it's perhaps not my favorite book in the series,  A Stroke of Midnight still has a ton of amazing imagery, plot devices, and magical awesomeness to keep me coming back for more. I reccomend this book (and series) for the serious paranormal reader who's not afraid of the unusual or the bizarre in their sex scenes. And being open minded about polygamy is a must. This is a truly great paranormal series charged with ridiculous amounts of originality and sexual tension.

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Review: Kiss of Frost by Jennifer Estep

Title: Kiss of Frost
Author: Jennifer Estep
Series: Mythos Academy #2
Pages: 354
Publisher: Kensington
Date Published: November 29, 2011
Format: Paperback
Genre: Paranormal/Fantasy (YA)
Source: Won from Leslie at My Keeper Shelf!

Synopsis:
I’m Gwen Frost, a second-year warrior-in-training at Mythos Acad­emy, and I have no idea how I’m going to sur­vive the rest of the semes­ter. One day, I’m get­ting schooled in sword­play by the guy who broke my heart—the drop-dead gor­geous Logan who slays me every time. Then, an invis­i­ble archer in the Library of Antiq­ui­ties decides to use me for tar­get prac­tice. And now, I find out that some­one at the acad­emy is really a Reaper bad guy who wants me dead. I’m afraid if I don’t learn how to live by the sword—with Logan’s help—I just might die by the sword..


My Review:
I won my copies of the Mythos Academy books from the amazing Leslie at My Keeper Shelf! It was a LONG time ago, but I remember being SO thrilled that I won! The Mythos academy is kind of a mythological retelling of several pantheons...the two main ones seem to be the Greek Pantheon and the Norse one. I absolutely LOVE mythological re-tellings so this series is definitely a fun on for me. Book Two starts right up where book one left off, and Gwen has settled down more or less at the academy. She's now in training to be Nike's Champion and continues to mourn the loss of her mother who died before book one started.

 As for the plot, there was a LOT of rehashing of book one. I get the point of the necessary "2nd chapter recap" that happens most of the time. Sometimes people need just a quick refresher of what happened before and remember just who these characters were. This is particularly helpful as a book blogger...sometimes I read 6 books or more a week so I like having the reminder to bring me back and let me get into the series again. But this book went to the extreme, recapping almost every event in the previous book, sometimes in immense and lingering detail. If I went through and cut out all the rehashing, I bet I could cut a good 50-75 pages out of the book. That is just a TAD too much for my liking. Otherwise, the plot was pretty exceptional. I love learning more about the different classes of students at the Academy. If I were Gwen and I had missed out on growing up with these kinds of magical warriors I would be learning all I could about them! From super strength and speed to the ability to kill with any object imaginable, these kids are TOUGH and they know it and that makes them really fun to mess with.

One of the most fun to mess with is Gwen's best friend Daphne. They became reluctant friends in the first book, and their friendship has a realness that you don't often see in books where the popular girl befriends the quirky odd girl. But both Gwen and Daphne aren't afraid of hurting each other's feelings and they are honest and true in their friendship which made them a lot of fun to read about, even when Daphne is having a brat attack or Gwen is being a mopey-dope about her man troubles. Which leads us to another fun character that comes into play. Of course, I'm talking about  Gwen's love interest Logan. He seems to have cooled down a bit from the end of Touch of Frost and Gwen is all frustrated. Especially because she is STILL being trained by him and his Spartan buddies in the arts of self defence and weaponry and all that. I admit that I had a total bookish crush on Logan at the end of Touch of Frost, but because of how cold and distant he was in this book that crush kind of died a bit. He's dating someone else, and despite Gwen obsessing about him for a huge part of the book, he only shows up in a handful of scenes which made me kind of feel over him and his moodiness.

I know I said it in my review of book one...BUT...I swear to GOD if I hear the phrases "froufrou" or "The Powers That Were" one more time I'm going to SNAP...I get it...sometimes authors favor particular words in their writing. I remember reading an interview with Kelley Armstrong where she talked about how she said "whirled" at least 100 times in her first few books of the Women of the Otherworld series. Once it was pointed out to her, she fixed it by replacing whirled with spun, dodged, etc. and made her books that much better because of it.  I TOTALLY believe that someone needs to clue Ms. Estep in on to the overuse of  froufrou and The Powers That Were. I won't actually go through and count the times they were used, but let me tell you..it was a lot. From everything to describing breakfast, to their accommodations at the ski lodge..."froufrou" became one of those phrases that loses it's definition because you've said it too much....say "fork" 50 times and you'll know what I mean...it got to the point that any time I read those phrases I would be jerked right out of the story with a pang of annoyance and struggled to keep going just because of my hatred of the overused words.
I give Kiss of Frost 3.5 Keys. It's a decent sophomore novel in the series in that it keeps to the pace of the first one and keeps character development rolling. Like book one, the ending is where all the action, plot twists, and fun is, which makes for 3/4 of a boring book and 1/4 something that's actually worth your time. I admit that I never guessed what happened at the ending, but for the most part, the beginning and middle of the book was so transparent that I could have guessed what happened from reading the cover blurb. So, in conclusion, (lol you can tell I'm writing papers while I'm writing this review...) this was another "meh" book for me. It's a fun escape from reality, but nothing to write home about. This is one of those that you will probably read and enjoy, but forget about it entirely until the next one comes out. 


Thursday, May 10, 2012

Review: Hammered by Kevin Hearne

Title: Hammered
Author: Kevin Hearne
Series: Iron Druid Chronicles #3
Pages: 310
Publisher: Random House
Date Published: July 5, 2011
Format: Paperback
Genre: Urban Fantasy
Source: Library

Synopsis:
Thor, the Norse god of thunder, is worse than a blowhard and a bully—he’s ruined countless lives and killed scores of innocents. After centuries, Viking vampire Leif Helgarson is ready to get his vengeance, and he’s asked his friend Atticus O’Sullivan, the last of the Druids, to help take down this Norse nightmare.One survival strategy has worked for Atticus for more than two thousand years: stay away from the guy with the lightning bolts. But things are heating up in Atticus’s home base of Tempe, Arizona. There’s a vampire turf war brewing, and Russian demon hunters who call themselves the Hammers of God are running rampant. Despite multiple warnings and portents of dire consequences, Atticus and Leif journey to the Norse plain of Asgard, where they team up with a werewolf, a sorcerer, and an army of frost giants for an epic showdown against vicious Valkyries, angry gods, and the hammer-wielding Thunder Thug himself.

My Review:
Seriously...Hammered is THE best book of the Iron Druid Chronicles and from the sheer awesomeness of the first two, that is saying a lot. Whether it is the scene where Atticus is describing what "squeeing" is to a 1000 year old vampire (complete with a description of when and how Atticus himself squees) or a car chase told in alternating shakespeare quotes and lol catz speak, I was laughing my ass off the entire time I was reading. I feel the need to just pepper this review with quotes because they were SO epic. If you haven't started this series, please do so immediately and tell me about it so we can laugh over all the completely ridiculous, yet awesome, fabulousness that happens in this AMAZING book!
There's a reason Bath & Body works doesn't have a fragrance called "Big F*****G Squirrel".
And that my dear friends, pretty much sums up Atticus's attitude in general. I love the way he interacts with mystical characters and shows total disrespect towards the gods. (The squirrel mentioned is guardian to one of the sacred roots of the tree that houses Asgard, the home of the Norse gods). Atticus is irreverent, yet cautious. I mean, staying alive for centuries proves that he knows how to watch his tongue around crazy, self important deities, but that doesn't stop the non-stop snarky commentary inside this wonderful man's mind. I wish I could have an Atticus shoulder angel who just provided a verbal, witty, hilarious play-by-play of every event in my life. Though I probably would get sent to the funny farm for laughing out loud 9940 times a day.And of course darling Atticus isn't the only fab character we get to experience first hand. We get the delightful, sarcastic, totally ADD puppy Oberon (though not as much as I would have liked!) and the centuries old vampire Leif. We get to know both Lief and Gunnar(the local pack alpha) a hell of a lot better, as well as being introduced to my favorite side character so far...Jesus Christ. :)
Awesome! I just bullied Jesus into taking a shot with me.... We ordered the insanely expensive stuff, seventy five dollars for a 1.75 ounce pour of premium Irish whiskey, because when you're doing a shot with Jesus, you don't buy him scotch.
The book is very lighthearted at first--how can it not be with the opening scene revolving around a giant squirrel with small mental capacities piggy-backing Atticus to the realm of the Norse gods? His adventures are quick and light and full of "har-de-har-hars", as Atticus single handedly trips up an entire pantheon of gods.Yet as the story continues, the playful hilarity transitions into something much darker, emotional, and meaningful. The action in the last half of the book is non-stop and it's SUCH an emotional roller coaster ride! I was laughing my ass off on one page, then on the next I was tearing up and sniveling like a little baby! One of my favorite "emotional" sections was the segment where all of the 5 challengers who want to kill Thor have a delightful week of male bonding so that they can better work together to destroy the Thunder God. We got to delve deep into the minds of not only our favorite Alpha-werewolf and Viking-Vampire, but also the histories and traumas of an entirely new set of characters from another thunder-god to a shaman-type dude with sweet ninja skillz. Then we are rewarded for this week of "story-time"  by the joy of THIS little quote when the boys think they have bonded enough to get to Asgard.
Getting five men to simultaneously touch me and the root of a tree was vaguely akin to a game of homoerotic twister.
 Bahahah!...Homoerotic touching aside, it was really cool to see so many different types of characters and gods interacting towards a common goal. Even though normally I would be very sad to see Thor killed (especially if he looks like Chris Hemsworth...)...this series paints him blacker than any villain out there. So...Death to the Thunder-Thug!!!

One interesting thing I have noticed not only with this series, but with male authors in general,  is that they seem to let important characters die a lot more easily than their female counterparts. I don't know if us ladies just get too attached to our MC's to kill them off, but it definitely seems to me that the guys are always cutting someone down just to tear at our heartstrings. Hearne appears to have no problem axing a few of the characters that you REALLY grow to love and respect. I was kind of sad and upset about the deaths at first, but they really add to the story and depth of the plot so guess I can grudgingly appreciate it. Particularly if they come back to life in later books like it seems like they will (fingers crossed!)
I give Hammered 5 Keys! To be perfectly honest, if you didn't find these quotes hilarious and immediately get the urge to run out and start your own Iron Druids collection, then we probably shouldn't be friends. This series is definitely an epic cornerstone of the Urban Fantasy universe and I will probably have my own Squeeing fan-girl moment if I ever have the fortune to run into Kevin Hearne somewhere because I'm so impressed and even occasionally moved by this series. Hammered is the best one yet and believe me, it isn't because the first two are stinkers. It seems like everything in the first two books were building up to the fabulousness that is the third one and we get a lot of closure as one story arc seems to be ending while another one begins. This is an excellent, hilarious, interesting, and original series that brings a breath of fresh air to the Urban Fantasy world. If you aren't going out to find your copy immediately, then we can't be talking right now :P

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Review: Fins are Forever by Tera Lynn Childs

Title: Fins are Forever
Author: Tera Lynn Childs
Series: Fins #2
Pages: 262
Publisher: HarperCollins Children's Books
Date Published: June 28, 2011
Format: Hardcover
Genre: Paranormal YA
Source: Won from (?) Sorry if you gave this to me! I can't remember!

Synopsis:
On Lily Sanderson’s eighteenth birthday she’ll become just a girl—still a mergirl, true, but signing the renunciation will ink Princess Waterlily of Thalassinia out of existence. That leaves plain old Lily living on land, dating the boy she loves, and trying to master this being-human thing once and for all. Now that Lily and Quince are together, mer bond or not, she’s almost content to give up her place in the royal succession of Thalassinia. But just when she thinks she has everything figured out, the waves start to get rough. Lily’s father sends a certain whirlpool-stirring cousin to stay with her on land. What did Doe do to get herself exiled from Thalassinia and stuck in terraped form, when everyone knows how much she hates humans? And why why why is she batting her eyelashes at Lily’s former crush, Brody? The seafoam on the raging surf comes when a merboy from Lily’s past shows up—Tellin asks Lily for something that clouds her view of the horizon. There’s a future with Quince on land, her loyalty to the kingdom in the sea, and Lily tossing on the waves in the middle. Will she find a way to reconcile her love, her duty, and her own dreams?


My Review:
Like the first in the series, Fins Are Forever is a cutesy, bubbly ( or should I say sudsy?), quick but entertaining read that is perfect for the younger audience in YA literature. I usually have a hard time with the second book in a series. Either the first book was so good that the second one pales in comparison, or whatever magic it was that made book 1 so good falls flat because it's not new any more. Surprisingly, this didn't happen with Fins Are Forever. Childs provides just enough rehashing of the last book to keep us caught up with what has happened and then jumps right in to the plot. The book starts right off with the introduction of Doe to the mortal realm and keeps going with tons of action and twists until the very last chapter.

This book was a big one, both for character growth and introducing new characters into the fold. We learn a lot more about Lily's personality in how she deals with her insufferable brat of a cousing, and I liked how each of the characters grew in their own way. Lily learns to accept responsibility both in her life on land and as a mermaid. Doe learns that she has harbored an unfair and harmful prejudice and works to fix it. Even Quinn seems to grow up even more during this book and he is probably the most mature of all of the characters... though he did make me really frustrated because of how little worth he saw in himself, I still loved seeing how much he truly cared for Lily. He just makes your heart melt because you can just see in his eyes that Lily is his everything and it makes you swoon with total silly-girly-girl love for the kid. Take for example this quote here:

"How do you always know just what to say?" I ask.
His laugh rumbles through me. "Practice, I guess."
I pull back and give him a quizzical look.
"I spent three years imagining what I would say to you if you were mine," he says, tugging me close. "I should hope I know what to say now that I've got you.”
Awwww!! How can you not love a boy who says things like that?!?! Still...I was a little irritated when Lily is so secure in her decision to give up her kingdom for him. I know every teen hates to hear it and every parent ends up saying it, but you just don't know what you want when you are in high school. You don't have enough life experience and just...knowledge to make life altering decisions when you are 16 and 17. You just don't. I know I hated when people said that to me as a teen, but looking back it is 100% true. When I look at how much I changed in the few short years I was in college alone it's amazing. In high school, little things like the popular kids and going to prom are your biggest worries. You don't become who you truly are until you are exposed to the pressures and decisions of being an adult, and Lily hasn't experienced those yet. I feel like it was a little unbelievable to expect her to make all of these impossible descisions  when she's so young. Kind of...forced and cliche...a little bit...but still cute!

I admit that I had no clue whatsoever that the book would end the way it did. Childs really amps up the drama and angst in this book so that you barely know what's coming at you next even though the plot and characters seem so simple. There is a TON going on at all times, from college prep, to earthquakes, to attempts at stealing the throne and everything is exciting and adventurous enough to keep you reading until you've finished. I read it in just one sitting of an hour or two.

I give Fins Are Forever 4 Keys. It is what it is supposed to be, which is  light-hearted, sweet, adventurous book for Tweens who will go crazy for the cutie-Quinn and want to swim off to be princesses in the ocean themselves. I just learned that there will only be 3 books in the series and I am oddly kind of sad. This isn't the kind of book that you spend hours talking about to anyone who will listen, but it is a really cute and uplifting story. If you liked the first one, or any of Tera Lynn's other books,  you will definitely like Fins are Forever. Like the first, it seems a little young...like it's suited for pre-teens and tweens...but it's still a light, cute, enjoyable read.


Monday, May 7, 2012

Review: Hex Hall by Rachel Hawkins

Title: Hex Hall
Author: Rachel Hawkins
Series: Hex Hall #1
Pages: 336
Publisher: Hyperion Books
Date Published: March 2, 2010
Format: Hardcover
Genre: Paranormal (YA)
Source: Library

Synopsis:
Three years ago, Sophie Mercer discovered that she was a witch. It's gotten her into a few scrapes. Her non-gifted mother has been as supportive as possible, consulting Sophie's estranged father--an elusive European warlock--only when necessary. But when Sophie attracts too much human attention for a prom-night spell gone horribly wrong, it's her dad who decides her punishment: exile to Hex Hall, an isolated reform school for wayward Prodigium, a.k.a. witches, faeries, and shapeshifter.By the end of her first day among fellow freak-teens, Sophie has quite a scorecard: three powerful enemies who look like supermodels, a futile crush on a gorgeous warlock, a creepy tagalong ghost, and a new roommate who happens to be the most hated person and only vampire student on campus. Worse, Sophie soon learns that a mysterious predator has been attacking students, and her only friend is the number-one suspect.As a series of blood-curdling mysteries starts to converge, Sophie prepares for the biggest threat of all: an ancient secret society determined to destroy all Prodigium, especially her.

My Review:
Witches seem to be going by the wayside in the word of paranormal literature. When they do come into play, they are typically villains or just side characters of minimal importance. WELL, I don't like that. There are a few well-established series out there, but nothing really new with kick ass witches as their main characters. So I am on the hunt. I want some new, fabulous, original witchies and I want them NOW! Which brings us to Hex Hall...lol...Hex Hall has been on my TBR pile for LITERALLY two years. Whether it was school, a publisher with an ARC, or just my own personal life, something always seemed to get in the way just when I started to read Hex Hall. Well, finally I was like NO! I am SITTING DOWN and reading this thing...lol :) I'm glad I did because Hex Hall is super cute and a fun start to what could be an amazing witchy series.

We get to start off right on Sophie's first day of school(cue those first day of school butterflies!). Of course, Hex Hall is nothing like Sophie's last school, where she inadvertently turned the most popular guy in school into a raving, drooling, moron, who will now be obsessed over the loser band girl until he dies. Poor Sophie just doesn't know her own magical strength it seems. *sigh* So the witches council packs her off to Hex Hall, school for wayward paranormal teens struggling to fit into the human world, where before she can even get in the door, she's attacked by a moody wereboy, made fun of by the popular clique, then embarrassed in front of the cutest guy at school, the sexy, the annoying Archer...poor, poor Sophie...but things pick up quickly when Sophie meets her Vampire roommate and starts taking secret magic lessons from one of the ghosts who lives in the Hall.


I am a pretty big fan of the paranormal boarding school setting...though Harry Potter and Hogwarts pretty much made it impossible to create a better school...Some of the more recent Academy/Manor/Hall's have been pretty cliche, but there was a lot that sets Hex Hall apart from all the other magic schools.  I liked that this school actually kept the kids away from the human world. It's on a freaking island...which is cool because you really wouldn't want your renegade paranormals running around where they could possibly find a human would you? I also thought the classes were kind of cool. Though Hawkings doesn't go into as much detail as I would have liked, the classes were some of the most fun...there was everything from Ancient Scimitar Defense, to Fairy History...pretty freaking awesome.


I thought the plot meandered around a lot. I understand that the setting needs to be established and we need to get a routine down and come to understand who Sophie is before the action can really start, but it seems like there was no other plot other than "go to school, flirt with cute guy" for the first 3/4 of the book. Some stuff definitely comes into play later, like the murder of the last witch who lived in Sophie's room, but I was kind of bored because though Sophie was getting all this information, she didn't DO anything with it. I also felt disconnected from everyone in the story except for Sophie. There is some depth in the side characters, but for the most part they just seem to be there to be a sounding board for Sophie, or the love interest, or the bad-girl. They didn't REALLY have drives and motivations apart from what Sophie needed from them so I would have liked more in that area. Still, the plot picks up and the last quarter of the book is a bunch of non-stop action and twists.

I give Hex Hall 4 out of 5 Keys! It was fun, relatively light (considering it's paranormal)and had a great mystery/twist introduced in the last few chapters. I bet it could be a good start to an interesting series, though there were a few things I found a little irritating/upsetting/cliche. I hope that in Demon glass, there will be more side-character development. Sophie was a great character and didn't take herself too seriously (both as a teenager and a witch) but remained true to her self during the entire book. I can't wait to get to book two and find out more about this world, especially Sophie's Dad and the Irish Paranormal hunter chicks...they seem pretty sshweet.

Saturday, May 5, 2012

Review: Horns by Joe Hill

Title: Horns
Author: Joe Hill
Series: N/A
Pages: 368
Publisher: William Morrow
Date Published:: March 1, 2010
Format: Hardcover
Genre: Horror
Source: Library

Synopsis:
Ignatius Perrish spent the night drunk and doing terrible things. He woke up the next morning with a thunderous hangover, a raging headache . . . and a pair of horns growing from his temples. At first Ig thought the horns were a hallucination, the product of a mind damaged by rage and grief. He had spent the last year in a lonely, private purgatory, following the death of his beloved, Merrin Williams, who was raped and murdered under inexplicable circumstances. A mental breakdown would have been the most natural thing in the world. But there was nothing natural about the horns, which were all too real. Now Ig is possessed of a terrible new power to go with his terrible new look--a macabre talent he intends to use to find the monster who killed Merrin and destroyed his life. Being good and praying for the best got him nowhere. It's time for a little revenge. . . . It's time the devil had his due. . . .


My Review
What an interesting and compelling story! I admit that the only reason I picked this book up in the first place is because I found out that Joe Hill is Stephen King's son. I adore King's book with a fiery passion so I just had to see if the apple fell anywhere near the tree and I believe that in this case, Joe certainly succeeds in a genre dominated by his daddy. He manages to make something that could get cliche and pretentious "the devil inside" and makes it into something hilarious, dark, and kind of cool.

For me, one of the worst feelings is waking up after a night of wild partying and probably too much drinking and realizing that you don't remember half of your night. The narrator of this story, poor Iggy Perrish has one of these "oh shit" moments when he looks at himself in the mirror after getting piss drunk the night before. But not only does he feel like he's done something terrible...the proof is right in front of him in the form of two devil horns! (Totally shweet!) Now all of the sudden, people are telling him things. Horrible, yet truthful things...things like banging the next door neighbor when the hubby isn't home, or wanting desperately to suffocate one's children in the middle of the night and run off with the bartender next door. Ig has no clue why people are telling him this, but he makes it his business to put this power to use and discover just what happened to the love of his life when she was murdered the year before. 

The novel is very well plotted out and moves at the same pace the entire time.  I could have used a few less flashbacks, or at least a little more action in between the flashbacks, but I understand why they were there and what they were supposed to do in the story. There is a steady pacing, but I felt like it could have used a bit more push to get through some of the descriptive chapters. It's not like I lost interest or anything, but it definitely didn't keep me riveted and gripping the book so hard my knuckles turned white. However, I really had no idea that it would end the way it did so I think that Hill did a great job at hinting and leading the mystery around. You are never really sure what's happening and where the book is going, but I think that is part of the fun and bizarre nature of this book. 

Joe's writing style was a very fun one. It has all of the unabashed, kind of depraved, dark humor that his father has, without all of Kings rambling nonsensical prose. Sometimes I will admit that I have to give King a rest because I just can't take the nonsense anymore. Hill takes a lot from his dad, whether it's from growing up in the King household or just a nod to his father, such as the complete debasement of religion and religious figures while at the same time revering religion and god. Iggy peed on the virgin Mary for christsakes, and then goes on to comment on her "idiot-savant" smile...definitely not very flattering to the holy mother...but at the same time the book is a smart analysis about the nature of man, and the ideas behind truth, love, and religion itself. 

I loved that Hill seems to dive down deep and expose the layers of all of his characters. Horns is a testamant to the evil that lurks within every human and whether or not it's best to be the devil or one of the damned. Seriously...the confessions of some of the characters had my skin crawling and I think that is what truly scared me about the novel. It's scary to think that you could be living beside someone and think you know what they believe, how they think....but then if you got a good look into their soul would it say what you believe it would? Probably not...Maybe your boyfriend secretly wants to take the lawnmower you keep nagging about and run over your face with it. Maybe your mom wishes you were never born so she could have kept sleeping with all the men in town...you never know. This kind of stuff really hits you when you're reading the book because it could be happening all around you and you would never even know it. 

I give Horns 4 out of 5 Keys! It was an entertaining and provocative read, but at the same time it has that dry and caustic undertone that tends to have me leaning towards Young Adult novels rather than Adult. There's just something so dry about some adult books that, so even though they are entertaining, they don't keep you reading late into the night just to finish the book. I think fans of King, or horror in general will really get a kick out of Horns. Those who are squeamish around defiling religious artifacts or talking about brutal, violent, rape will want to stay away, but for those of you who can get past the vulgar, there is a lot of depth and humanity behind this book that I think is definitely worth checking out.