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Saturday 31 October 2015

Friday 30 October 2015

Reading progress update: I've read 7%.

The White Rose - Amy Ewing

In spite of the fact I thought th first book in this series is one of the stupidest dystopias I gave ever read and swore blind in my review I had no interest in reading the sequel, I broke. I bought the sequel. It looks like The Jewel series is I may hate it, but I still HAVE to know what happens series.

Original post: sunsetxcocktail.booklikes.com/post/1279465/reading-progress-update-i-ve-read-7

Thursday 29 October 2015

Story Sprites Round 2 update

The Moon and More - Sarah Dessen The Secret Fire - C.J. Daugherty, Carina Rozenfeld Fans of the Impossible Life - Kate Scelsa The Shining - Stephen King Daughters unto Devils - Amy Lukavics The Haunting of Hill House - Shirley Jackson, Laura Miller Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone: The Illustrated Edition (Harry Potter, Book 1) - J.K. Rowling Ink and Bone: The Great Library - Rachel Caine

 

At the end of the first month of my second round of Story Sprites challenge I have completed 8 squares. 

 

Male MC - Ink and Bone by Rachel Caine - 5 Stars

Multiple Fantasy Creatures - Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone (Illustrated edition) JK Rowling - 5 stars 

A Classic Novel - The Haunting of Hill House by Shirley Jackson 3.5 stars

A Book with a Mountain - The Shining by Stephen King (reread) 5 stars

A Halloween Read - Daughters unto Devils by Amy Lukavics - 4 Stars

Photograph for a Cover- The Moon and More by Sarah Dessen - 4 Stars

Flames on Cover - The Secret Fire by CJ Daughtery - 5 Stars

Quiltbag Author - Fans of the Impossible Life by Kate Scelsa

 

Not a bad start :)

 

Currently Reading a bunch of books to cover more stars.

 

Gender Bender/Cross Dress - currently reading both Scarlet by AC Gaughen and Under a Painted Sky by Stacey Lee. Nearly finished Scarlet but I don't really like it that much whereas I like Under a Painted Sky a lot.

Set in Southern USA - Currently reading both Compulsion by Martina Boone and Miss Mayhem by Rachel Hawkins for this square. 

Character Death - using The Stand by Stephen King for this one as this book has some truly epic character deaths in it. Initially this was going to be my book for Bram Stoker Award Winner it was on the Goodreads Bram Stoker Winners list but when I checked the Bram Stoker Award website it wasn't listed, so don't rely on Goodreads lists of award winners for facts! 

Character is a Musician - Wildflower by Alicia Whitaker - country singer girl goes from family band to stardom story. Its very simple and the MC is one of the biggest Mary Sue's I've come across, but inspite of that its a a lot of fun and the Nashville fangirl in me is enjoying this one. 

Supernatural race in Modern Times - Born at Midnight by CC Hunter - girl goes to summer camp and discovers vampires fairies and shapeshifters and a whole host of other paranormal beings are real. This one is awesome so far. 

POC MC - Scarlet Undercover by Jennifer Latham - not really liking this one much so far to be honest. Finding it a little unrealistic and the plot is kinda boring.

 

Squares to be filled

A middle grade fantasy novel - still pondering on this one. I have a few potential candidates, either Land of Stories by Chris Colfer, The Copper Gauntlet by Cassandra Clare + Holly Black or I may just read another Harry Potter book. 

Set at a Boarding School - either going to be a Vampire Academy or a House of Night Book. 

Witches or Wizards - Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. 

Bram Stoker Award Winner - American Gods by Neil Gaiman or Duma Key by Stephen King. 

 

Ones I'm struggling to find something for are

Character centred novel - I have a bunch of YA contemporaries I could use for this one but I can't make my mind up right now.

 

Book with a fictional language - really stumped on this one.

So far my candidates are Heart of Betrayal (Kiss of Deception book 2) by Mary Pearson. I remember the first book in this series had fantastic world building including its own dialects and languages and hopefully this will be continued in the second book.

Other thing that comes to mind is Lord of the Rings but I tried reading this one once in a trilogy bind up version and got up to about half way through the Two Towers and got bored and that took me over a year. Don't really fancy trying it again at the moment. (I doubt watching the movies again will count)

I got about 3 books into the Game of Thrones series. I thought about picking one of them up again. (Dothraki and others) 

I also thought about Throne of Glass for the Wyrdmarks (could possibly count as fictional language) 

It if gets to the end of December and I haven't got anything covered for this square I will most likely just read Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets again (for Parsletongue) 

Original post: sunsetxcocktail.booklikes.com/post/1278706/story-sprites-round-2-update

Wednesday 28 October 2015

Review: Fans of the Impossible Life

Review:

Fans of the Impossible Life - Kate Scelsa

I received a copy from Netgalley.

 

I also purchased a copy when I saw it in my local bookshop (couldn't resist). 

 

It took me a while to warm up to this one. I was sort of hoping for a romance that would eventually turn into a threesome (which I didn't get). What I did get was what turned out to be a moving story about three very different people each with their own struggles finding some comfort in each other and their friendship, until it all spiralled out into a surprisingly dark mess. 

 

I found the method of storytelling rather unique. Three characters, a different point of view for each character, Mira in third person, Jeremy in first and Sebby in second. Sebby's point of view told along the lines of You do this and you do that was the hardest one to get used to. If the entire book had been written this way, I don't think I would have finished it. 

 

I didn't like it much at first, I found the characters hard to get used to, the only one I had any sympathy for or liked in the slightest was Jeremy. Jeremy was a quite boy who was returning to school after a horrible bullying incident that made him miss the end of the previous semester. He's almost painfully shy and wants to get through the rest of school with as little trouble as possible. He has a very caring home life, his two Dads are very supportive and involved and really want to see him succeed and do well, which was lovely to see. He wants to start an Art club. And he meets Mira and Mira's flamboyant friend Sebby.

 

Mira came across to me at first as flaky and there seemed to be no real reason for why she was missing school and just came off as spoiled lay about. The more of the book I read, the more I began to feel for her as the reasons behind her attitude came to light. Her depression was serious and moving and it almost hurt to read how no one would ever really listen and take her hurting seriously. She did wind up in the hospital a few times, but even when she came back and seemed to resume something of a normal life. her parents just didn't get that the depression wasn't really gone. They want a certain standard of life for her, they don't seem to care what she wants. So Mira loses herself in thrift store shopping and designing clothes and hanging out with Sebby.

 

Sebby, the openly gay foster kid, was flamboyant, cocky, and a lot of fun. But of course, there's a much deeper and darker side to him that is rarely seen by anyone. He's got layers of personality, the surface ones everyone sees, and his darker struggles that cause some major problems and upset towards the balance of friendship with Mira and Jeremy towards the novel.

 

The novel tells the story of how Sebby and Mira came together and how they start to bring Jeremy out of his shell. There's a lot of emotions swirling back and forth as the three of them figure out where they stand and get to know each other, lots of drama as they all have their own issues, and a host of entertaining side characters that work their way into the plot as well. 

 

Though towards the end it took a surprisingly dark twist as things particularly for Sebby began to change in a not so good way. Mira's depression gets worse and Jeremy doesn't seem to know what to do only that he can't seem to face the idea of possibly losing the two new brilliant friends he has. Jeremy was the most sensible, stable character. Some of his actions had consequences for other characters, but all done with a trying to do the right thing even though you might not like the results attitude which made the narrative all the more heart wrenching.

 

The conclusion seemed open ended, if bittersweet. I can't really say it was a happy ending or not. It left me a sort of sad smile and the hope that things would work out for these characters.

 

So I'm glad I finished the novel rather than DNFing it early on, as it turned out to be a very good read.

 

Thank you to Pan MacMillan for approving my request to view the title.  

Original post: sunsetxcocktail.booklikes.com/post/1278162/review-fans-of-the-impossible-life

Review: The Space Between Heartbeats

Review:

The Space Between Heartbeats - Melissa Pearl

I snagged a copy of this title from Netgalley when it was available as a 'Read it Now'. 

 

This was a bit of coverlust and a lovely title that caught my eye about this book. I read the synopsis on Netgalley and think I passed on it initially, then went back a week later or so and figured I would give it a chance. 

 

Unfortunately, I didn't like this one much at all. The plot showed some form of promise, and at least by the end the main character did show something that resembled some smidgen of character growth. However, Nicole was such an obnoxious brat it was hard to garner any sympathy for her whatsoever.

 

The initial ideas of the plot were a fairly good one - Nicole is a spoiled popular girl with a hot boyfriend, absentee parents and all the right friends. Something happens at a party and Nicole wakes up in a ghostly state somewhere between life and death and discovers some harsh truths about what her friends really think of her and what her boyfriend has really been doing behind her back. And to top it off, the only person who can hear her in this new ghostly state is the one boy she has been really horrible to, the school weirdo, Dale. 

 

For me it was a case of good idea, poor execution. The writing was also very simple. The characters were flat and uninteresting and the parts that were supposed to be emotional were sappy and ridiculous. The dialogue in some of the scenes was appalling and sounded like a made for TV movie.

 

There's one scene were Nicole stands in her kitchen while her parents are discussing her disappearance (they can't see her) and they're weeping and wailing about what horrible parents they are and how they never even noticed Nicole's acting out and struggling (this after her mother finds and reads her diary). We learn that Nicole had a Terrible Thing happen a few years ago and this changed her personality and her family completely.

 

I found Nicole so impossible to relate to or like in the slightest, in regards to this Terrible Tragedy that shaped her current personality, and her family into the state it's in, I felt nothing for her. The scene with the parents discussing how they behaved badly after the incident and not noticing how it effected Nicole was supposed to be a moving one. As I already mentioned, the dialogue was so over the top along the lines of oh noes, we're terrible people and if only we hadn't been so absorbed in our own pain we didn't even see how hard this was for our poor Nicole! It was so sappy it was more gag worthy than anything. 

 

Nicole,  it turns out as she and Dale start investigating what happened to her, used to be friends with Dale and a whole bunch of different people before she started high school and became Miss Popularity. She was nice and fun and likeable. The Terrible Tragedy changed her. Nicole doesn't like to talk about it. Understandable. But she also can't accept it when she hears her friends talking and what they really think of her. She also doesn't like the fact that Dale, who the popular kids make fun of can hear her, she argues with him, she whines. This is the only person who can help her and she fights with him! 

 

The were a few utterly ridiculous plot twists towards the end as Nicole finally finds out what really happened. She does warm towards Dale and finally gets it in her head that maybe being really popular isn't worth it with the type of people her so-called cool friends turn out to be. There are a few more gag worthy sappy scenes as Nicole struggles to choose between life and death. But then there's the ending. The ending was totally unbelievable, after everything Nicole goes through, every twist and turn when the truth is finally revealed her actions in dealing with it left me utterly baffled. Urg. It was awful. I think she was trying to take the moral high ground, but it was...stupid. At least to me.

 

In the end, I really didn't like this book at all.    

Original post: sunsetxcocktail.booklikes.com/post/1278159/review-the-space-between-heartbeats

Tuesday 27 October 2015

Review: Daughters Unto Devils

Review:

Daughters unto Devils - Amy Lukavics

I read this in a couple of hours during a long flight from London to Phoenix a few weeks ago. 

 

Once I started, I couldn't put it down. I'm not sure what I was expecting with this one, I certainly wasn't expecting to be anywhere near as horrific as it was. It tells the story of 16 year old Amanda and her struggling family in a historical setting. The story starts with Amanda having been seeing a boy, Henry for a while, they have been sexually involved for some time and she appears to be quite enamoured with him. Until she finds she's pregnant. Given the historical setting and the religious undertones in the novel, Amanda is quite freaked out. She's terrified of her family finding out...one more mouth to feed in an already full family and difficult situation. 

 

The setting is brutal, blunt and delightfully atmospheric. Amanda's father moves the whole family down from their mountain cabin, across the open plains to find a new homestead for them. There's a wonderful family dynamic in the novel, though not without problems. Something terrible has happened the previous winter, and is referenced a lot, though its not until much later in the novel that the reader finds out. All we know is something bad happened, and Amanda is very haunted by it. Also, her baby sister Hannah, was born that winter, though Hannah was born deaf and blind and screams and cries a lot and puts a host of added strain on the family. 

 

Amanda is torn between helping her family and keeping her pregnancy a secret and its a struggle. Not helped by the long journey down the mountain to the new homestead. The father's determination and resilience is quite impressive in the face of so many different troubles. He's very religious and seems to find strength in that no matter what. The younger siblings are best friends, and the other sibling not quite as old as Amanda but older than the children, Emily (I think or it might be Emma, can't remember off the top of my head) was always very close to Amanda, and their friendship is strained by the Amanda's secret pregnancy. Amanda can't tell Emily, but Emily knows something wrong. 

 

They find an unoccupied cabin to set up as their homestead. Right off there's something not right about it, the place is a mess and its got a whole host of bloodstains inside. Instead of saying a massive no and moving on, Amanda's father decides this is where they will stay and he will fix the place up. Which the family do. From them on things go from creepy to out right frightening.  Not recapping much as its too spoilery from this point on.

 

What the family go through is pretty horrific and it gets harder and harder to tell the difference between is this really happening or is Amanda simply losing her mind due to the move and the unplanned pregnancy which winds up having terrifying consequences. Family stress goes from bad to worse as things keep happening. Not helped by the arrival of a couple of new comers, as one would hope, a boy Emily's age and his father, a doctor. 

 

It gets gorier as the novel progresses. Though in spite of the terror, Amanda shows some remarkable strength as she has to pull it together to figure out how to save what's left of her family by the time the truth is revealed. Complete with an ending to send shivers down your spine as well. 

 

A fantastic spooky read. 

 

 

Original post: sunsetxcocktail.booklikes.com/post/1277614/review-daughters-unto-devils

Wednesday 14 October 2015

Review: The Scorpion Rules

Review:

The Scorpion Rules - Erin Bow

DNF at page 186.

 

I snagged a copy from Netgalley with one of those read now for first five hundred member emails. I didn't get very far. I liked it initially, but couldn't seem to get into it. Sometimes with me, I just can't read certain things on kindle so I stuck it back on my Tbr list and bought a finished hardback. Didn't make much of a difference.

 

Some interesting concepts and rather unique world building. Yay for diversity and double yay for potential bisexual love triangle. I did grin and my interest picked up slightly when that first started to happen. However, I find the whole thing so flat and boring and I just don't care about any of these characters.

 

The first half of the book seems to be about the hostage kids doing farm work while one new boy comes in who defies the rules and starts making the main character, Greta realize things aren't as okay as they seem. They all know the situation, if their parents countries declare war, their kids die. No questions, negotiations. It's swift and brutal and seems to have been doing a pretty damn good job of making its point.

 

So the idea was certainly a unique and interesting one. While Greta certainly held herself well as a princess and don't shy away from any responsibilities...she had zero personality.. Hardly any of the characters did. There were some fairly dark turns that was just enough to keep my interest. I really don't care about their farming duties or the goats they keep. I'm an animal lover, but even the goats bored me to death!

 

Half way through, even though things were getting rather dark and twisty, war has been declared...but it's still so flat and lifeless and I realized that I wouldn't care in the slightest if any of these characters were killed as a result. So...time to quit for me. This book was just not to my taste in the end, I guess.

Original post: sunsetxcocktail.booklikes.com/post/1270804/review-the-scorpion-rules

Monday 5 October 2015

Review: The Secret Fire

Review:

The Secret Fire - C.J. Daugherty, Carina Rozenfeld

I received a copy from Netgalley.

 

I put in a request for this title as soon as I saw it pop up on Netgalley. Stunning cover and a blurb that immediately got my attention. When I didn't hear back for what seemed like ages I pre ordered the book. And wouldn't you know...about two weeks later I got my approval email. By then i think my pre order had been shipped early. Oh well. So I wound up with a shiny paperback copy and a copy for my Kindle.

 

As it turned out, I would have probably got a kindle copy as well anyway, because I absolutely loved this book. I read in a few hours. Simply could not put it down. The basics of the plot were nothing particularly new. Studious boring girl discovers super power and may be "the chosen one" for...reasons. And a mysterious boy with his own issues and somehow they have to come together even though they don't seem to like each other at first to defeat the bad guys.

 

The plot was brilliant. Set in both a small English town and Paris, France, it weaves amazingly the two separate storylines of the heroes, English girl Taylor who dreams of studying history at Oxford University with her grandfather who is a professor there, and French boy Sacha who is a wiseass with an attitude problem. When Sacha is first introduced he's involved with some dodgy characters and seems to have some unusual abilities of his own. Taylor's life is fairly normal. She's told she has to tutor Sacha in English. He's less than thrilled about it.

 

The characters were densely layered, and there was so much more to each of them that meets the eye. Its impossible to recap without being totally spoilery. As Sacha and Taylor get to know each other via emails and on-line chats, each is having their own problems. Family issues, and things relating to their own unique abilities. The two intertwine and connect together as the plot thickens and more secrets and questions are woven into the story line.

 

The tension is gripping, there's a great mix of action. There's barely there hints of a romance which I'm hoping will be developed as the series goes on. There was a lot of information to take in, but the writing was so good, some of the concepts involving Taylor's unique power was a little hard to grasp, but it was well put together enough that it wasn't info dumping at all.

 

The last battle scenes where Taylor finally gets her head around what's happening reminded me very much of the end of the first 'Matrix' movie. (I was grinning a lot). By the end of the book there is definitely more questions and hardly any answers. A solid start to a brilliant series with a whole host of great potential. I loved it from start to finish and really can not wait to see what's going to happen next.

 

Thank you to net galley and Little, Brown Book Group UK for approving my request to view the title.

Original post: sunsetxcocktail.booklikes.com/post/1265429/review-the-secret-fire

Thursday 1 October 2015

Story Sprites Round 2

So today marks the start of a new board for Great Imaginations Blog Story Sprites Challenge 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Since I did so well on the first board, I'm going for the whole board again. As usual with challenges I like to have a plan. Sometimes I stick to it (sometimes not). So here's what I have planned so far. Some of these squares are quite tough and will require some thought.

 

Middle Grade Fantasy novel: The Land of Stories, Chris Colfer (kindle book)

Male MC: Polaris (Avalon 2) Mindee Arnett (hardback book)

Wtiches or Wizards: Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - JK Rowling (Paperback book)

A classic book: The Haunting of Hill House by Shirley Jackson (kindle book)

A Book with a Mountain - The Shining by Stephen King (kindle)

Bram Stoker Award Winner - The Stand by Stephen King (kindle) 

Halloween Read - either Blood and Salt by Kim Liggett or Daughters Unto Devils by Amy Luavics

Set in Southern USA - Miss Mayhem by Rachel Hawkins or Compulsion by Martina Boone (both hardbacks)

Quiltbag Author - something from either my Poppy Z Brite or Caitlin R Kiernan collection. 

Character who is a Musician - Wildflower by Alecia Whitaker (hardback)

Photograph on Cover - The Moon and More by Sarah Dessen (paperback)

 

 

 

Original post: sunsetxcocktail.booklikes.com/post/1262812/story-sprites-round-2