Monday, 4 February 2013

Raised by Wolves Book Series Review


This second series in my little werewolf related reading drive came recommended by Sarah Rees Brennan. If you don’t know who she is, shame on you, go here and learn. Shameless promoting aside I’m thinking this will be the last review on Tumblr because I’m not sure that Tumblr is really the best outlet for such things and instead I’ll be starting a blog. Not the first in my life time and I make no promises that I’ll be able to maintain it but I’ll be moving all text heavy posts to there and I’ll link once it’s up. That way, if you are interested in what I’m reading and do, by any chance, go out and buy said books so you’ll know what on Earth I’m wittering on about so much, then you can still do so. If not and you’re sat there looking at your dash going ‘another review? are you ever going to draw again? geesh’ then you’ll be happy as a clam too.

TheRaised by Wolvesseries is written byJennifer Lynn Barnesand is written from the perspective of Bryn. The theme appears to be about defying authority and finding yourself but it’s also about relying on others and having to make difficult choices.

Bryn is human and at the age of four was attacked by a wild rabid werewolf. Though her parents were killed she was recused by Callum, the alpha of the Stone River pack. Marked and adopted by the pack she was put in the care of Ali, also human for female weres are rare, who was mated to another member of the pack. Being the kind of girl she is, who when told to do something does the exact opposite, Bryn soon finds herself up to her neck in hot water when she stumbled on freshly minted teen werewolf Chase. But turned weres are also rare and when Bryn discovers that the rabid who attacked her, who killed her parents, who she tought was dead turned Chase from human to werewolf she doesn’t know who to trust.

For her own safety Ali takes Bryn and her newly born twins to The Wayfarer, at the very edge of Callum’s territory, where Lake and her father live. Lake and Bryn have been friends since they were kids but Lake had been coming back to the pack less and less and only now does Brynn start to realise why. Together they, along with some help from Chase and Bryn’s other bestie purebred werewolf Devon, Bryn tracks down the rabid were who she discovers has been killing other kids.

The first book was, to me, very very clever because Barnes managed to tie in the weaknesses of her werewolves with a very human problem or one that a human reader could easily connect and empathize with. You really can’t go wrong with this book, the characters are wonderfully diverse in their opinions, their backgrounds and their behaviour. Barnes encapsulates all the weaknesses and strengths of her creations without it feeling forced or contrived and no one seems to have been put there just to fill a gap. What I said the Nightshade trilogy lacked in pack behaviourRaised by Wolvesmakes up for in abundance.

Book two I felt dropped the ball and can be summed up with three things.

1. Shane is a horrible horrible were that deserves far stronger profanities than horrible.
2. There’s a bunch of psychic people with powers that give Ali a tragic back story and make trouble.
3. Lucas.

You’re basically looking at around 300 hundred pages of set up for book three. So when I got to book three I was ready to write it off and when ghosts started coming into the equation I was ready to put the book down. I find the whole ‘you can’t find it but it can do damage to you’ concept irritating. Like I find zombies irritating. However, once you get to the latter half of the book it all kicks in.

There was this part with Sora, Devon’s mom, and you’ll know the part I mean, where I just burst into tears. Literally the second the implications of what was happening dawned on me there were tears streaming down my face. For Sora, for Bryn, for Devon, for Bryn. And I didn’t even like Sora. In fact, the events of book 1 kind of make it a point that you shouldn’t like Sora. Then there was this wonderful twist with Shane and the finale where Bryn is like ‘oh hi sweetie, home so soon?’. At this point you think it’s all over, Bryn’s won, everyone can go home but it just doesn’t quit.

And all the time Brynn is human. She doesn’t get changed into a werewolf. She does all these amazing things as a human and I felt that was just so great because if she had become a werewolf it might have become a crutch for her. That her strength didn’t come from herself but from the raw power that being a werewolf would give her. The other thing that amazed me was that there was no love triangle. DevonBrynChase was such an obvious route to go down and Barnes didn’t go there at all and I loved it. There wasn’t a lot of romance at all actually the majority of the focus was on pack and action which was a wonderful change of pace.

It’s kind of got an open ending and I don’t think it’s an ending you’ll necessarily be expecting or maybe you’ll even hate the ending. But I don’t think there could have been a better one. It’s very powerful in it’s own ride. Bittersweet.

I’d definitely recommend this book if you’re a fan of werewolves, and even if you’re not this might be the book that makes you one.

Fifty Shades of Grey: A review of mis-conceptions


Before anyone panics this will be a PG-13 review (however the word sex is mentioned a lot, you’ve been warned. I take no responsibility for you’re further reading of this article as you read beyond this point of your own free will), I’m well aware I have younger viewers on my Tumblr but I’m sure even they have heard the whispers of this series, especially since it’s become synonymous with Twilight. Now I’ll admit I didn’t read these properly, I skim read, skipped a fair bit at the beginning of Grey and flipped through chunks of Freed. Out of all of them I read the most of Darker. This isn’t so much a review for the books but more an examination of the things I’ve heard about these books and how they measure up.

Now the big things I’d heard when these books hit the shelves, and very soon the best seller list, were Twilight, sex, bondage, fanfiction, abusive relationship.

I realise that by writing these book reviews I’m putting my opinion out there, but it’s a critical opinion and you are welcome to disagree with it. What I am about to say is more of a philosophy of mine that if you disagree with, which you are entitled to do, I won’t think better of you.

If you hate or otherwise have an opinion on a book you haven’t read then your opinion is invalid.
I read these books so that I could at least have an informed opinion. However I can’t really compare these books to Twilight because…I haven’t read Twilight. I’ve seen the films, and although that might give me a brief incite into the basic plot for Twilight it by no means conveys the writing style. However I can address the point of:
It’s stupid because it was once Twilight fanfiction
I’ve read and written a lot of fanfiction. Pages and pages of the stuff. I think my big phases were Yu-Gi-Oh and Harry Potter. I’ve read canon stories, I’ve read spin-offs and I’ve even read AUs. Alternate Universes. Some well written and some terribly written. A cursory glance of those and other categories that I’ve have read and written in wouldn’t suggest that any particularly fandom has more better writers than any other. Therefore to refuse to acknowledge Fifty Shades on the basis that the author had some affiliation with the Twilight fandom would be like condemning The Mortal Instruments by Cassandra Clare because you didn’t like Harry Potter (as Clare wrote The Draco Trilogy and re-adapted scenes she’s used for that in TMI). Or to say ‘I won’t read it because it was fanfiction’ is to say ‘I won’t read a book cause it was written’. Everyone starts somewhere right?
It’s full of sex and filthy sinful things like handcuffs ohmagurd
Well yes. It is most definitely full of sex. However in it’s defense it was always safe sex. I am of the opinion if there is going to be sex in a book that promoting safe sex and not overly romanticizing impulsive not-safe-sex is much better for the younger readers that everyone is so terrified for that they need to make a new category, New Adult, in which to stash the sex.

However a lot of people seem to be acting like these books are some sort of revolution. Like they’re a sexathon in paperback form. They’re not the first. They won’t be the last. If you’re me you’ll remember Belle de Jour: The Diary of a London Call Girl which was made into a rather hilarious tv series starring former Dc Who companion Billie Piper. Just in case you’re wondering where you saw her fully clothed.



If a little older still you’ll remember ‘Girl with a One Track Mind’ which my boyfriend at the time lent me. There was a scandal when her true identity was revealed and she lost her job in the film industry for writing a book about her sex life. A book that was actually the publication of her successful blog.

And if we’re going to talk about women who’ve made a blog into a book and even onto the big screen why not look at Julie Powell who cooked her way through Julia Child’s cook book. Wrote a blog about it. And voila. Her publishing dreams came true.



So if we’re going to hold it against El James that she wrote fanfiction or that she writes about sex. Let’s hold writing about cooking against Julie. And writing about sex against Abby Lee (or Zoe something irl) and against Belle de Jour. Just so we can keep our moral stand point right?
Bondage is about abuse of women. This book is about abuse of women. This book encourages women to go along with abusive relationships
As part of the anime fandom you meet a huge range of people. A huge range of sexualities, comfort zones and life styles. Yes, I know people that practice BDSM. Both lightly and heavily. Without going into it I will say this.It is based on trust. Just like all relationships. It is not an exclusively male-dominance practice. And it is not unwilling. The negative view this lifestyle gets comes from, I believe, fear of the unknown. Humanity hates what it doesn’t or can’t understand. This is a sad fact of life.

But this book doesn’t promote an abusive relationship. Anastasia Steele is fully aware of every choice she makes. She is presented with a contract and a check list so she, and Christian Grey, can define their limits. Which is actually a lot more than regular couples do. When was the last time you talked about any kind of limits with your partner? Sexual or otherwise.

Nothing heavily BDSM appears in any of the books. In fact there’s remarkably little in Darker, more worried about dealing with a psycho ex with a gun. Most of it happens in Grey and there’s brief mentions in Freed. In fact, Anastasia walks out on Christian Grey when he goes too far. She. leaves. him.

If this isn’t a sign of an independent of sound mind and body woman acting in her own best interests despite the sexual and emotional attachment to the man, I don’t know what is. Just because the woman decides to get with the guy you don’t like in a book is not a reason to condemn her. She doesn’t go along with it. In fact she spends most of Darker, where Christian has said he’ll change, he’ll give it all up just to have a shot with her, worrying that she’s not enough for him because she’s just not into it the way he is.

Last I checked partners who abused their significant other did not go around saying they were in BDSM relationships. And those who were in BDSM relationships didn’t go around saying they were abused. They consented to have their limited tested and entrusted their welfare to their partner. (Isn’t that scarily close to marriage? In sickness and in health, through trial and tribulation, for better or for worse I’m yours and all that?)

This isn’t me lecturing, this is me passing on what understanding I have from knowing real life people who practice this kind of thing. I’m not saying you have to like it, I’m not saying you have to understand, I’m certainly not saying ‘go look for answers whip in hand’. But what I’m trying to say is, please keep an open mind and don’t judge what you haven’t experienced and therefore cannot claim any understanding of.
This book is mommy porn for desperate housewives
Pornography: Printed or visual material containing the explicit description or display of sexual organs or activity.

Yes. These books fulfill that description. What I disagree with is the generalization of those that enjoy Fifty Shades. Fundamentally what those statements are doing are putting fans of these books in a box. It is discouraging others from reading it because they do not want to be labelled. Why do we apply labels? So that we can feel better about ourselves. It’s disgusting.

This also brings to mind the point of labeling a fandom because you didn’t like the book. I did not enjoy the Twilight films. I felt underwhelmed. But I have friends who loved the series and even loved the films. I do not go up to them and tell them they are stupid or childish, just because they like those books. And neither would you, surely. If you’re friend liked something you didn’t you wouldn’t call them an idiot and never be friends with them again for it surely? So why would you do it to people you don’t know? By labelled people for liking something it discourages people from saying what they like. And if we do not communicate what we like then where does that leave us?

Sorry if you feel this is getting too deep but these are real and true issues that don’t just affect people that read Fifty Shades of Grey but those that read YA fantasy. Just in slightly different ways.
In conclusion
If you’re looking to read a book that explores BDSM relationships…this is not for you. It may throw names and equipment at you that may be new but the psychological aspect of truly being in a BDSM relationship is not explored.

If you’re looking for a book with lots of sex. There’s lots of sex. In different positions, in different places. Money is no object to Christian Grey so all sorts of opportunities arise. Go mad. Enjoy.

If you’re looking for a story about an innocent girl who falls in love with a man she’s only just met without even realising it. A man with scars and problems. And a road that isn’t easy, that bends and bumps. Well then you might as well read this and every other romance novel.

I would say that these books aren’t what they’ve been hyped up to be. The negative hype that is. As for whether or not they deserve success. Well, there are authors I’d wish success on. There are those that I don’t see why they’re successful. But I wouldn’t go so far as to say
this person does not deserve to be successful because I don’t like their books
because this is the opinion of the ignorant.
Did you enjoy Fifty Shades of Grey?
Well if there were sub-plots I didn’t see them. And I recognized familiar back up plots and situations from my fan-fiction days, but they do occur in published fiction too though perhaps not quote so bluntly.
Anastasia’s POV didn’t entirely agree with me, I found some of the descriptions and wording cringe worthy and the inner-goddess had me thinking of inner-Sakura the whole time.



I’d say it was alright but I’d also say I’ve read better love stories and better action.. I wouldn’t read it again.

The Snow Child Book Review

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Look. Fiction. NON -YA-FICTION. What is this madness?

Well a friend of mine is a big big big Sarah Rees Brennan fan (and was actually going to play Holly in our fan-trailer for Unspoken but she got called in for a last minute rehearsal ; ;) and I lent her Team Human. When she’d finished she asked if I wanted to read anything of hers and I said I didn’t know what she had but maybe it’d be fun to send a mystery book back and forth. So she sent me The Snow Child, which was interesting as I’d just bought it the day before. Thus is how I came to read The Snow Child.

Now I wasn’t actually going to write this review, not because the book was bad, but because I didn’t think it would be of interest as the following I have is mostly YA readers right? But recently I’ve been seeing rants and posts that have generalised YA literature, it’s readers and it’s writers in an often disparaging light. As a result I’m left wondering if there’s something juvenile about my mind that I don’t seem to enjoy anything outside of YA and I’m twenty two. Maybe it is so, or maybe I’ve just been reading YA too long that reading normal fiction where far less happens is just…dull.

So The Snow Child is based around a fairy tale of the same name where and old couple build a child out of the snow and she comes to life. But as she learns to love and becomes human she melts. Or something. I forget the particulars. Now what is interesting is that the fairy tale is featured in the book, in the form of a Russian picture book that lead character Mabel’s father showed her when she was young.

The story centers around Mabel and Jack. Having not really got over the death of their first child, and I think Mabel couldn’t have more, Mabel had suggested they move to Alaska. So they moved out to Alaska and built themselves a struggling homestead in the middle of nowhere. They’ve fallen out of love with each other as they both try to deal with their grief and time is marching on despite them. One day, something changes and as Jack is coming back from a hard day of working the land under the snow to prepare for planting Mabel attacks him with a snow ball. The two play in the snow ‘like when they were young’ and build a small snow man (snow girl) where Jack details the face and Mabel adds a red scarf and mittens.

The next day the snow man is gone, but no signs of the mittens or scarf and only one set of tracks, and not animal tracks, leading away from where the snow girl stood. Following the tracks Jack sees her flitting through the trees with pale pale blonde hair and wearing the red scarf and mittens but she doesn’t come to him. Eventually he coaxes her out with a doll and eventually she comes to the house. She brings wild presents but never stays.

The Snow Child, Fiana as she calls herself, acts as a catalyst for Mabel and Jack to re-discover each other and re-discover love. But she must leave with the Snow. While she was with them she took Jack high into the moutains and showed him the frozen body of her father and the small cave in which she lived. He slaved for days to dig a grave in the frozen earth and when Fiana left with the Snow he went again to that cave to find her. Jack despaired but Mabel, comforted by The Snow Maiden fairy tale, patiently waited. Making a coat for the child and decorating it with embroidered snowflakes from sketches Mabel had made with Fiana. Jack thought she’d gone mad.

Jack and Mabel aren’t alone though, as Jack is struggling to ready the land on his own they get help from the family from another homestead. A husband and wife, Esther, and three sons. Esther decides she and Mabel will be friends and that’s that. Slowly the closed off Mabel opens up, not just to Fiana, but to Esther also and finds herself in the snow and the dirt when Jack is laid up ill and Mabel works the land in his stead with Esther and Esther’s youngest son and trapper Garret.

Esther goes home but Garret stays on to help. There’s a six year time skip in which Mabel and Jack have truly established themselves at the homestead but time is taking it’s toll. In all this time no one but they have seen Fiana. In the story of the Snow Maiden she is described as having a fox familiar; Fiana too had a fox and Jack had forbidden Garret from trapping red foxes in response to Mabel’s fear that should Fiana’s fox be killed she’d leave like the Snow Maiden. However, in it’s age, the fox’s fur had faded and Garret shot it.
His guilt silenced him until one day, while hunting wolverine, he came across Fiana killing a swan. From then he was obsessed with her though he didn’t know it and two fall in love and kiss and make love in the snow. Jack discovers them one day and storms back to the homestead. When Garret returns Jack punches him in the face. But Mabel discovers Fiana is pregnant. Garret asks Jack’s permission to marry Fiana and, not all together willingly at first, Jack grants it. Jack and Mabel also bequeath the homestead and the farm to Garret because they have no children of their own, save Fiana as Jack describes it ‘fatherhood had crept up on him’, and for all the help he’s given them over the years.

Jack and Garret build a new log cabin to be Garret and Fiana’s family home but it’s not finished in time for the wedding. It had no roof. Fiana marries Garret in a dress made for her by Mabel and, as a surprise to all, decorated with swan feathers from, as Garret remarks, the swan she killed that day they met. Fiana delivers the baby but dies from a blood infection. She lay in bed getting hotter and hotter until eventually they took her outside and Mabel fell asleep watching her. When Mabel woke up the covers and Fiana’s bed clothes were in the snow and Mabel herself was partially burried.

While everyone else, especially Garret, spread out calling Fiana’s name, Mabel knew that she was gone. There is an epilogue set a few years later with Mabel and Jack realising their age, Garret still not entirely happy and the baby boy running around.

If you were going to study this book you could get really in depth about the how the language was used as a powerful tool to not only depict the landscape but made you feel like you were there.  You could take about how Mabel and Jack were so completely inept, they dove in at the deep end but never gave up. That they went into the wilderness broken and somehow in the harsh and rough cut edge of nowhere found something warm and loving that brought them back together and that gave them back themselves.

But for me, who is used to a lot more action and side plots and secondary characters. To have such a bluntly single tracked heap of 300 odd pages where nothing really happened wasn’t exactly gripping reading. It’s Mabel and Jack being miserable. Jack killing things and planting things. Mabel cooking dinner, sewing and planting things. Then suddenly you view point shifts from Mabel for the last quarter of the book to barrel towards a hurried ending.

By mentioning the fairy tale on which this story is based within the book and having a character be aware of it, I thought there was going to be some twist to it. But Fiana, though she shows Jack her dead father, is implied to have come from the snow girl that Jack and Mabel build. When you’re used to YA fantasy novels that build up whole magical worlds and explain things like that, to have a work of fiction come from two sides and explain neither was confusing and fulfilling.

I wouldn’t even call it light reading because it’s neither funny nor gripping, you can’t jump in at any page and just go and enjoy it and find yourself amidst the action. If you’re lucky you’ll be in time for dinner.

If you just focus on Mabel and her growth as a character you could call this book a great study of an older woman whose gone through the hell of losing a child and come out fighting with some persuasion. But I wouldn’t say this book is promoting the idea that women can only be happy if they have a child as I’ve seen some reviews imply. We’re not looking at a woman who’s married, settled and looking to start a family and dragging petulant feet because she doesn’t have one. We’re looking at a berrieved young twenty-something that has carried and lost. Who has fled the pressure of surrounding family and society to the brink and there in found an answer.

You could take from this story that it doesn’t matter how bad the world outside looks, or how bad things get, or how low you find yourself. Somewhere, somehow, there will be a way out. It may happen in an instant, it make take forever. You might see it at once or you may not even realise until you’re out of danger and look back to see how far you’ve come. But it will happen.

Nightshade Trilogy Book Series Review

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Long time no review I know but I’ve been super busy and it is taking forever to get through one book but recently I’ve had a craving for werewolf stories and since re-reading The Wolves of Mercy Falls just won’t cut it I turned to you guys for suggestions. The Nightshade trilogy by Andrea Cremer was the first suggestion and, co-incidentally, the only full series the book shop had in stock so while I await the delivery of my mini-werewolf-library I have read this trilogy.

The Nightshade trilogy opens in the first person with Calla and very quickly there is terminology being thrown about. Guardians, Master, Mistress, Keeper, and no, before you ask, this is not 50-shades-of-werewolf. In fact you’re not supposed to call them werewolves, they are Guardians.

So Calla, alpha-to-be, is running around the woods in wolf form, on patrol, with her beta Bryn and ends up bringing down a grizzly bear in order to save Shay, although at the time he’s more like ‘the guy who smells like meadows who I’d like to do in a meadow’. Already we’re knee deep in action with a bloody kill, a fierce rescue and Calla’s teenage mind overcome with thoughts of making out with meadow-man. We’re also shown a glimpse of some Guardian powers as Shay has been mortally slashed open so Calla transforms back into a human before his eyes and makes him drink her blood in an entirely non-vampiric way. The gift of blood conveys healing and thus Shay’s life is saved and she hopes he’ll wake up thinking it was all a bad dream.

When not running around in the forest Calla goes to school with her pack where she gets hit on by her intended Ren. Now there are two packs in this back end of no where, the Nightshades and the Banes. Calla is daughter of the Nightshade alpha and Ren is the son of the Bane alpha. Then you have the Keepers who, among other things, are basically dog breeders. Each pack has a ‘Keeper’ and they have to do what they say or terrible things will happen to them. And the Keepers have said Ren and Calla, along with the sum total of 8 other ‘pups’, are going to get together a form a new pack. This is big news because this hasn’t happened in ages apparently. That said, don’t think that this is Calla trapped in a loveless marriage-to-be, there is definitely Ralla chemistry, in fact, I quite liked the Ralla chemistry.

Then Shay turns up during chemistry, the class, not a make out session, as the new kid in school. Upon seeing Calla he realises he didn’t have a furry dream and is then very keen and very outspoken. Calla is charged with being friendly by her pack’s Keeper-to-be Logan (sadly not the beefy one from the X-Men) and her and Shay can’t keep themselves off each other.

However Calla is conflicted. On the one hand, we have I-smell-like-meadows-Shay and on the other we have I-want-you-right-now-Ren. Shay’s opinion of Ren is that no one can force Calla to marry him, yadda yadda modern woman yadda yadda. Which is of course very true, arranged marriages aren’t exactly pro-choice, but Shay is a bit like a dog with a bone (all of the puns) and won’t shut up about it. Even though Calla is like…well I do actually kinda like Ren when I’m not making out with you and he has me pinned up against the lockers. What’s a girl to do?

Apparently sneak into what the Guardians are supposed to be guarding but never look at with Shay, steal the contents with Shay, nearly get herself killed, nearly get Shay killed and then turn Shay into a Guardian to save his life.

In the mean time, of the 8 remaining pack-to-be (I forget who was from what pack in some cases) we have two betas, two bitches, one sheep, one brother and two gay guys, who are together. Those last two being Mason and Neville who I loved because they were just there, and in a relationship and just doing it. It didn’t come across as a novelty or that they’d just been put in there to tick ‘my-book-contains-homosexuals’ off the list. Which I have felt some books do, no offense.

So while the humans of the school are having a halloween party, Calla is bedecked in ivory frills and finery and whisked off to marry Ren. However, while waiting for her entrance to the ceremony she catches the sent of meadows and finds Shay tied up and ready to be sacrificed, by her, as part of her wedding ceremony, and guarded by a succubus. Free-ing Shay the pair make a run for it to Shay’s home, or rather his uncle Bosque Mar’s home, to retrieve some books and things. There they are attacked by zombies and succubi and chased by other wolves and then ‘rescued’ by Searchers. Aka. the sworn enemies of Guardians.
Thus ends book one.
Then I forget where book 2 ends because I read Wolfsbane and Bloodrose back to back but basically the Searches are the good guys, the Guardians are being lied to and manipulated, Shay jumps through portals around the world to retrieve the other 3 parts of The Cross (aka two elemental swords) to ultimately lead a revolution against the Keepers and drive Bosque Mar back into some equivalent of hell. A bunch of people die and then there’s a little twist at the end which I actually kind of liked.

Spoiler for the end.
Shay, Calla and the rest of the Guardians (bar one because reasons) become wolves permanently. And there’s a nice little epilogue of them being observed running around in the snow and being happy…as wolves.
Spoiler end.

There are things I liked about this series and there were a couple of moments I really liked but overall I felt there was too much going on, too many characters and the one thing that really, really annoyed me was SPOILER that Ren died. And it wasn’t even that that I had the problem with. Calla spends all three books um-ing and ah-ing, she has sex with Shay but then goes to Ren and says ‘come fight with me and we may yet end up together’ and gives him the come on and clearly does have feelings for him. But instead of actually choosing, instead of making a conscious choice, the choice is made for her by killing one off.

I went looking for books about werewolves, I would not say this is a book about werewolves, it is a book with wolf-changing people in it. It’s more about teenage-hormone-drama and higher magic problems. With some family issues on the side just to make sure everyone is miserable at least once.

But there is lots of action and lots of wolf based action that’s described really well and you really get a sense for the wolves. But I wouldn’t say there’s much pack behaviour. And no I don’t count sitting together at lunch and walking through hallways together like your Ezio from Assassin’s Creed ‘pack behaviour’. But then this might be because the Guardians weren’t independent, their every move, including who they married and how many kids they had and when they had them, was watched and controlled by the Keepers. So they were behaving more like trained hunting dogs than a pack of wolves.

The only other problem I had was the problem I always have with first person. I end up more interested in what everyone else is doing off camera and unless Calla was spying on them or kidnapped you didn’t see it. Not that this happened a lot but there were times when I’d have preferred to be following another character. The other problem was I felt Calla, until the last half of the third book, was being pushed around a bit and having the men-folk make the decisions and the moves for her.

All in all, an alright set of books but I won’t be re-reading them. I did, however, love the cover set.

October Exploits

I know I’ve been really inactive this month but it’s because I’ve been surprisingly busy and normally I don’t really do ‘post-convention write ups’ as it were because I don’t feel it would be of interest but there have been many goings on so I shall share this once ;)

So I start off the month with my feature in Neo Magazine [link]

The blurb really isn’t that interesting as it’s me talking about me but what was exciting was to find myself on the cosplay page as well with my Tales of Graces group which we did back in February. We now have a Richard and are hoping to go off and take pretty photos as soon as I get round to making the costume for him XD Somuchtodo. Click through the picture below for more of my Cheria costume and you’ll be able to find photos of the others too. Double score <3



Next off this month I had EMS, Entertainment Media Show, which I went to with Bexi.

On Saturday I did a photo shoot with her as Special Weapons Dalek Princess with my new Nikon Coolpix camera (who has been lovingly named Tony after someone remarked that his lush red colour reminded them of Iron Man) and here is my favourite shot



Then we changed into Alice and Will of the Abyss from Pandora Hearts for the masquerade and you can see a little of our performance here 12:06 - 12:40 [link]. Both dresses were made by me and we also took some photos on the Iron Throne replica which is from the Game of Thrones series.

  


And on Sunday we reprised Anneliese and Erika from Barbie Princess and the Pauper which you’ve seen me in here:



But with a whole new performance which we reprsied (and managed to record) at London MCM Expo on the Saturday in the mini-masquerade which you can watch here [link] . Sadly Anneliese and Erika did not win a prize either time but people seemed to enjoy our skit all the same even if there were sound issues both times. At EMS no one could hear the audio and at MCM they faded it in before we were even on stage. We basically took the advert audio from the 2004 release of the singing dolls, changed the solo songs a bit and then performed a modified version of our original finale chorus choreography to end with the punch line ‘dolls and toys each sold separately. That said Alice and Will got first prize on the Saturday of EMS so it wasn’t all for naught but it was all fun and that was the main thing! If exhausting!

The weekend after we had Play Expo as ~NavigatorxNami had invited me to reprise an old Blazblue cosplay with her that we originally did way back in 2009 I think. There’s actually a picture of my Litchi cosplay here:



So I dug it out but it looked terrible. I thought it was quite good at the time. Just goes to show I guess. That and I’d lost one of the boot covers so I was kind of stuck. I had gold bias left over from another project and I’d seen so many other amazing renditions of Litchi since I’d done mine that I thought, why not remake it? So I bought some red fabric and set to work. Last one took me 2 days, this one took me 8 hours. I also had a mostly finished Noel costume, when I say mostly finished, I mean I’d done everything but the dress. I started the dress twice and twice made a complete mess but I asked Bexi if she’d be able to make herself a dress and if she’d like to come to Manchester with me and see Jen and be part of the group. She agreed and knocked a dress up in a couple of hours cause gurl got skills. I had actually made the Rachel for Jen at the same time as I made my old Litchi so it was great to see it again and snap a couple of pictures. Sadly my battery died by we have a shoot planned for January where we’ll have a few more Blazblue Cosplayers and more photos to share!



11:18 shows us on stage [link] and later we were ‘interviewed’ by some lovely guys from We Are Super Massive who’d done a really awesome wrestling/play fight routine [link] Then we found out we’d actually won best group!! We were judged by some really amazing cosplayers, including this years ECG UK representatives ~yuka-rin, Dahlia, Nomes and *Sephirayne. Which was both nerve wracking and exciting!

We didn’t go back to Play Expo on Sunday, instead we chilled out around Manchester where *Darkie-kun picked up the Noel accessories for her cosplay partner Tanya to borrow and *CheetosFtw picked up the Generation of Miracles and Seirin uniforms that Sam, Bexi, Kyle and I had bought her as an early Christmas present so our Kuroko no Basuke group could go ahead <3 It amuses me now that two people have worn my Noel gear and I haven’t XD I think Jen is wearing it before me for the January shoot but we’ll all four be there in Noel dresses and socks, it will be so funny XD

  


Then came London Expo, sadly I arrived later than intended (2 hours later!!) due to major traffic accidents :/ But these things cannot be helped so as soon as the hotel was sorted I changed in my Riko Aido Cosplay from Kuroko no Basuke and we had ourselves a little shoot that ended up being mostly derp. I put together a little video after which might give you a laugh: [link]

Best. Photo.



Sadly I don’t have a shot of us all together ; ; I forgot to take any and none have turned up on Facebook yet. Funny story, our Kise was wondering around as Kise again for the Saturday and a couple of times he was asked if he heard about the big group from the Friday. He was like…I was in it B) So then we rolled into Saturday, I ended up feeling very ill all day, I had just enough energy to do the stage performance with Bexi before collapsing back in the room for a nap. I suspect the air mattress I slept on gave me sea sickness. Note to self, never sleep on an air mattress ever again. I did however wake up with enough energy to do our traditional K-On shoot. We’ve done one every Expo (and they’re twice a year every year) since May ‘11 and this time we did the No Thank You outfits. Bexi stood in for ~WingedWalrus because sadly she could not be with us. A fair few of the photos are blurry because we had to take all the group shots on timer and tripod with Tony. Still it was fun and next up we’ll be doing the Fuwa Fuwa Time kimonos with ~BernieBear will be our acting Azu-nyan. Really only made the badges for these costumes, everything is else is just bought.



Then came Sunday which was the most anticipated day of the whole year for me because it was the culmination of months worth of work. The Designer Disney Princess Group. We were determined from the start to have a full group, we’d only ever seen a maximum of 6 in one place and none in the UK so it was very very exciting! We had our own little secret group on Facebook where we’d post progress and ideas and everyone chipped in with fabric and pattern suggestions. It really was a fantastic group to be part of and each and every one of those girls is a dear friend <3 We even put together a skit, which was really difficult because we wanted to keep it Disney themed and funny but so that even those who hadn’t seen all the Princess films would get it and also be able to move in our dresses! Then we had the idea to parody I Just Can’t Wait to be King with I Just Can’t Wait to be Queen. Tonyo Times managed to capture it here from 42:40 onwards [link] . Our poor Snow was arrested by back pain in the middle of the day so we had to get her a wheel chair. She tried to stand shortly before we were due on stage to no avail so we did a quick bit of reconfiguring to incorporate the chair and I think it came off really well. The crowd seemed to enjoy it at least a little. Hopefully you will too.



Thus ends the tale of my October. If you’re interested in hearing more in the future of my crazy cosplay con plans or seeing pictures let me know in a comment and I’ll see about posting a few more every now and then if they’re particularly good. In total I made 6 new costumes (of vary-ing complexities), 3 commissions and touched up 3 costumes this month. Went on stage 5 times with some of the most amazing people I know and generally had the best time of my life. So now you know why I’ve been so inactive but I promise you have my attention for the next couple of month ;) Then it’ll be exam season and I’ll fly into a panic again I have no doubt.

Hope you’ve enjoyed this entry~

Faerie Wars Series Review


The Faerie Wars series by Herbie Brennan features Faerie Wars, The Purple Emperor, Ruler of the Realm, Faerie Lord and most recently The Faeman Quest. This review is only going to cover the first four, partly because that’s all I could take and because book 5 centers on a new character after a substantial time skip and for me enough was already enough. Don’t get me wrong though and think that the entire series is a write off, I actually really liked the first book, very promising.

Faerie Wars opens with Henry Atherton who’s just been told his mum is having an affair with his dad’s secretary and that they’re getting a divorce. A pretty bold start. Henry also works as cleaner and cat-feeder to old Mr Fogarty and Hodge who Henry believes was once an engineer of some sort. Then one day Hodge catches a butterfly, only it’s not a butterfly, it’s a faerie.

Very quickly you’re introduced to Brennan’s habit of using chapters to change point of view as well as go back in time. Admittedly it can be very difficult to imply events are happening at the same time with different sets of characters and Brennan does it with relative ease. It doesn’t seem out of place and it’s not hard to follow or, for the most part, detract from the pacing of the story. I say this because the chapter then breaks and we’re introduced to Pyrgus Malvae (whom we later learn is a Faerie Prince) and two villains; Brimstone and Chalkhill.

I’m not going to go into great depth about the plot of each book but I’ll say this, with each book it’s like Brennan has cast a die for each character and after one book is finished he scoops them up into a cup, shakes, rolls and wherever those die land is where those characters start. This approach was bearable for the first two books but after that you were kind of hoping that someone would have been properly defeated and someone else would be making out. Especially given the copious mentions of bottoms.

What I loved about this series was the element of a world within a world, or really it’s two worlds side by side. The Analogue world which is our reality and the Faerie Realm. Technologically advanced Faeries living in a Victorian era-esque period where magic comes in cones. It was a wonderful mix of all my favourite things.

Book 1: Henry’s parents are divorcing and he ends up having to save Prince Pyrgus and all the Faerie Realm from a demon invasion/domination/generally cause havoc plot. On the way he sees Princess Holly Blue about to take bath and has to rescue Mr Fogarty from prison.

Book 2: After the death of their father Pyrgus assumed the Purple Throne but their step-uncle Lord Hairstreak intervenes to put their half brother and Hairstreak’s nephew on the throne instead. Apparently with the permission of the not-dead ex-Purple Emperor and Pyrgus’ father Aperture Iris. Henry must help save the realm again but this time they have the help of the Forest Fae and Pyrgus eyes up their Princess Nymph.

Problems: Henry is burnt in this book and patched up with skin grafts made of giant spider silk that turns his hands and chest multicoloured. Not only is this never mentioned (despite numerous future injuries) in later books but how he deals with this when translated back to the Analogue world is never covered. Nor his loss of his portal device supposedly stolen by his sister. In fact there’s very little coverage of what’s going on in the Analogue world with regards to Henry’s family other than ‘it’s bad’. Which is a great set up for him eventually breaking off with the Analogue world without familial ties but it kind of seems like a waste. Or lazy. Or both.

Book 3: With Princess Holly Blue on the throne she’s got some pretty black and white ideas about what’s best for the realm. War between the Light and Night faeries threatens and Henry has been taken over by demons and kidnapped Blue. In the mean time there are some time stopped crystal flowers, a fake army and a lot of confusing plot points.

Problems: Well again nothing about the Analogue world reactions which really detracts from the story. Also the entry of Henry being abducted by world saving aliens which is apparently a demon hallucination is kinda confusing. I was very confused for most of this book.

Book 4: In which Holly and Henry go on a quest and get married. Really the only thing worth reading is the last few pages where they get married.

Problems: Henry and Blue took forever, they were cute but despite having them so obviously liking each other from book 1 and Player!Pyrgus on the loose the romance was lacking. Especially with the book 1 comradery between Pyrgus and Henry I was hoping for some bromance at least. On top of the complete sweeping aside of Henry’s Analogue family and friends. And then there was the fact that none of 4 available villains didn’t really start getting defeated until the end of book 3 and then some rather lame endings in book 4. Not to mention an introduction of three new characters who apparently had very temporary agendas, a cameo of a suicide and a lot of fuss about nothing. Any more plot holes and you could strain tea with these books.

In conclusion, read books 1 and 2 and be reassured that Pyrgus marries Nymph and Holly marries Henry (and that according to the blurb for book 5 they have a daughter) isn’t that wonderful?

And don’t get me wrong, I find it was a terrible shame that I grew so tired of this series by the end because I really really liked how it set out. It had interesting creatures and characters and characters of all ages. I loved the character of Mr Fogarty, the ex-bank robbing portal making Gatekeeper of awesome.

Over and out.

The Traitor Queen Book Review/Rant


So the Traitor Queen is Trudi Canavan’s finale to her Traitor Spy series, which is a sequel to her Black Magician series with a one-shot historical prequel called The Magician’s Apprentice. Now I’d like to start off by pointing out that I haven’t actually finished the book yet and so this review is somewhat pre-mature but I got kind of frustrated with the book and might take forever to finish it so…here goes.

It’s been over a year since I read book 2 of the Traitor Spy trilogy, The Rogue, I know this because I went to meet the lovely lady herself on her book tour of the UK.
 

This is a familiar wait for Mortal Instruments and Infernal Devices and many other series and maybe it’s my fault for not really keeping track of the books but I had pretty much forgotten everything that happened before. This wasn’t too much of a problem as Canavan does a wonderful job of nudging the memory when it’s relevant without spending the first two chapters summarizing the first two books. That’s not to say you can pick it up as you go if, for some reason I’d never understand, you chose to start at this particular book you’d probably be really really confused.

Now the world Canavan has built for these books is actually a pretty solid one so these books read more like ‘slice of life’ with believable real time reactions and realisations by the characters rather than continuous displays of magic. Magic is a recognised part of every day life, although not everyone is or can be a Magician. For me these books ask a lot of questions about why you do something. Can you justify doing the wrong thing for the right reasons? And sometimes there is no right answer and all of the characters go through these struggles from a multitude of perspectives which makes it a really compelling read.

The part that lost me was the romance brewing with Sonea and Regin. Now these two have history going as far back as book 2 of the Black Magician Trilogy, The Novice, where Regin bullied Sonea for being a slum girl (the only lower class citizen to ever be allowed into the Guild at the time). So they had a hate/hate relationship and Sonea got with Akarin and had Lorkin who became the main focus (ish) of the Traitor Spy trilogy.

So Sonea and Regin are twenty years on or more and ‘respect’ each other and he’s grown and up and the chemistry is getting pretty obvious that even Sonea is noticing. So I was about half way through the book, on page 300-and-something and pretty much mentally shouted at them to kiss and make out already. Now this book uses chapter changes to change focus and there were a lot of little groups of characters doing things towards the ultimate plot so I had to flick through a fair bit of book to get back to Sonea and Regin and they still hadn’t kissed. So off I flicked again and anyone who has read the last sentence of a book knows that this can make or break the entire of the read and I accidentally spoiled parts of the book for myself. Not so much plot parts because most of it’s fairly routine at this point, catch the bad guy, throw a few bolts of light, right the wrongs. But I spoiled who dies. And now I don’t really want to go back and read it to find out how they died because I liked them.

That and Sonea and Regin don’t kiss until like…near the end of the book and not very much. Obviously the book isn’t meant to be about them, they’re not the main focus anymore but Regin was married. It was made clear at the beginning of the book that his wife had been cheating on him and he’s broken it off with her and obviously this was clearing the way in the moral minds of the readers for him to pursue Sonea without anyone calling him out on it.

Personally…I’d have liked to have seen him still married and unable to resist Sonea who would have protested on a moral level and given in on a basal level but that is perhaps a little too tawdry.
So really…you can’t call this a book review as I haven’t finished the book and really haven’t talked much about anything other than my desire for a steaming romance between Sonea and Regin. (Or I’d have been happy with some Cery action cause he’s awesome too).

They’re well written books, well fleshed out characters and a strongly built world…but it was getting kind of slow and the changing between characters got tiring because it took so long to get back to them that what they were doing was getting broken up. I understand that it’s hard to depict all the characters motions in real time but I think the consequence was that it dulled the impact. Or at least for the first half of the book. Who knows, things might get pacier in the second half.

Wish me luck.

The Secrets of the Immortal Nicholas Flamel Books 1 and 2 Review


So I’ve recently begun reading The Secrets of the Immortal Nicholas Flamel by Michael Scott and I had thought I’d wait until I’d finished book 6 and then review the series as a whole but instead I’m going to break it down as it’s taking me a while to read the books (why must life get in the way of reading?) and I’ll forget most of what happened otherwise. Books one and two are called The Alchemyst and The Magician respectively, referring to Nicholas Flamel, who serves as a mentor for the twins, and Dr John Dee, once a pupil of Flamel’s, now an immortal in the service of the Dark Elders.

The twins are Sophie and Josh Newman who possess uncommonly clear and rare auras of Silver and Gold respectively. Interestingly these auras also come with distinctive cents, vanilla for Sophie and oranges for Josh. Flamel’s aura is green and mint whereas Dee’s is yellow and sulpherous. Thanks to Harry Potter the majority of this generation’s readers will have heard the name Nicholas Flamel and may know that he is a historical figure with roads in Paris named for he and his wife Perenelle, whose home claims the title of the oldest house in Paris and is now a restaurant and apartments. Readers may not be so familiar with Dr John Dee who was an English mathematician, astronomer, astrologer, occultist, navigator, imperialist and consultant to Queen Elizabeth I, he also chose the date of her coronation.

Sophie and Josh, who had been spending the summer with their aunt while their archeologist parents were on a dig, quickly find themselves embroiled in a world populated by myths, legends, nightmares and fantasies. And when I say quickly, books one and two take place over two, maybe three days. In that time Dee attacked Flamel, stealing the Book of Abraham the Mage, also called the Codex, but he loses the last two pages when he tears the book out of Josh’s grasp (who had been working at Flamel’s book shop). Though how he could have pulled the pages, given the description of both book and scene, is a mystery to me, but a necessary plot device to prevent Dee from releasing the ‘Dark Elders’.

Dee kidnaps Perenelle which Flamel escapes with the twins, who don’t understand why they can’t just go home. Flamel explains this is because Dee will kill them and anyone he thinks may have had contact with the book to keep it secret. Flamel takes them to Scathath; an immortal but not invulnerable, by her own admission, warrior who claims to have taught the humani how to fight. Scathath is actually a legendary Scottish warrior woman but she’s so much more in these books.

Dee attacks again, this time with rats and gollums made from mud which Flamel and Scathath defeat and then they flee to the shadow realm of Elder Hekate, the Goddess with Three Faces.* The Goddess awakens Sophie’s powers and her senses (based on the ‘humans only use a tiny percentage of their brain’ and ‘all capable of magic’ ideas) but before she can do the same for Josh, Dee attacks with Bastest (Egyptian cat goddess) and The Morrigan (the crowd goddess) destroying the shadow realm and killing Hekate.
Perenelle, still imprisoned manages to possess Sophie, whose been out of it since her awakening, giving the group the opportunity to escape and tells her husband to take them to the Witch of Endor. The Witch happens to be Scathath’s grandmother and a master of air magic, who imparts all her memories and knowledge to Sophie and uses a leygate (a mirror portal on a point where magical leylines intersect) to whisk them away to Paris to escape Dee.

Book two opens in Paris, where Dee has enlisted the help of the Italian, Niccolo Machiavelli, a historian, diplomat, philosopher, humanist and writer based in Florence during the Renaissance, who is also in the service of the Dark Elders. On top of that, he’s now one of the most powerful men in Paris and uses the local forces to try and apprehend Flamel and the children. He is initially thwarted when the party meets up with Count of St. Germain who has been variously described as a courtier, adventurer, charlatan, inventor, alchemist, pianist, violinist and an amateur composer, and is a current pop star and married, in secret, to Joan of Arc, who trained under Scathath.

Being the only non-awakened, non-immortal and entirely too human member of the team Josh not only begins to feel envious of his sister but after a run in with Dee in Ojai he doubts the intentions of Nicholas Flamel. Flamel however retrieves a sword for Josh, the twin blade to Excalibur the ice blade, and so it is the blade of fire. So while Sophie learns fire magic from St. Germain, Josh learns sword play with Joan and Scathath. Skills he has to put to fast use when Machiavelli summons three Valkyries to take out Scathath who, in turn, release one of their beasts on the Warrior that Dee accidentally freed when he destroyed the World Tree in Hekate’s shadowrealm.

Josh defeats the monster and frees Scathath, only for her to be dragged into the water by Dagon, a monster more fish than man who had, till now, been serving Machiavelli. In the confusion Dee convinces Josh to come with the Italian and he and descend into the catacombs of Paris (think the Court of Miracles if you’ve seen Disney’s Hunchback of Notre Dame) which do exist even to this day. Once limestone quarries they are now filled with human bones from the days of plague when the graves of Paris overflowed. There he is presented to Mars, the God of War, who awakens Josh and imparts to him battle knowledge.

Sophie, Flamel, Joan and St. Germain arrive in time to retrieve Josh from the vengeful sleeping God and trap him as he attempts to destroy them when Sophie refuses to lift a curse placed on him by the Witch of Endor who had once been his lover. Dee and Machiavelli make for higher ground, namely the top of Notre Dame and animated the famous gargoyles but Josh and Sophie combine their powers to destroy them and escape. And so the chase continues as Flamel flees Paris with the twins to London, the heart of Dee’s power, in an attempt to find another leygate to get them back to San Francisco and back to Perenelle who has been imprisoned on the abandoned Alcatraz.

Scott uses chapter changes to change scene between the twins, Dee and Perenelle however it’s difficult to pick out the protagonist at times between the twins and Flamel as it seems to change perspective between them very quickly. Flamel, and other characters, have often mentioned a prophecy in the Codex about twins, ‘the two that are one’ or something, with silver and gold auras. This is linked to Danu Talis (or Atlanatis) the paradise home of the Elders that sank after a fight between two twin Elders with auras of gold and silver. It’s also said that the Elder race pre-dates humanity and various Elders have been attributed with teaching humani how to read, write, make fire and various other evolution basics.

Now, I’m not saying I dislike this series, there are elements I do like, the characters are good and I like that there are different types of magic and different specialties. Flamel is the Alchemyst, Perenelle is the Sorceress and Dee, though referred to as the Magciain is, first and foremost, a Necromancer. However the twins element isn’t working for me so far, don’t get me wrong, I love twins, but there’s a lot of ‘we can finish each others sentences, we know when the other is in pain, we know what the other is thinking because we always think the same’. Put that together with the unclear protagonist and you begin to wonder why Scott even bothered with twins for anything other than an aesthetic reason and to be able to claim to have a lead of both gender.

We’ve seen some progression in Josh’s character and his conflicting feelings towards his sister but we see comparatively little of what Sophie is thinking and feeling from a development point of view. We see lots of her ‘oh my head hurts from all the new magic’ but not a lot else. My other problem is that the prophecy has been discussed in front of them and they didn’t seem overly curious or ask any questions until much later. They still aren’t really.

So we’ve got two books of about 400 pages each and we really haven’t seen any major plot development. We’ve seen lots of action and lots of name dropping of historical figures and mythical beings from across the ages but we haven’t progressed past, we have a prophecy, some magical twins and a man hell bent on releasing evil onto the world who needs the two final pages of the Codex. Seeing as there are four more books to go that’s a lot of room for improvement, but on the other hand I don’t really want to read a whole book full of disposable characters who may, or may not, turn up for a big finale. I’d rather have plot and main character advancement.

Now these books also show an impressive amount of research on the part of the author, both into the historical figures and the places. In fact book two displays a knowledge of Parisian streets that rivals OCR maps but as a reader who has little to know familiarity with Paris, being bombarded with street names gives me nothing. But again, these books, so far, just seem to be history books wrapped up in fiction.

This is partly the reason I chose to break this review up because I wanted to record how I was feeling now about the series and see if that changes as it progresses. So far there have been hints of greatness so here’s hoping there’ll be a big finale, but hopefully I won’t have to wait until book 6 for it and that there will be some meaty plot chunks to come.

On a more positive note I love the covers. Or at least I love the cover set I’ve displayed in this review, although mine has a slightly different format of where all the writing is but the visual is the same. Interestingly, when I went into my local book store to buy the series they only had books 1-3 and they were all in different cover sets. Now I’m assuming the ones I have are recent and re-prints because on the back I could see the titles of all 6 books and the prospective covers so I went up to the desk and asked if I could order the set in the same covers. The shop assistant told me I’d have to wait months so I resorted to getting them online and now have all 6 lined up, matching, on my shelf. Although the last book, the Enchantress I believe, is larger than the rest, might send it back and wait for the smaller paper back to be released. Though why they do alternating sizes in paper backs I don’t know.

To finish, I would encourage readers to read these books as they show a great wealth of knowledge and clearly a lot of skill linking them all up and making them fit into a recognizable magic/history system. However, were these books to be translated into film, I wouldn’t mind if they combined the books to keep the plot snappy.

On to book 3, The Sorceress.

*(If anyone has seen the 4kids dub of Yu-Gi-Oh or even Yu-Gi-Oh abridged, they will understand why I can’t take the term ‘shadow realm’ seriously.)

Unspoken Book Review


Unpsoken is book one in Sarah Rees Brennan’s new trilogy ‘The Lynburn Legacy’ and one of two new books she has out this year. Unspoken will be available for both the US and the UK (as far as I know but I could be wrong about the UK) in September. Miss Rees Brennan was kind enough to send me an ARC copy, on a related note it has 9/12 on the spine, I interpreted this as it being 9 of 12 ARCs but I could be wrong. Either way, by birthday is on a 9th so I count this as a good sign.

Our heroine, Kami Glass, has an ever prominent sense of humour and when she’s not talking to the boy, Jared, in her head she’s being a fearless reporter, pioneering the school newspaperThe Nosy Parkeralong with best friend Angela Montgomery. Quick to be recruited as photographer is Ash Lynburn whose family has returned to Sorry-in-the-Vale to re-inhabit it’s ancestral home Aurimere house with his parents, aunt and cousin. Kami is determined to unearth the secrets behind the mysterious Lynburn’s who appear to be the town’s best kept secret. A secret that everyone knows and nobody talks about.

Her search leads to the befriending and recruiting of Holly Prescott, the second most gorgeous girl in school after Angela, whose feminine whiles were to be used to snare ‘the other Lynburn’. Jared Lynburn.

The same Jared whose been in her head since before she can remember. The imaginary friend that lost Kami her old best friend and terrified her mother so much she stopped talking about him to other people. Now he’s here, real, solid and part of the mysterious family who live in the big house the other side of the woods from Kami herself.

Kami finds herself caught between an affectionate Ash and a confused Jared, best friend Angela gravitating towards Holly and strange noises in the woods waking her younger brother’s int he night. What’s a lady sleuth to do? Look for clues of course.

What’s great about Unspoken is it challenges a lot of the stereotypes and cliches for young fiction. Kami has kissed a boy, Jared hasn’t kissed anyone, let alone a boy. Angela and Holly who are described as being naturally gorgeous are not the bitchy queen bee’s of the school who happen to have roped the man Kami has her eyes on. In fact, Kami didn’t really have her eyes on any man but Ash was pretty cute. Also the mental connection between Kami and Jared is a fascinating thing.

Rather than have the heroine have admired her supposed love from across the football pitch for all her school years or even just bumping into him on the street the history is already there. Also their turmoil at discovering each other is really real is very much relatable. You might expect Kami to fall head over heals and the pair of them to start passing mental love notes instead they are wary of each other, scared and not really able to comprehend reality. Clearly neither of them are crazy. But imagine if you will someone who knows all your secrets, all the lies you’ve told, all the good things you’ve done, all the awkward puberty moments you don’t ever tell anyone except in your head, suddenly that person is real, in your life, in your school. What could be worse? Face to face with someone who knows you better than yourself would be a terrifying prospect. But that doesn’t mean they lack chemistry. Oh no, plenty of jumbled up feelings and chemistry and an ending that just leaves you begging for the next book. But more on that in a minute.

There’s also some POV changes in the book and very fluid ones too. You find yourself drifting along the mental connection between Kami and Jared to keep everything in moving in real time. Rather than have a scene or a chapter break for each change in POV which suits the fast pace of the book rather well. There’s never a dull moment with some high flying action mixed in with some rebellious teenage-antics and maybe one or two heart wrenching scenes.

Back to Angela and Holly, the dry wit and the perky respectively who seem to be forming a connection all their own. These two are not side kicks, nor do they bale on the action, when push comes to shove Angela picks up a chain and starts whipping the bad guy. There’s no lieing down and taking anything with any of these girls that’s for sure and it’s so great to see. Too often secondary characters spend the climax in peril, crying, out of commission or just applaud afterword and no one is really sure what they were doing in that time. Not here.

Even Ash plays a healthy role. Too many times when you have the two interested parties it’s just for show. One is obviously going to lose out or just puts the girl back together in time for her ‘true love’ to come back and sweep her back off her feet. Not here. I told you this book was challenging. Unspoken also avoids the common trap of the lead couple getting together in book one and subsequently spending book two making googly eyes at each other and generally being about 10% of their usual awesome. But it’s not all about Kami there’s a lot going on between Ash and Jared too. Never a dull moment.

By the end it’s looking bleak for everyone involved but it just leaves you begging for more. There’s so much unresolved tension between Kami and Jared as well as unanswered questions about the Lynburn’s and their powers. Not to mention Ash, Holly, Angela and her brother Rusty who’s non-too-keen on Kami’s affiliation with Jared. That said, no one is particularly keen on Kami’s affiliation with Jared.

Unspoken has set the stage for a fantastic series full of Rees Brennan’s trademark wit and challenging characters. Rees Brennan seems to have a knack for combining high school girl fiction elements with fantastical sub-worlds in believable and relatable ways while skipping merrily around common plot-holes and cliches.

Can’t wait for the rest.

13 Little Blue Envelopes Book Review


Like The Name of the Star, 13 Little Blue Envelopes was a book I picked up because I was (and subsequently have) going to meet Maureen Johnson and it’s not really the sort of thing I read but I stuck with it.

First of all, we’re introduced to Virginia ‘Ginny’ Blackstone., who has recently learned that her artistic Aunt Peg has died and has been directed to a package containing, you guessed it, 13 little blue envelopes (well 12 considering the first one lead her to the package). The rules are as follows:


Each envelope must be opened in order and can only be opened after the task in the previous envelope has been completed. Envelope one contained $1000 for a one-way ticket to London from New York, a passport and a backpack. So, armed with her purple and green back pack filled with a practical assortment of essentials recommended by guide books she wasn’t supposed to have read, Ginny embarks across Europe following the instructions in the letters and each time learning a little something about her runaway-Aunt.

In London Ginny stays with Richard Murphy at his house in Islington in Aunt Peg’s old room. Whilst there she meets Keith, an older, kilt wearing and slightly excentric student of the arts when she buys up all the tickets for hisStarbucks: The Musicalunder the instruction of one of the letters. From there Ginny is whisked up to Edinburgh to meet Aunt Peg’s artistic idol Mari Adams who gives Ginny a temporary ink tatoo or a lion on her shoulder which she endeavours to keep for as long as she can.

From there it’s Virgins in Rome, a cafe in Paris, Knapps in Amsterdam, windmills, karaoke and endless sun in Denmark, then it’s doubling back to Venice to jump on a big red boat bound for Greece.

But then disaster strikes and Ginny’s bag is stolen and inside it was the mysterious 13th envelope unopened. Having kept her barclycard and passport in her pocket she’s able to withdraw her last 40 euros and called Richard who gets her back to London. Keith visits and as Ginny is explaining her Aunt’s favourite painting to him, a print of which is hanging in her room, she finds a key behind it. A key that opens a cupboard in a Harrod’s store room Richard would let Aunt Peg into (he works there) to paint, revealing a collection of Aunt Peg’s work and a business card with the words CALL NOW on it.

Ginny then finds herself in an auction house watching the paintings be sold and wonders if it’s the right thing to do. Richard says the paintings show the end of Aunt Peg and that’s not how they should remember her, he also reveals that he and Aunt Peg were married, which makes him Ginny’s uncle. The collection sells for £70, 000 (c. $133, 000) and leaves Ginny in a daze of what to do with it.

In the end she decides to do what Aunt Peg never did, go home.

In the end of the book Ginny writes a letter to Aunt Peg, a letter it’s clear she knows she can’t post to anywhere but sums up her feelings over the month long journey she’s made.

‘At the same time, you pulled off this incredible trick. You got me over here, made me do all of these things that I’d never have done otherwise; And I guess even though you were telling me what to do, I still had to do them on my own. I always thought that I could only do things with you, that made me more interesting. But I guess I was wrong. Honestly I pulled some of this stuff out of my butt. You would have been proud. I’m still me…. I still find it hard to talk sometimes. I still do incredibly stupid things at inappropriate moments. But at least I know I’m capable of doing some things now.’

In summary, although Keith does appear in London, Edinburgh and Paris as the romantic interest his presence isn’t much else felt and Ginny is often unsure of where she stands with him. This is a change from the ‘girl falls for guy everything is perfect candyfloss and paper hearts for everyone’ mental state and makes Ginny more relatable. That said, the romance isn’t the focus of the book, it’s Ginny’s journey and the letters. Admittedly I got to the end of the book and it didn’t really feel like an end, it didn’t feel like a story, it felt like I’d just read a book about a month of Ginny’s life with little visible change in her. But maybe that’s the point.
13 Little Blue Envelopes takes a girl out of her comfort zone and shows her it’s okay to make mistakes, these things happen and life goes on but in a very subtle way. Ginny hasn’t faced monsters or near death experiences or romeo-and-juliet perils of the heart she’s just faced life and come out the other side knowing a little bit more about herself and what she’s capable of. A whole world of opportunity has been opened up in her eyes, not just by the money, but from the sheer act of doing what she’s done. From that perspective this book presents not only en enjoyable read but a learning experience and I’d recommend it.

There is now a sequel where I believe the purple and green backpack has been found with the envelopes inside entitled The Last Little Blue Envelope. It will be on my to-read list this summer.

The Name of the Star Book Review


So the reason I bought this book was because I’m going to a signing in London next weekend for Cassandra Clare and Maureen Johnson so I thought I’d check out some of the latter’s works. This will actually be the second time I’ve seen Johnson, the first time was because I was in the area and nearly got run over by a fire truck, so I was sat at the back of the room (this was October 2011, maybe some of you were there?) listening to her talk about ghosts and not really knowing what was going on. I had intended to try and get a copy of The Name of the Star there but there was a veritable flood of eager tweens so I slipped away.
It has to be said horror and paranormal isn’t what I usually go in for, the last time I read a ghost related series it was Meg Cabot’s Mediator series which I can remember liking at the time but I couldn’t tell you anything about it now, apart from the fact that the girl falls in love with the ghost and it ended happy because it wasn’t going to end sad.

The Name of the Star is written from the first person perspective of Aurora ‘Rory’ Deveaux who goes from Louisiana to Wexford, a mixed-sex 6th form college (-college here meaning “school for seventeen- and eighteen-year-olds.”) with two houses (dorms), Hawthorne for the girls and Aldshot for the boys. Rory touches down in London on August 31st in the wake of a murder ‘in a manner emulating the first Jack the Ripper murder of 1888…

Now I went to a school like Wexford so I’m sure you’ve had that feeling reading a book that’s set on familiar turf and comparing the experience. I think Johnson managed to capture the atmosphere and explain it and make it relatable for anyone who hasn’t had that experience. You’re also reminded just how current this book is when one of the characters, Charlotte, wears Amy Pond’s kissogram outfit for the fancy dress party. She’s only been a companion since 2010.

Back to the book, Rory nearly chokes and it’s explained that a near death experience combined with a pre-disposition has left Rory with the ability to see ghosts. On September 8th, the date of the second Ripper murder, Rory and dorm-mate-turned-best-mate-Jazza are sneaking back into Hawthorne and Rory sees a man that Jazza can’t.

After this Rory and Jazza gain a new roomie, Bhuvana ‘Boo’ Chodhari. Shortly after Boo arrives Rory finds herself getting mixed up in a world she never knew existed and on top of that, the ‘Ripper’ turns his attentions on her.

Although an interesting idea I personally found the book a little slow to start, not that we weren’t getting a feel for Rory and there was plenty of information and facts about the original Ripper murders that even someone who hadn’t heard of Jack the Ripper could follow, but once Rory did get in on the behind the scenes action she was met with a wall of ‘classified information’. Being from her perspective that means the reader doesn’t get a lot of answers until the other characters decide to hand them out.

Then we have Stephen, Callum and Bo, Johnson’s answer to the ghost busters armed with the terminus disguised as phones instead of large back packs. We get near death experience back stories for Stephen and Callum and glimpses of their personalities and how they interact as a group but I wonder if we saw too little of them to really get to grips with them or real feel the suspense when the action hit. That said, a sequel novel is set to follow, The Madness Underneath.


Then there’s Alistair and Jo. Alistair appears to haunt the library and has read every book at least twice, well most of them, and seems to be there to provide dry wit and homework assignments while Rory gets herself into trouble. Jo is Boo’s friend and the British army’s last active soldier from the Second World War, still in her uniform, still defending the East End.

It’s not very well explained exactly what ‘ghosts’ are or how they come back and this is swept under the ‘we don’t fully understand it yet but we know we have to deal with it’ rug but not necessarily in a bad way. The science behind this fantastical element is somewhat brief but that could just be because Johnson plans to expand on it, no need to play all your cards too soon. However the public reaction and the reactions of those close to Rory, even of Rory herself, to the Ripper-madness is very realistic, believable and relatable. It helps to keep the story grounded and the reader finds themselves believing it could all be possible and that it’s happening to them right along side Rory.

On it’s own The Name of the Star isn’t enough but it definitely works as the opening to a series. Johnson has lined up a diverse and intriguing cast, with one or two last minute surprises thrown in at the end of The Name of the Star that have set up The Madness Underneath to be a truly can’t-put-it-down read.

A note on the cover art, I have the cover on the right and I really like it, it has an eerie feel to it and draws you in. Although the cover on the left confuses me, the only red-head I remember was Charlotte, head girl at Wexford and veritable pain in the ass, unless I missed something? Though I believe Rory was described as dark haired and I’m assuming it is her on the right hand cover, I’m not sure what the left hand cover is meant to convey about the book? I’ll never know, oh well.

If a glimpse into the paranormal brushing up against every day life is your thing, with a little bit of suspense, horror and history thrown in then you’ll thoroughly enjoy this book.

The Fallen Book Review Part 1/2


The Fallen is a series I recently picked up, it’s written by Thomas E. Sniegoski and features a male protagonist, Aaron Corbet, and his discovery of his Nephilim nature, being the son of an angel and a human, and everything that follows. Now I haven’t reviewed anything by a male author yet and in fact I haven’t read anything recently, that I know of, by a male author as the young adult fantasy section seems to be becoming dominated by female authors. That’s by no means to say that either gender has a monopoly on the category, after all we have Tolkien to thank for the epic Lord of the Rings, Branden Sanderson and Garth Nix wrote Mistborn and The Old Kingdom trilogies respectively, two of my favourites.

The series was originally printed in 2004 as four books, The Fallen, Leviathan, Aerie and Reckoning.


But they have been rebound and recovered into two omnibus’ so The Fallen and Leviathon form Book 1, Aerie and Reckoning form Book 2 and Book 3 and 4 are new works detailing Aaron’s struggle after the events of Reckoning. I have to admit I hadn’t realised this when I was reading the current Book 1 so when I came to the divide expecting a change in theme or a time skip and instead I found myself reading a summary of the events of the previous half as if it was the beginning of new book I was somewhat confused. While looking into the books I found out there is also a movie that was re-released in 2010 but it’s a loose adaption, going so far as to change the gender of the main villain Verchiel, a change that makes little sense as all angels are apparently male in the books.

The book introduces Aaron as being a child of the system who has been fortunate enough to fall in with a loving family, the Stanley’s, with their autistic son Stevie (who is younger than Aaron). He also has a loyal golden Labrador called Gabriel. In a strange turn of events Aaron finds himself able to understand his dog, as well Vilma, the most beautiful girl in school and Aaron’s crush, who he communes with in her native Portuguese to both their surprise. The fallen angel Zeke is drawn to Aaron and helps him to awaken the angelic nature within him that has already begun to manifest as it does for all Nephilim on their 18th birthday.
Aaron’s power is great and his awakening had drawn him attention from more than one side. Verchiel, leader of the angelic host Powers, whose heavenly task is to destroy all things that offend God, to him this has become the Nephilim in their entirity. This is in fact due to a prophecy that details the coming a chosen one, a Nephilim, who will redeem the fallen. A prophecy that drove the original leader of the Powers host, Camael, to abandon his post and the violence that had surrounded him, and search for the one, saving many along his way and losing more.

These powerful forces come to clash resulting in the deaths of Aaron’s foster parents and his younger brother Stevie is taken by the Powers. Aaron flees with Camael and Gabriel. Camael is searching for Aerie, the rumoured safe haven for the fallen and the Nephilim alike and hopes to see Aaron fullfil the prophecy but Aaron is not so sure and more focused on retrieving his little brother from the clutches of the powers.
Their flight takes Aaron away from everything he knows, including Vilma, which leaves little room for romance in the books. This was something fresh for me, along with a male protagonist. I’d become accustomed to female protagonists and the subsequent romantic element with a prospective male suitor who usual did most of the action. But here we have a male protagonist by a male author and I have to say it did show. There were elements of phrasing, views on the world and comments or descriptions that seemed like a very masculine way of thinking.

Also the priorities were different, there was a lot of well described action, too much in some cases for my taste. There’s a relatively small cast, easy to keep track off and in two distinct groups, Verchiel and Aaron, but their clash is the obvious end and in some instances it felt drawn out. The roles of the different hosts and types of angels is well explained however, as is the nature of the Nephilim and though set in our world the descriptions of places visited were more than enough to build a picture in the minds of those who had never been there or anywhere like it.

Aaron is also remarked to have his father’s eyes and Aaron’s angelic parentage plays a major part in the progression of the story throughout Book 2 leading to a climactic finish.

It’s definitely a series I’d recommend as being refreshing and solid.

To save on spoilers I won’t summarise the beginning of Book 3, End of Days, which I have begun to read. Book 4, Forsaken, is due to be released on the 14th of August this year and part 2 of this review of the series will come out after I’ve read that as Books 3 and 4 are set some time after the end of Book 2 and cover a new stage in Aaron’s life as a new danger threatens humanity and old ones rear their ugly heads.

City of Lost Souls Book Review

 

I feel marginally current writing this review as City of Lost Souls officially came out today. City of Lost Souls by Cassandra Clare is book 5 in The Mortal Instruments series (City of Bones, Ashes, Glass and Fallen Angels) with book 6, City of Heavenly Fire, set to be released in a year or so.

Anxiously awaited as it has been by fans the world over it does not disappoint and certainly lives up to it’s tagline ‘can the lost be reclaimed?’ We get an in depth look at each characters relationships with others, be it siblings or loved ones, to have loved and lost and to be on the brink of loss. The Seelie Queen, who we have seen more than once before in the books, makes the following remark to Clary, ‘For as is often the happenstance with that which is precious and lost, when you find him again, he may well not be quite as you left him.’ which really sets the tone for the whole book.

There are a series of scenes that expand on the fantasy element of the series, exploring Angels and Demons and their involvement with the Nephilim/Shadowhunters in ways we haven’t seen before. The Nephilim are race of humans whose blood has been mixed with that of the angel Raziel who are tasked with keeping demons from the world and to act as the law for downworlders including vampires, lycanthropes (both demon-originated diseases), faeries (part demon, part angel) and warlocks (infertile, half human, half demon which exaggerated life spans). While all the while keeping this fantastical world a secret from mundanes, aka regular human beings.

Also the book doesn’t just focus on one character, or get lost in a whirlwind of romance culminating in Clary sulking after Jace, who disappeared along with the body of her brother Jonathan Christopher Morgenstern, who had previously posed as Sebastian Verlac, at the end of City of Fallen Angels. Instead we get to see Clary being pro-active and really coming into her own as a Shadowhunter in her own right being her usual hot-headed impulsive self.

In the first two weeks after Jace’s disappearance he is the Clave’s top priority but for them it’s more about finding Sebastian/Jonathan. However, after two weeks the Clave has to re-prioritize but the same can’t be said for Clary. Questioned extensively about her brother by the Clave in the wake of his re-appearance she was banned from helping with the search. A woman on a mission she recruits Isabelle and Alec Lightwood (Jace’s adoptive family) along with Simon and Magnus (High Warlock of Brooklyn and currently dating Alec) to help her with the search.

Attempting to secure help from the Seelie Queen Clary catches site of her brother and Jace stealing books from the New York Institue’s library and rather than finding Jace, he finds her. With the help of two faery wrought rings she is able to keep in contact with Simon mentally when she goes off with Jace and Jonathan in an attempt to find out if Jace can be saved from the bond binding him to her brother. But those she left behind do not sit idle.

We are bound, cut him and I bleed.

Magnus, Simon and the Lightwoods look for a weapon that will destroy the bond between Jace and Jonathan and they’ll go to some pretty extreme lengths to get it. We even get a look into the mysterious Praetor Lupus, an organisation of trained werewolves who specialize in the inducting of new downworlders or hunting down rogue ones as is the case with Marueen, a young fan of Simon and his band who was turned into a vampire and used to lure him into danger in City of Fallen Angels. We also get a glimpse that something far bigger than just the search for Jace is brewing behind the scenes.

The pacing is good, the action never stops and there are well placed breaks between characters so you’re easily able to keep pace with what each set of characters is doing at different points in time. There’s also a healthy smattering of Clare’s trademark humour and spoon full of sugar’s worth of sarcasm all building up to a well written and easy to follow battle scene where Jonathan’s newly rallied forces clashes with Jace’s rescue party. Often you find fight scenes glossed over or such a jumble of movements and characters that you’re unable to follow what’s really going on and the impact is lost. Not here.

More than once my heart stopped while reading as more than one character faces tests of character, endurance and immediate threats to their respective health. Lovingly smoothed over by snatches of happiness but really a lot of the book is about internal conflict. Coming to terms with yourself, your relationships with others, how your decisions affect them and the consequences of making decisions on their behalf. The theme of family is rigorously explored and demonstrated not just with Simon who has been tossed out of his home by his mother when she discovered he was a vampire, his front door bedecked in symbols to ward him off, who then finds him in a difficult position with his sister Rebecca caught between the two. We see the Lightwoods falling apart behind closed doors and how that affects Alec and Izzy, how it’s shaped them into who they are today and how they mean to go on and finding the strength to carry on the search for their adoptive brother who has been, essentially, kidnapped by the very man who murdered their youngest brother Max.

But perhaps most interestingly we get a real incite to the relationship, if it can be called that, between Jace, Clary and Jonathan. Clary who met and fell in love with Jace, who for most of book 2 and 3 believed he was her brother and society said her love was sick and wrong but did nothing to dampen her feelings for Jace. Who found out that the brother, who her mother had cried over annually on his birthday believing him dead, was alive and packing a punch. A brother she feels no familial connection to. Jace who believed Valentine who raised him was his true father only to find out he was one of two boys raised by Valentine and that Jonathan had known all about him but not vise versa. Who mourns Valentine’s death despite his cruelties whereas Clary, whose Valentine’s daughter by blood, didn’t even cry for him. Finally Jonathan, who grew up knowing of Jace, knowing that Jace was competition and knowing that somewhere he had a sister and can’t seem to understand why she doesn’t love him. Which raises the complicated issue whether blood makes you family, or love?

There are also hints towards characters for the sequel series that Clare has mentioned on more than one occasion, The Dark Artifices. Along with mentions of objects and names familiar to those who have read the prequel series, The Infernal Devices, with two out of three books released so far, Clockwork Angel and Clockwork Prince, with Clockwork Princess to follow.

Well thought out, well paced and thoroughly entertained. A highly recommended series for anyone looking to step outside your typical werewolf-centric, vampire-centric or angel-and-demon-centric fantasy story. Combining all of these fantastical elements in an original blend of fun and action.

If I had to sum up City of Lost Souls in one word, it would be Glorious.