Tuesday, January 28, 2014

Scarlet by Marissa Meyer



Cinder, the cyborg mechanic, returns in the second thrilling installment of the bestselling Lunar Chronicles. She's trying to break out of prison--even though if she succeeds, she'll be the Commonwealth's most wanted fugitive. 

Halfway around the world, Scarlet Benoit's grandmother is missing. It turns out there are many things Scarlet doesn't know about her grandmother or the grave danger she has lived in her whole life. When Scarlet encounters Wolf, a street fighter who may have information as to her grandmother's whereabouts, she is loath to trust this stranger, but is inexplicably drawn to him, and he to her. As Scarlet and Wolf unravel one mystery, they encounter another when they meet Cinder. Now, all of them must stay one step ahead of the vicious Lunar Queen Levana, who will do anything for the handsome Prince Kai to become her husband, her king, her prisoner. 


Almost as a rule of trade, sequels are not as good as the first in a series. 
That is not the case with the Lunar Chronicles.

Anyone who read my review of Cinder knows that I was blown away by the characters, the world, and the story, and this sequel did not scrimp away from any of those details, either.

I'm a sucker for a strong heroine, and I got that in Cinder, and I was delighted to meet the kick-ass, no-nonsense Scarlet in this book. She is strong and defiant, but she's not perfect. She's one-minded, stubborn, and impulsive, all of which gets her into some serious trouble, but it also makes her three-dimensional and real.

I don't think I have a bad word to say about this novel. I'm infatuated with the characters, the tension and drama is constantly rising in stakes, the world-building is great -I love it all.

Normally I end up shying away from fairytale retellings; they just don't go well, in my past experience. But Meyer has surprised me twice, and I have full confidence she will do it again in Cress. The original story is fully recognizable in the current situation, but the story being told is so original and unique that it reads like a new tale. 

I am a little confused as to the reasoning behind the "wolf-soldiers" and their real purpose in the long-run of the story, but if I think of "moon" and "animal," my mind goes to either owls (not very ferocious or terrifying) or wolves (both scary and strong). So in my head, the connection between these wolf-hybrid people and Luna make sense.

Overall Impression:
    I loved this book. I love Meyer's writing style, and I will continue to follow The Lunar Chronicles through the final installment of Winter. I'm excited to see what's still to come.

The Blonde Rating: 5/5
GoodReads Rating: 4.3/5
Amazon Buyers' Rating: 4.7/5

Check out my review for Cinder, and [soon to come] Cress.

Thanks for reading,
The Blonde

Wednesday, January 22, 2014

The Unbecoming [and] Evolution of Mara Dyer by Michelle Hodkin


Mara Dyer doesn’t think life can get any stranger than waking up in a hospital with no memory of how she got there.
     It can.
     She believes there must be more to the accident she can’t remember that killed her friends and left her mysteriously unharmed.
     There is.
     She doesn’t believe that after everything she’s been through, she can fall in love.
     She’s wrong.
     After Mara survives the traumatizing accident at the old asylum, it makes sense that she has issues. She lost her best friend, her boyfriend, and her boyfriend’s sister, and as if that weren’t enough to cope with, her family moves to a new state in order to give her a fresh start. But that fresh start is quickly filled with hallucinations—or are they premonitions?—and then corpses, and the boundary between reality and nightmare is wavering. At school, there’s Noah, a devastatingly handsome charmer who seems determined to help Mara piece together what’s real, what’s imagined—and what’s very, very dangerous.


      I was really excited to start this series this year, because I'd heard so much about it, and yet knew next to nothing about the story's plot. When I realized it was a psychological thriller, I got even more excited.

      Then I read the book. I kept waiting and waiting...and waiting for something to happen. All I got was a lot of gooey Mara-Noah relationship building, which would be fine...if the synopsis hadn't promised a psychological thriller. The writing is fine, makes for an easy read, but that's not all that makes a good book. We didn't really find out about her powers until the book was more than half over, and by then it was too late to really do anything superb with them.

     The book started off with the reader wondering two things: How did Mara's friends die, and why is she still alive?

    Technically both questions were "kind of" answered, but by the end of the book, the reader has so many more new questions that aren't answered or even really addressed that it doesn't matter if the first two were answered or not. I finished this book confused and frustrated.

The Blonde's Rating: 2/5
GoodReads Rating: 4/5
Amazon Buyers' Rating: 4/5

But I had already bought the second  book, so I couldn't NOT read it.


Mara Dyer once believed she could run from her past.

She can’t.

She used to think her problems were all in her head.

They aren’t.

She couldn’t imagine that after everything she’s been through, the boy she loves would still be keeping secrets.

She’s wrong.


My hopes weren't too high after the disappointment of "Unbecoming," but I was almost immediately surprised.

The second book in this series is instantly enticing, as if trying to make up for the lack of excitement from the first. The reader is constantly frustrated, as Mara is, by her family and peers not believing her, and the fear that strengthens its grip on Mara as the book progresses gets the reader's heart pumping. And in the back of your mind, a small part of you is asking yourself -is Mara Dyer actually an unreliable narrator?

Of course there are more questions than answers in this book as well, but the text invoked such a varied range of emotions from me that I didn't mind. When I wasn't terrified that someone -Mara's dead ex-boyfriend, the weird witch doctor from the first book, the crazy b*tch at her "troubled teens" school, or her suspicious psychiatrist feeding her more and more unnecessary drugs -was going to pop out from around the corner and kill her, I was SO frustrated that her family refused to listen to Mara. I mean, they've known Mara her whole life, why can't they believe that she wouldn't just lie about this kind of thing, or that she's not crazy? Especially Mara's brother! I thought she was on her side, and then he just turns on her! Awful!

And then you get lulled into a false sense of security with the cute and happy times between Mara and Noah, only to have it snatched back by some disturbing sleepwalking episode, or a weird dream that makes no sense!

Needless to say, this book also ends on a cliffhanger of cliffhangers, and I couldn't be more exasperated and impatient for the June release of "Retribution." 

The Blonde's Rating: 4/5
Goodreads Rating: 4.4/5
Amazon Buyers' Rating: 4.6/5

Recommendations: Obviously other people see something I don't in the first book, so yeah, go ahead and read it, but ONLY so you can get to the greatness of The Evolution of Mara Dyer.

That's all for this double-review,
Thanks for reading,

The Blonde

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Movie Review: Catching Fire

Catching Fire
Starring Jennifer Lawrence, Josh Hutcherson, Liam Hemsworth, Elizabeth Banks, Woody Harrelson



Katniss Everdeen and Peeta Mellark become targets of the Capitol after their victory in the 74th Hunger Games sparks a rebellion in the Districts of Panem.


Actor Impression:
    As always, Jennifer Lawrence is flawless in her return to the screen, this time reprising her role as Katniss Everdeen from The Hunger Games. Her performance was more emotional and intense than the last movie required from her character, and the viewer was definitely pulled in by the character's emotional turmoil throughout the film.
     Josh Hutcherson definitely upped his game in this film, as well, but I think the character/actor that stole the film was Elizabeth Banks as Effie Trinket. I've read the book, of course, but I didn't remember Effie being so involved in this one as much as she had been in the last one, but she quickly became my favorite character in this movie. She was more vocal and funnier, and Banks brought heart and character into the "tribute handler" in the most unusual and funny ways.
     I think all of the women in the theater were happy to see more of Liam Hemsworth, but his character and development in Gale were less than what we could have expected next to Katniss, Peeta, and even Haymitch (Woody Harrelson).
     Notable performances definitely need to go out to Philip Seymour Hoffman as Pultarch Heavensbee, Sam Clafin as Finnick Odair, and Jenna Malone as Joanna Mason.

Plot Impression:
    Once again, I'm impressed with how much the screenplay was able to stay faithful to (at least what I remember of) the original book. I only noticed one thing that was left out, and it really wasn't all that important (not that it would have been very hard to slip in, either.) Although I was a little disappointed that we didn't get the scene between Katniss and Peeta, as they watched all of the other tribute's Hunger Games victory tapes, and see Haymitch's win. I think that would have been an interesting scene, and really changed the way the audience looked at Haymitch and his "gruffness."

Overall Impression:
     This was a fantastic film, expertly costumed, written, and edited, and I loved how faithful it remained to the book. I think it is more than worth the movie stub price, and while I'm not a big fan of HUGE cliffhangers, there was really no way of getting around it in this book ["There is no District 12..."]

The Blonde Rating: 4.5/5 *****
Rotten Tomatoes: 89%
Hypable Rating: A- 

Now the real question for Mockingjay is...how the hell are they going to make that two movies? Or follow up THIS act? That will really be impressive.

That's all for now!
Happy Holidays!
The Blonde

Allegiant by Veronica Roth [UPDATED]


What if your whole world was a lie?

What if a single revelation—like a single choice—changed everything?


What if love and loyalty made you do things you never expected?



I promised myself and the few people I know that actually read my reviews that I wouldn't put in any spoilers for this book. I promised, but that means the review is going to be shorter than usual.

So this book was pretty good. I definitely liked its predecessors better, but it was a good, conclusive ending. I really hate "endings" that leave things ambiguous and unresolved, but don't worry, there aren't too many questions on the last page of Allegiant.

There were a few bits and chapters that I thought didn't seem to have too much impact or a necessity to the rest of the story, but those were few and far between. There were a couple of characters that seemed to act a little differently than what I was used to them behaving (See: Tobias chill-axing with Peter, of all people).


I really liked the changing perspectives between chapters, from Tris to Tobias, but it would sometimes create frustration for the reader when we knew what one character was thinking and doing, but keeping it from the other. Like, haven't we already figured out that that doesn't work, guys? You just end up fighting!



Overall, a satisfying ending with a little bit of frustration around the middle, but keep your tissues close by in the last 70 pages or so.


Blonde Rating: 3.5/5
Goodreads Rating: 3.7/5
Amazon Buyers' Rating: 2.9/5

Sorry, this review is a little lame, but i promised, no spoilers. Check out the Insurgent and Divergent reviews. They are spoilers galore.

Thanks!
The Blonde

UPDATED:

So I've had time to really sit on this review and my thoughts about the ending and the series as a whole, and I've heard about the crazy people and their death threats to the author, and how upset they were about the "shock" at the end of the book, and I've decided that I don't like this book as much as I thought I did.

I loved Divergent, don't get me wrong, and I actually really liked Insurgent, which a lot of my friends are saying they hated, but Allegiant just did nothing for me.

I will say that I still liked the switching POVs, but it seems pretty dumb now, knowing that, really, nothing is happening in this book.

Think about it. They're just sitting around, gathering "information" that doesn't really help or harm them until about the last 100 pages or so. In a book 550 page book, the last fifth of it shouldn't be the only interesting part.

While I will always appreciate well-constructed prose, it can't always make up for an overly drawn out finale. 

I'm re-issuing my rating to a 2.5/5 

and I'm giving the series as a whole a 3/5

Sorry for the update, I promise I will sit on and think more thoroughly through my reviews in the future.

The Blonde

Friday, November 15, 2013

The Book Hangover

The Book Hangover

I've heard the term, "book hangover" before, but I didn't realize just how much a good book is like alcohol until after I turned 21.

Think about it:


  • Drinking puts your mind all out of whack, just like when you're in the middle of a good book, and nothing you say makes sense because all you can talk about is the story.

  • At a family party, if you're drinking, you're probably doing it to isolate yourself from all of your relatives. I did the same thing with my books, when I would read at family gatherings.

  • When you're reading too many books at once, you get easily lost and confused about who is who, which character belongs with which backstory, and where-the-heck-are-we-going?

  • When you wake up the next day after finishing a particularly thrilling and involved novel, the wake of that story leaves you dazed and probably more than a little sad. And you probably have a headache from staying up so late to finish, and you don't really want to do much of anything but eat your feelings for that character you liked that died at the end.

  • You tell yourself "I'm never doing that again" when you wake up this way, but in no time at all, you're back on that wagon.

I have found that there are really only two ways to combat and prevent a book hangover:
  1. To not read.
  2. To start about fifteen-thirty pages of a new book just before you finish the last one.
For me, option 1 is not a possibility, and it probably won't ever be. I don't want to be book sober, and I hope I never will be. 


Option two is one of my own making. I have determined that, by just-barely starting a new book in the last fifty pages of the one I'm about to finish, I can "keep the buzz" going when that first book ends in a blaze of glory. Instead of moping around and getting "hung-up" on that last book, I've already got something to look forward to, because I've read just enough of the new book to know who the protagonist is and what kind of trouble he/she is facing.

It's not a perfect strategy, but it works for me. If I wasn't constantly reading two or three books, I'd probably never have gotten over [SPOILER] Dumbledore's death [SPOILER] or, more recently, the end to the Divergent trilogy.

It's hard, ending something you've spent 150-700 pages working on. It's hard to let those characters go, but we have to accept that story has to come to an end. In some series, we learn the hard way that they maybe should have ended sooner than they did, but whatever. I've come to realize that overly empathetic readers like myself need to have multiple things to focus our thoughts and emotions on, or else we'll put our whole beings into the stories we have in front of us, and a part of us dies with the end of the book.

I'm not saying feeling strong emotions for books is wrong, but it isn't right to let it control you. It is fiction, it is not real, and we must learn to let go. I personally move on faster when I have something new to hang onto, like a new project, craft, or book.

This is not a step-by-step program to rehabilitate your addiction. It is to nourish it, and help you get addicted to great books, so when you do consume your "poison," it's not crap.


I am NOT by any means saying that alcohol and reading are the same thing, or that they are the same kind of addictions.

In fact, I encourage you to nurture your addiction to books. 

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Cinder by Marissa Meyer (The Lunar Chronicles)


     Humans and androids crowd the raucous streets of New Beijing. A deadly plague ravages the population. From space, a ruthless lunar people watch, waiting to make their move. No one knows that Earth’s fate hinges on one girl. 

     Cinder, a gifted mechanic, is a cyborg. She’s a second-class citizen with a mysterious past, reviled by her stepmother and blamed for her stepsister’s illness. 


     But when her life becomes intertwined with the handsome Prince Kai’s, she suddenly finds herself at the center of an intergalactic struggle, and a forbidden attraction. Caught between duty and freedom, loyalty and betrayal, she must uncover secrets about her past in order to protect her world’s future.

     My first comment is this: why didn't I read this sooner!?

     I've had it for weeks, and I decided to deviate from my TBR list a little bit to push this to the top because Marissa Meyer was coming to town and I wanted to get my copy of the book signed. Halfway through, I was racing out to my local indie bookstore to get Scarlet so I wouldn't have to wait once I was finished. Something tells me the wait between Scarlet  and Cress is going to be unbearable.

      I really liked the way this was done. The elements of the original fairytale are evident in the book, but the setting and characters are so unique, interesting, and different from any other adaptions and recreations of the Cinderella tale that I've ever seen before. 

      I really appreciated the world-building that went on in this book. There was no giant paragraphs trying to describe the NEW WORLD ORDER or describing the "how the world got this way." It was done very naturally; the reader was introduced to new parts of the world as Cinder or Kai was approaching elements that were different than what the reader might have assumed. I loved the whole aspect of "cyborgs as lower class citizens" -it really adds a new dynamic to her relationships with the people around her.

      The Lunars are freaking crazy! I love to hate them, which is totally the whole point to them, I feel, which is great!

      Though I will admit, I TOTALLY called the "secret" ending by page 115. And, once suspecting it, all of the clues just seem like giant neon signs pointing to it until it is finally confirmed. Not that it deterred from the story at all, I just like being right.

Things That I Liked:

  1. Dr. Erland; he's like the greatest loving uncle, or cool grandpa ever. Right from the start I wanted to like him, so I was really glad we got to, but I didn't really see too much of his "going mental" happening in this book. Maybe it's explored more in Scarlet?
  2. Iko; poor little android! I loved her, and it made me so upset that Cinder lost her little partner in crime for so much of the book.
  3. Prince Kai; he had such a sweet personality, and I liked his persistence in pursuing Cinder, and his complete disdain for Levana. He felt like a real guy character.
Things That I Didn't Like:
  1. Adri and Pearl, Levana; I loved to hate this dysfunctional step-family and this stupid, mean, awful queen.


Overall Impression:

     What a cool, unique re-envisioning of this classic fairytale. I cannot wait to see how Cinder gets out of her predicament and continues on with her story in the upcoming books.

The Blonde's Rating: 4.5/5
GoodReads Rating: 4/5 
Amazon Buyer's Ratings: 4.5/5

Stick around for further reviews of The Lunar Chronicles books!

Thanks!
The Blonde

The Dream Thieves by Maggie Stiefvater (The Raven Cycle)



     Now that the ley lines around Cabeswater have been woken, nothing for Ronan, Gansey, Blue, and Adam will be the same. 

     Ronan, for one, is falling more and more deeply into his dreams, and his dreams are intruding more and more into waking life. 

     Meanwhile, some very sinister people are looking for some of the same pieces of the Cabeswater puzzle that Gansey is after....

     
      Stiefvater comes back with the LONG awaited sequel to The Raven Boys and...it fell a little short. Though to be fair, this could be partially my fault. I was expecting a sequel as dynamic, new, and interesting as the first novel was, and I really shouldn't compare two different books...or should I?

     I wanted to love it. I really did. And it started off good. And it ended pretty okay. But that middle, man. That middle killed me. I finished three other books in the time it took me to get through pages 215-335. It just felt like everything that was happening in those pages was, well not filler, but reiterating things we already knew. The most exciting thing that happened was Ronan's dream lessons, and those were relatively low key compared to the opening when Declan gets his shit rocked by the Gray Man, or the terrifying fights with Ronan's nightmare monster things.

     That being said, the beginning and the ending were totally worth over-looking the middle. I have a newfound appreciation for Ronan's character and his background, and his powers are freaking awesome! In the beginning the reader learns a lot of new information very quickly, which is probably why it slows down before the ending (it needs time for that information to sit, saturate, and become useful, I guess). I loved seeing how the characters relationship dynamics had changed and matured, and we got some new characters that I just LOVED. 

     The ending was a little weak in some areas, but definitely strong in action! A dream monster fight in a sky filled with fireworks? Hell yeah! But the Gray Man's personal stand-off was a big underwhelming, especially considering all of the build-up during the book. But what exactly were Adam and Persephone doing? That was weird and confusing. Everything involving Adam in this book was confusing.

Things That I Liked:

  1. The Gray Man; it was funny, I was wary about this new character, I was ready to dislike him and pin him as a villain, but i LOVE him! I hope he sticks around! I want him to be an over-protective father-like figure for Blue, especially while Maura is missing.
  2. Noah!!! His scene with Blue in Monmouth Manufacturing both warmed and broke my heart.
  3. Kavinsky; I know he's bad, but he's SUCH an interesting character, I wanted more! I was kind of hoping he'd be a recurring villain.
  4. Ronan and his dad; what a great relationship.
Things That I Didn't Like:
  1. Adam; Adam was a total turd-face jerk in this book. He was my favorite in the last book, but he just got mean in this one, and I didn't really understand the reason for it all.
  2. Cabeswater magic; where the heck did that stuff go? It seemed like it was doing a whole bunch of cool things every chapter in the first book, then it just disappears? Supposedly this dream-draining magic has been happening for a while, so why is it so prevalant now?
  3. Adam and Gansey; what the heck is going on? These guys are constantly telling themselves that they're like brothers, but then Adam is constantly picking a fight with him. 


Overall Impression:

      This book was definitely different from the first one, and I'm still figuring out if I like it or not. I liked that we spent so much time in Ronan's head, but the Adam-Blue-Gansey drama felt almost forced or inappropriate because we spent so much time outside of their heads. It felt like even the book was tip-toeing around Adam's issues, like it wasn't quite sure what was wrong with him. I enjoyed the new characters that were introduced in this book, and I liked the inclusion of more "realistic" issues, like the car races and the drugs. I was beginning to think the boys were a little too perfect. It was a good read, but just remember to push through those 100 pages in the middle, or you'll be stuck on this book for a while.



The Blonde's Rating: 3.5/5
GoodReads Rating: 4.3/5
Amazon Buyers Rating: 4.5/5

Don't forget to read the review for The Raven Boys.

Thanks,
The Blonde