alaterdate: book with a bookmark (Book)

Ava Reid heard you like stories so she put a story in your story.

Again.

She loves doing this. I kind of think it's funny how much literary analysis her characters do in this book and for the silliest snippets of her imaginary story. The quotes so reminded me of the over-the-top writing in something like Rainbow Rowell's Simon Snow books. Anyway, A Study in Drowning is the third book I've read from Reid and sadly the blandest!

I've had a love-hate relationship with her books. She writes well and her perspective on prejudice and misogyny is at least interesting to read in the sphere she's published in in (YA, New Adult). This book includes those topics, but I wouldn't say it was done well here, especially the prejudice that never gets addressed.

cut for length )

I have to say this is my least favorite of her novels, though I haven't read Lady Macbeth yet (and I hear it's not good!). I want to say that this novel had the bones for something good, but I think I liked my own idea of what might've happened in this book before I got a quarter through and it fell apart. The cover is nice though. It wasn't the worst thing I've ever read, but I think my issue with whether or not I actually enjoy her books is now skewing towards "no." I'd rather be torn and mad, than bored and disappointed.

I listened to the audiobook of this so it didn't have the acknowledgements at the back, but apparently she gives an acknowledgment to Zelda Fitzgerald which is insane, 'cause girl this book is not good. But now I see where the MC's name came from šŸ’€.

alaterdate: book with a bookmark (Book)

I hadn't been reading much recently so I decided to quickly pick something available on the library's audiobook page and I ended up getting Game of Thrones by George R.R. Martin. It might be rare, but I had pretty much avoided the show for its entire run, and only briefly thought of reading the books when I saw a boxset on sale at a secondhand store that I didn't end up purchasing. I think I only ever "watched" one episode while hanging out at a friend's house after school, double quotes because I don't remember anything except everything was blue and there was an ogre(?). Actually I think I was in the room for one other episode at a different friend's house, I just remember her saying "I don't care about those fucking priests" or something. Both these friends insisted I watch the show, but my ick-o-meter for live action nudity always detered me. All I ever heard about the show was that it had gratuitious sex scenes, which I tend to dislike in television and movies. However, I'm not bothered overmuch by sex scenes in books, so it was fine to read/listen to.

'Spoilers? )

So, Game of Thrones is good. Martin is a skilled writer and I can see why the series is so popular. I really enjoyed listening to the audiobook read by Roy Dotrice, his character voices were ofun, but some lines really made me laugh, like the way he said some words killed me. My favorite characters were Jon, Arya, and Catelyn. But I'm satisfied enough having read just the first book in the series and doing a little internet searching to satisfy my curiosity about their fates that I don't see myself continuing to read through the series.

alaterdate: book with a bookmark (Book)

I have been reading Sally Thorne's romance novels since she debuted. So I picked up her latest novel Angelika Frankenstein Makes Her Match.

In this book our main character Angelika Frankenstein and her brother Victor are rich orphans obsessed with ā€œScience!ā€ and set out to reanimate a man. Victor wants to do it to spite a long time rival (who has already done it?? not clear) and Angelika wants to do it so she can marry her creation. Yup. So they both reanimate a man each. Victor’s man is hulking and runs off screaming into the forest, while Angelika’s man is perfectly sensible. So sensible he refuses to follow her plan to become her husband and instead makes it his goal to find out who he used to be before he woke up from the dead with amnesia and someone else’s dick sewn onto him. Yup, she swapped his dick for a bigger one and it’s a running joke. While trying to discover the reanimated man’s identity Angelika meets another man who may be her real match, especially if it turns out that her science project had a wife of his own before he died, dun dun!

The premise is fine if you don’t think too hard about it, which leads to actually reading it being a complete mess. I ended up skimming a lot….

Cut for length )

This book was funny at first, but quickly went downhill and I think it’s my LEAST favorite of Thorne’s books which means it is just awful because I really hated 99 Percent Mine. I’d steer clear if you have any respect for the novel Frankenstein and your very own brain.

alaterdate: book with a bookmark (Book)

The Atlas Paradox by Olivie Blake is the second book in the The Atlas series. You can check out my full review of book one here: The Atlas Six. I didn't think the first book was the best, but I had to read this one because there was something entertaining about The Atlas Six that I never quite put my finger on. I also thought this series was gonna be a duology, unfortunately not....

Oh my god, I thought this was a duology I'm fucking SICK.
— Me

In this book we follow the five candidates who passed the trial to join the Alexandrian Society as they start their second year in the house and are tasked with writing a thesis. Riveting. They have to balance their growing paranoia, the mind games they play with each other and that the school plays with them all while secretly working toward uncovering just what happened to Libby Rhodes.
Through the process of reading this book I came to believe that "Dark Academia" is a kind of power fantasy. Being special because you're good at school and knowledge being a tangible sort of power over society. Then not only having these qualities, but being able to explore them deeply, in isolation, without worrying about money, food, or lodging. When Libby finds herself out on the street with nothing, but the clothes on her back where does she go? The closest university where she is able to get off of the streets and made comfortable because she has knowledge the university wants. The supernatural elements in this series highlights the core of the trend rather than just regurgitating the aesthetics, which is let's face it 99% of it's raison d'etre.

Cut for length )

I guess I have to chalk this one down as a guilty pleasure, even though I still don't think it's that great. I wanted to write a small fic for it though, but I got bored and gave up lol. It's just so vexxing because there is something about Blake's writing that I like, but I can't figure out what it is. Maybe just the potential I sense from her plots and characters that unfortunately don't go anywhere. I'd definitely like to see her write something else. I'll have to wait and see what she does after she concludes this series. I haven't heard about her getting any new deals though.

alaterdate: book with a bookmark (Book)

Second First Impressions by Sally Thorne is hilarious. Everyone is incredibly weird and that added to the laughs.

Ruthie Midona works the front desk at a luxury retirement villa and is so into her job that she even lives on the property herself. When the retirement villa is purchased by a big wig property developer she has to start thinking about her life and career for the first time in years. What's more, the property developer's "lazy" son is moved into the empty room next to Ruth's! They have a slight "meet-ugly" before striking up a friendship and maybe more? Of course more, this is a romance book. And there's a subplot with some very nice old ladies.

But the romance? Meh. I never cared whether or not the leads got together. It would have added a lot more tension and interest if Ruthie had actually gone on a date with someone else. I didn't particularly like Teddy, what was he seeing in Ruthie? A girlfriend or a mom šŸ˜•

So the love interest and romance really didn't interest me and sadly the sub-plots got tidied up way too quickly. Hey, at least the huge fallout didn't happen AT the party like it usually does in romance novels! Oh well. I did like Ruthie though. I thought she was competent and passionate about her job despite her naivety in general, which was nice. And I have to admit that I did think it was funny and endearing that she was... well... a loser. Can't believe she deleted her forum without making an announcement post though. Fandom archiving nightmare! A bit unbelievable for her tbh. In the end her online friends meant nothing to her?? Not now that she's got a BF huh?? wow lollll. The side character Melanie at first seemed like a vapid cut-out, but she turned out to be so much better than I expected and I liked that as well.

Most of the writing is well-done and a breeze to read even though I agree about the hiccups with the dialogue other people have mentioned (having to backread to try and figure out who was saying and doing what in a convo), but I laughed a lot and didn't hate it, so 3 stars. Sally Thorne's novels are more miss than hit, but this one was fine and I'll probably read her next one. In fact I saw it at the library the other day, but I didn't have a sec to grab it, hopefully it's there tomorrow when I go and I can grab it.

alaterdate: book with a bookmark (Book)

A Far Wilder Magic is the second book I've read from Allison Saft. Someone recommended it to me and told me it handled the topic of prejudice better than Ava Reid’s Juniper & Thorn. I was mostly surprised to see Saft’s book recommend because I didn’t remember her debut novel, Down Comes the Night, being particularly well received.

In A Far Wilder Magic Margaret Welty lives in isolation in her small town, taking care of her home all alone while she waits for her mother, a renowned alchemist, to return from her travels. When she spots a mystical and elusive fox in the forest near her home the town’s traditional Hala hunt is announced. Believing that winning the hunt and slaying the fox will bring her mother home she decides to sign up, but there’s a problem: she needs an alchemist partner to compete. Luckily, Weston Winters, a down-on-his-luck alchemist shows up at her door looking for mentorship from her absent mother. They sign up for the hunt and throw themselves into a rocky partnership where they clash with each other and the rest of the town.

Cut for length )

Ultimately, the writing sucked, the pacing sucked, most of the characters were completely boring including the female lead despite how badass she was supposed to be with her hunting rifle. It read like a first draft and was extremely derivative of Full Metal Alchemist and a little derivative of Shadow & Bone

alaterdate: book with a bookmark (Book)

I picked up Master of One by Jaida Jones and Danielle Bennett just to have something to read while I waited for my hold on another book. A blurb somewhere called it a cross between The Cruel Prince and Six of Crows, two books that I hated. Why did I pick this up then? To see how bad it was.
Spoiler: It was GOOD.

cut for length )

I was so pleasantly surprised with this one. I went in with little expectation and fully planning to roast it, but that didn't last very long. While I wish the end was more substantial it didn't detract from the rest of the book for me (it's a very open ending. Enough so that I wish this had been bought as a trilogy instead of a stand-alone). The writing reads well, every scene matters, the characters have rich inner lives, the foreshadowing is well-done and doesn't treat the reader as if they can't puzzle it out on their own and, boy, the pay-offs for paying attention are exciting. It was a joy to read. I hope more of this world gets to be published by the authors. I am looking forward to it.

alaterdate: book with a bookmark (Book)

My second Caitlin Starling book, but the first I write a full review for is The Luminous Dead.

Gyre is hardly the first protagonist I found incredibly annoying, but not enough to drop the entire book because of. In fact I think her personality was perfect and needed for this book. Someone more levelheaded simply wouldn't have had the same interactions with Em. On that note, I enjoyed the "bad romance" aspect in this book, it's reminiscent of one of my favorite psychological thriller stories.

I didn't really get into this book until a little past the midway point. Until then I couldn't say anything noteworthy happened, just lots and lots of Gyre being annoying and paranoid. It wasn't until the threat was real in a way that wasn't just Gyre slipping for the fifth time that I had any interest in her fate at all. I didn't read this book for the caving, I read it for the monsters.

Spoilery Review )

Props to Starling for making a two character story work, it wasn't bad. However, thinking of it now Jane Lawrence didn't have that many characters either... so maybe that's her schtick.

alaterdate: book with a bookmark (Book)

Juniper & Thorn another Ava Reid book that I both like and dislike simultaneously! It's hard to pin down a star rating again, I'm waffling on it, but this is at least a solid 3 for me for sure. (Also did not know there was controversy around this book until after I read it. Why are authors constantly shit-talking Goodreads reviewers on Twitter? smh. They really shouldn't specify a specific reviewer!)

Juniper & Thorn is a retelling of Grimms' The Juniper Tree. While it uses aspects of the fairy tale it doesn't follow the same plot events. Reid's Marlinchen is the youngest daughter of the last wizard in a town rapidly turning toward industrialization and away from magic. Marlinchen and her two older sisters are witches that their father keeps under his thumb in order to squeeze profit from their powers. As Marlinchen begins to discover herself and the world, she has to confront her abusive father and the atrocities in her life.
Oh there's also a boy she gets with.

Mind that this book is horror (readers online seemed perplexed by this fact), and while I don't discuss them in my review the content warnings can be found in the author's Goodreads post HERE

Cut for length )

The Wolf and the Woodsman had worldbuilding (such as it is) and Juniper & Thorn has some of that, but it would have meant very little had I not already been familiar with the themes Reid likes (or general history because this stuff is pretty thinly veiled).
This book bleeds more emotion though. I was put-off, gloomy, and angry at times, even while not caring much for the characters. I liked the ending and I liked the idea of Marlinchen, if not the woman herself. Making a note to buy myself a copy of the paperback next year.

alaterdate: book with a bookmark (Book)

I love having to put [Review] before book titles so people don't think I'm spiraling lmfao. Anyway...
I'd been wanting to read Eric LaRocca's horror story Things Have Gotten Worse Since We Last Spoke, but I had to wait for the September publication that includes two other short stories alongside the titular one. Perhaps my anticipation hyped the story up in my mind, but it didn't deliver.

Length + minor spoilers )

And for the other two short stories: Too much repetition of the same idea. I gave the benefit of the doubt to thematic use until I read near identical description in the next story. You can write about the same theme without rewriting the same expression over and over. LaRocca has his pet phrases as well and they grated on me when repeated in such a short span of pages.

With that said, I was certainly entertained and I liked the stories a tad more after reading the afterword:

When I was very little, I desperately wanted to believe in God. [...] This collection of macabre tales is my attempt at making sense of some of the connections I've missed or forsaken over the years. Religion and faith play a huge component in some of these stories as I continue to struggle with the fact that I still cannot reasonably believe in a divine creator. Of course, I admire the dedication of others; however, the connection and balance that faith presumably provides is still lost to me.
I'd like to see those feelings tapped into more masterfully so I'll visit this author again in the future to see if they are.

alaterdate: book with a bookmark (Book)

The Time Machine )

The Haunting of Hill House )

We Have Always Lived in the Castle )

alaterdate: book with a bookmark (Book)

The first 46 pages of The Atlas Six by Olivie Blake reeled me in. It starts with the gathering of six magical candidates who will compete for entry into the mysterious Alexandrian Society. Only five will be fully initiated, and it is up to the six candidates to decide who they will eliminate. The beginning is really fun because it slips into the heist model of recruitment. Unfortunately, the fun doesn't last long and my attention began to wane.

Cut for length )

All that said—I didn't hate it. And I'm not certain why that is. I think the author is good at dropping crumbs of flavor that I once tasted in better books and so I have hope of taking a full bite, but the meal never quite arrives.

Hell's Gate

Jun. 3rd, 2022 01:28 pm
alaterdate: book with a bookmark (Book)

Finally finished Hell's Gate by David Weber & Linda Evans. 1208 pages with a cliffhanger ending. I already knew this book was put out as set-up for the rest of the series, but the premise was too good to pass up.

Two civilizations discovered portals that lead to uninhabited planets, all of them copies of Earth. They explore, and plunder, and move into these copies. Arcanum has been doing this for 200 years while Sharona has only had 80 years of exploration. Then one day portals on their respective sides lead them to the same Earth and they discover other humans for the first time.
Two soldiers standing on opposite sides meet in a forest—each shocked to see a stranger and wary of the weapons in each others hands—kill each other and no one will ever know who shot first. Despite having peaceful First Contact protocols an act of cowardice and fear leads to a massacre.
The Sharonian's guns are weapons never before seen by Arcanans and when they decimate an entire squad in the blink of an eye the Arcanans can't help, but to retaliate... with dragons. Yes, Sharona is a civilization built on science while Arcanum is built on magic.

cut for length )

This series debuted in 2006 and had some rough patches with it ending with 3 volumes, with the third and final volume published in 2016 with a differnt co-author. I only have the first two books in my possession. I flipped through the second one to get a feel for the plot and oof, it barely moves. Halfway through its 632 pages Jasak and co. are still on their way to the capital. I won't be reading the rest of the series, but it's not a bad book. I just don't forsee the rest of the series actually covering subjects I'm interested in. I enjoyed both sides being puzzled about what they each brought to the table and implications concerning Gifts and Talents being utlized in/against the other society (Arcanum politicians being read for filth by Sharonian Voices who relay bad vibes to their bosses via hand signals is awesome lol), but the plot is moving way too slow with way too many asides for me.

alaterdate: book with a bookmark (Book)

Basically stuff I read recently and don't want to/didn't review:

mini-reviews is generous phrasing )

Manhunt

Apr. 27th, 2022 11:27 pm
alaterdate: book with a bookmark (Book)

Pivoting harshly from V.E. Schwab's Gallant I read Gretchen Felker-Martin's Manhunt.

I found this book through R.S. Benedict's podcast Rite Gud. Perhaps you've heard mention of Benedict and her podcast because of the recent(ish) "Squeecore" conversations. I think I'll make a second post on Squeecore since it's interesting, but I don't want to derail this post.

Cut for length )

This book is a horror novel and it's very gory and full of shock value, and also has something to say, but overall it feels more like a B-movie than something trying to be really poignant. Which is fine! 3 out of 5 stars.

Gallant

Mar. 22nd, 2022 03:28 pm
alaterdate: book with a bookmark (Book)

Gallant is V.E. Schwab's latest novel. I don't remember which moniker is supposed to be for her YA vs. Adult works and at this point does it even matter? *looks forlornly out the window*

Wasn't Addie LaRue supposed to be "adult"? *laughs* Anyway.

Gallant was a fun read! I read it in a single sitting and it's been a while since I've chomped a 300 page book in one bite. It's immediately apparent that she was inspired for this by Crimson Peak, but eh the plot point she steals is minor.

Olivia Prior was left on the doorstep of a girl's home at the age of two, with only her mother's journal in her possession. She pored over the entries since she learned to read and memorized every word of her mother's apparent descent into madness. Nothing in there shed any light on where she came from (but perhaps does explain why she can see ghosts). Even her mother's parting words to her via a letter in the back of the journal, "You'll be safe, as long as you stay away from Gallant" are cryptic. But we the audience who have watched Crimson Peak know what this means.

cut for length )

But Gallant was surprisingly fun and I made more notes than I thought I would. Definitely a step up from whatever the hell Addie LaRue was (can u tell that I did not like that book at all?). I have hope again for whatever Schwab decides to write next :^)

alaterdate: book with a bookmark (Book)

It took me a week to get through the audiobook for Brandon Sanderson's The Way of Kings. I own this book in E-book format. I got the free copy from TOR. I tried to read it twice, but didn't make it past chapter 1 either time. Since I'm currently playtesting a Sims challenge for someone I thought that I might as well listen to audiobooks while I play instead of just listening to music. Browsing through the 'currently available' section of my library's audiobook selection I grabbed Way of Kings because what better time to listen to a 45 hour audiobook right?

Read more... )

alaterdate: book with a bookmark (Book)

I may have been way too excited for The Wolf and the Woodsman by Ava Reid to release and I bought the hardcover on release day [sad horn noises]. It's very pretty though and I did technically enjoy the book, but not release-day-(despised)hardcover-purchase-$ level of enjoy 😬

Now, this book was marketed as adult, but the writing style does not feel like an adult book. And there's not even any adult content in it that I haven't read in a YA book by this point. I get that the author was going for a more complex theme concerning religion, but just wanting that to be the thing that made the book adult did not make it so. The plot and the characters could have been so at home marketed as YA, and honestly I feel tricked into reading it tbh. I specifically bought it because it wasn't YA..................
Remembering who recommended it I thought, "Oh it's YA, hmm I'll just wait or mayhaps never read it" but I double-checked and the author & publisher are saying "it's adult!" so I went ahead, but please it really reads like it was intended to cater to the YA market, but along the way someone changed their mind at the last second. BAMBOOZLED.

cut for length )

Overall, I got what I wanted out of this book. Enemies to lovers, folklore, brutality, and tenderness. Could it have been better? Absolutely! I wish it had been 100% engaging rather than floundering around every chapter. But I can't say I didn't enjoy it for what it is. I'm interested in the kinds of themes this book starts to lay down and I definitely enjoyed digging into those morsels. But the book as a whole was not cohesive in quality. It wants to have this complex theme and dark tone, but the characters, plots, and writing style are not developed to that complex level at all.
But I liked the magic and the conclusion of the religion theme.

alaterdate: book with a bookmark (Book)

Into the Drowning Deep by Mira Grant is an exciting survival horror story.

I borrowed it from the library because I kept seeing it on various "read these books" lists even thought it's a few years old already, and I've wanted to read more horror books lately.
Yet, I recall looking at the cover in my Kindle library and thinking "ugh okay let's get this one over with" since I have NOT been on a roll with picking books to read this year. Well, was I an absolute fool to put this one off because this book kicks ass.

Into the Drowning Deep reminds me so much of Crichton's Timeline in structure. (I adore Timeline too šŸ’›) Both novels start out with a slow build-up—about 100 pages worth—before getting in to scenes packed with enough action to be movie worthy (don't watch the Timeline movie though, it's so botched) and peppered with iffy science throughout.
I WISH this book was a movie because I liked it so much I want to talk about it, but none of my friends and family read enough lmao. Ah, it could be so good as a movie because part of the story involves a mockumentary, imagine the sweet gimmicks you could pull off with that in a film. Anyway,

cut for length )

This novel is a fun thriller and I would love a sequel because I'm dying for more!

April 2025

S M T W T F S
  12345
6789101112
13141516171819
2021222324 2526
27282930   

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Custom Text

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jun. 8th, 2025 03:29 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios