Saturday, 31 May 2014

The Storied Life of A. J. Fikry by Gabrielle Zevin




ARC provided by Algonquin Books through Netgalley

I am constantly saying this, but with this story I think I've hit the jackpot:

This is the most difficult book I've ever had to review. 
(badly, some of you will probably say)

Conceptually speaking, this is a five star rating. This is truly a book about bookworms, and for bookworms.
I'm a certified bookworm. So why the three star rating?

In the wise words of the "main character", A.J. Fikry _and, not forgetting that this is an ARC, I'm going to re-use his words (not to a book contest) to say what reviewing means in part to me:
“These things are never fair. People like what they like, and that’s the great and terrible thing. It’s about personal taste and a certain set of people on a certain day." (A.J. Fikry)
I like to think that every review that I've wrote is fair, but tastes change, people grow up, and honestly these days I am a little afraid of re-reading books that I used to love back in my twenties.

The positive:
All through the text it feels as if we're on a "book hunt", lol, for instance, the person who gets the most "literary quotes and tidbits" that the author gives us "scattered" through the text , wins at the end... what?
Maybe the satisfaction of knowing how well read, she or he is.
It was cute, and very well done, and it warmed my cold bookish heart! lol
Well, at least the ones I recognized! *wink*

I particularly liked the part where a customer returns a book that she read, The Book Thief, because it made her sad, and kept her up all night long reading it! A.J. should have known better than that, she says!
She is old, and he recommends to her a book about Death? What was he thinking???

However _ and keeping in mind that this is called: "The storied life..." _ I can't help feeling that the way the story is told: A literary novel in chick lit clothes... made it lose some of its strength. The junction of the two genres was at times clash-inducing.

However the part that really didn't work out for me, was the beginning, and the narrator's voice:
"On the ferry from Hyannis to Alice Island, Amelia Loman paints her nails yellow and, while waiting for them to dry, skims her predecessor’s notes. “Island Books, approximately $350,000.00 per annum in sales, the better portion of that in the summer months to folks on holiday,” Harvey Rhodes reports. (..)By the time her nails have hardened, her relentlessly bright- sided nature has kicked in: Of course it’s worth it! Her specialty is persnickety little bookstores and the particular breed that runs them. Her talents also include multitasking,
selecting the right wine at dinner (and the coordinating skill, tending friends who’ve had too much to drink), houseplants, strays, and other lost causes."
However, after awhile it does get better...
Or maybe I just got myself used to it...

The story started advancing, and, after awhile of reading it, I started feeling that I was watching some sort of stand up comedy for the nerd, or intellectual in all of us.
And yes, despite that it was well done, at the same time, this writing style created a form of distanced communication between the story and the reader. Well, it did for me.

The characters in this novel, as "storied" as they should be, feel like stereotyped clichés. And maybe that was the author's intention, but _and as accurate as this novel can be in all bookworm things_ I'm afraid it forgot one  crucial aspect of reading: The passion it creates amongst most of us!
Hey! There's people among us who prefer to buy books to buying clothes, shoes and even purses!! 
It's a serious DEAL!

And when it comes to that aspect, this story gets a negative. It forgot that reading should also be about fun, about getting oneself immersed in some random story!
Reading is _or should be _ mostly about connecting with a story and its characters. And I'm afraid that they were too undeveloped to achieve that goal.

I agree, however with one of its messages, that each book has its own proper timeline to be read and appreciated.
Who knows? Maybe a couple of years from now I will love it.

Then there's the drama department... which _I'm sorry to say _ was used and abused, especially in the last part. Also it was way too cheesy when it came to the baby's (precocious) pov.  It was too much.

The romance was done in a very strange and disconnected way: A.J never paid the slightest attention to Amelia, and then suddenly all it took was a very positive book recommendation (that had been done 4 years ago!), and there you have it: He's inviting her on a date - disguised as a book meeting deal. It was too predictable, and not all that romantic.

Also I can't help pointing out how STRONGLY I dislike every-time something is justified with the adagio: Oh, but everything turned out wonderfully... or beautifully...!

This is the reader in me speaking, because obviously one doesn't have to like the characters to appreciate a story... but I hated the justification that in the end all was forgiven because Maya ended up having a wonderful life. I hated that particular dialogue. (Yes, this was the part in which I would act all Bradley Cooper on the god-damn book... well, if I wasn't reading this on the computer).

Truth is, the girl's life would have been wonderful with her mother in it. Period. 

After an unexpected revelation things went downhill for me.
Also _and I know this is ironic _ if I read books about people with cancer, I like to know in advance _Like I said, I know it's ironic, and partly the reason why I read fantasy. 

I am not one of the millions enthusiasts about "The Fault in our Whatever". In fact, I haven't even read it, and I'm not interested in doing so. I even took a long pause in reading Alice Hoffman's (who is one of my favourite writers) books because, up until some books ago, it seemed as if all the author's books had characters who would die with cancer.

Having lost family members to that illness, I don't like to see it "acted" out on paper, or tv.
Thing is, there's nothing to romanticize about it, and also it shouldn't be used as a way to create drama and fill some pages. I know I'm being unreasonable. If it happens in real life, why can't it happen in books?

But as you can read, this is not something I can be impartial about, and for that I am sorry.
But in the end, why was it used? To show that booksellers are dispensable, because there will be always another one? To show that what matters are the stories, and the books?
The way the story ended, didn't impress me.
In fact, it just confirmed  the novel's somewhat dehumanization: The end of a life circle. Let's start a new one:
Books are the only thing that matter.



Buy "The storied Life of A. J. Fikry"

Wednesday, 28 May 2014

Cobweb Bride by Vera Nazarian - Fan Art


 
 
 


Fury's Kiss (Dorina Basarab #3) by Karen Chance




After the events of Death's Mistress, Dorina is now working with the Vampire Senate to stop the smuggling of magical artefacts from Faerie into our world.
Unfortunately, during one such mission, Dorina wakes up in a lab with no recollection of what has happened - and worse! - minus Lawrence, her vampire partner for the mission, one out of Kit Marlowe's closest in his family.

Kit and Dorina's relationship has never been the best, and he insists that Mircea delve into Dorina's missing memories to unearth what happened to Lawrence.

This is the book I'd been truly waiting for, and I can only hope to see further development on this front. I never made it a secret in my former reviews of this series that the most complex, compelling, and heartbreaking relationship is that of Dorina and her father, Mircea.

Going through Dorina's memories, exposing the cracks already in her mind, is sure to bring up long forgotten memories of Dorina's mother - the love of Mircea's life - and Dorina's forgotten but happy childhood memories at Mircea's side.

But with Æsunbrand (a fey prince intent on Dorina's demise), toxic vampire politics, fallen angels, mad scientists, and full out war on the Senate (and, therefore, threatening Dorina's family), there isn't as much time as I would have wished for happy family reunions.

As always, Karen Chance delivers an amazing book, full of action, mystery, humour, and dashes of red-hot romance, with some time for the development of familial relationships.

Highly recommended! And what with me being a notoriously stingy reviewer... ;)


Karen Chance's official site

Buy Fury's Kiss
@ The Book Depository (with free worldwide delivery)

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The Cyberkink Sideshow by Ophidia Cox



Ciberpunk and kinky stuff? Count me in.

I went into this book expecting something very straightforward and, while it was, it took an unexpected turn which reminded me of the film Preaching to the Perverted.

Some things I loved:

- it was well written
- it brought up how sex between consenting adults should be free to please all participants, regardless of social mores
- it had a male romantic interest who is very much unlike most written and the female protagonist is attracted to him, because she likes everything about him

Some things I liked:

- Max, the dog!
- How this was more of an exploration of how fluid sexuality is and not so much a mystery/romance
- How the female protagonist debated with herself about complying with social expectations about removing pubic hair and how she, in particular, found it infantilizing

A few things I hated:

- I was expecting a tighter mystery
- There should have been more about the romantic/sexual relationship between the two main characters. Yes, it was all resolved, but it was too quick, I needed to see more development in the way they functioned as being in an official relationship.
- It was set in a circus. Yes I know I can't really complain because it's clear from the title, from the cover, and from the blurb. I didn't go into this book unwittingly. I just find circuses REALLY creepy.

All in all it's a good book, but certainly NOT for everyone.


Buy the Cyberking Sideshow
@ Amazon

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Happy Ever After (Bride Quartet #4) by Nora Roberts






After Del and Laurel's book _which I loved _ my expectations for this one were running high. And up until a certain point, they were met.
I honestly enjoyed the first pages of the romance between Parker and Malcolm. Mal's impetuosity was well played considering Parker more sedate way of being. *cough* Of course in real life, he would probably end up getting slapped... a lot! lol
The tension and attraction between them was visible and palpable. In that point, mission accomplished.

The thing that I can't help feeling, is that after the initial click in their relationship, the story simmers down, and the only thing we mostly have, as readers, is wedding after wedding of perfection, lovely brides, endless bottles of champagne, and rivers of tears.
How these people don't get dehydrated... oh, okay, that's the reason behind all that champagne!
It's cliché after cliché, and even though NR does know how to write them, this is the fourth book of the series. My patience/cheesy cup ~runneth over~

Everyone who has been reading NR for a couple of years now (as I have been doing), knows that originality is not one of the author's strong points. The settings may be different, but the characters are basically recycled ones from other stories.

So, for that, for the fact that Mal made me think of Michael Fury (Finding The Dream #3), and the fact that Parker has a little of Laura in her, this rating gets downplayed.

Recommended with caution: If you're allergic to everything wedding related and coordinated, you'd better stay away from it.

Honestly, since this is the fourth book in the series I was expecting something a little different...
Why not a Goth's wedding for crying out loud?
After I don't know how many weddings (I honestly lost count of the number of weddings that took place during this volume), I honestly am a little nauseated of pastel colours!
A story that would have benefited had it been somewhat shorter.


Author's official site

Buy Happy Ever After
@ The Book Depository (with free worldwide delivery!)

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Sunday, 25 May 2014

Death's Mistress (Dorina Basarab #2) by Karen Chance








Just as her romance with Louis-Cesare seemed to be going somewhere, he disappears on a family emergency.
It just so happens that his whereabouts are also of interest to the head of their vampire family (and Dorina's father) Mircea Basarab.

Claire is back to being Dory's roommate, this time with her royal son in tow, which is fortunate since the fey mix Dorina had impulsively adopted for a pet turns out to be sentient, thus catapulting him into the territory of... "son"?

These adversities aside, Mircea has a mission for Dory: to apprehend a smuggler who turns out to be in possession of information on the whereabouts of a fey rune that Claire desperately needs to protect her son.

To complicate matters, Louis-Cesare is trying to save his... mistress?! Needless to say, this doesn't bode well for his relationship with Dorina.

It's a race against time with Dorina having to navigate the waters of vampire politics and get to the fey relic before Kit Marlowe (yes, that Kit Marlowe, who is now a vampire), Mircea (acting on behalf of the North-American vampire consul), Mark Anthony (yes, that Mark Anthony) who is the European Consul, enemy fey factions... and Louis-Cesare himself.

Karen Chance manages to avoid the dreadful 2nd book syndrome by raising the stakes (pun intended) and delivering non-stop action, bits of scorching-hot romance, a compelling mystery, well-researched historical backgrounds, and an extremely tight plot - all with a humorous tone.

If this sounds like the kind of book for you be sure not to miss Death's Mistress!!!


Karen Chance's official site

Buy Death's Mistress
@ The Book Depository (with free worldwide delivery!)

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Saturday, 24 May 2014

A Creature Of Moonlight by Rebecca Hahn




Arc provided by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Children Books through Netgalley

This is a review that I simultaneously want to write and one that, at the same time, fills me with a healthy dose of dread.
The reason is very clear: I loved this book to bits, and if I could, I would make sure everyone with whom I spoke would get a chance to read it.

Truth is, it's because of books like these that I will never stop reading. It pulled at my heart strings with its beautiful language, it captured me with its voice, and amazing scenario.
"So I stopped listening, and I stopped looking. It’s been many years now since I followed whenever the voices called from the woods. I no longer talk back to birds with people’s faces, or watch as misty creatures dart through the brooks."
My only fear for this story is that, in a market saturated by new releases, it has become increasingly difficult to find gems _like this one _ amongst the more common and usual YA stories that sell so much.

My wish for this story is that it finds its intended audience. The right audience who I know will love it madly. Maybe a more mature audience, instead of the expected YA one. People who want to read about magic, while keeping both feet firmly on the ground.

You see, I'm perfectly aware that this book will not be loved by everyone. This is not a story filled with action and heartbreaking romance. Two ingredients that are, today, common marks for a story's success.
This is a story that takes its own time to get where it needs to go. Sometimes it feels as if it meanders a little, and for that I gave it 4 stars (a very strong 4 with sparks of 5 star ratings), only because of that.

This is a story of a sixteen year old girl: Marni; who lives with her grandfather at the edge of the woods. Magical, scary woods. Woods in which girls disappear, woods that are slowly taking the place of all the Land in the Kingdom.

Marni's background is one filled with sorrow and blood, and it seems that her life is once again in peril.
Mostly this is a story about family ties, vengeance, and growing up.
About trying to find your place in life and be content about it.
And, most importantly, Marni's struggle to keep being her own independent self.
Girl power over and over.
Finally!
Definitely recommended, and a book that I will be buying for future re-reads.

Truly amazing, for an author's first work.


Buy A Creature of Moonlight
@Bookdepository.com (With Free Worldwide Delivery!)


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Midnight's Daughter (Dorina Basarab #1) by Karen Chance




I absolutely LOVE this series - at the moment, this and Downside Ghosts are the only Urban Fantasy series that haven't disappointed me *cough cough* Kate Daniels *cough cough*. And, as usual, when I love something, I keep postponing my reviews because distance helps me get out of the ~omg fangirl!!!~ mindset and see the series strengths more clearly.

Karen Chance introduces us to the peculiar life of Dorina Basarab, a Dhampir - daughter of the vampire Senator Mircea Basarab (of the Cassie Palmer series, which I haven't really read and, quite frankly, don't think they're my cup of tea).

Dorina's best friend and roommate, Claire, has a gift: her presence dampens others' magical abilities. Seeing as Dorina, as a dhampir, is prone to blackouts during which she experiences uncontrollable rages and awakes surrounded by carnage (reason as to why most dhampirs lead very short lives), Claire is a very handy friend to have, even if it weren't for the genuine friendship between her and Dory. 

...That is, until Claire goes missing and word on the street is that she was taken by a vampire - evidence leads to Dory's uncle Dracula.
Dorina's father, Mircea, wants Dorina to recapture Dracula, and for that mission she has to team up with the Master Vampire Louis-Cesare, the only vampire Dorina's eccentric uncle Radu Basarab "made". 
But the mission doesn't turn out to be as straightforward as they thought...


What has me absolutely obsessed with this series is Dorina's relationship with her father, Mircea. 
Dorina's memories are fractured. She longs for her father's love and approval, and he, in turn, seems to yearn to bestow upon her all the tenderness of a loving father... but, as with most well written relationships, things are extremely complicated between them.

If you're looking for a well researched series, featuring POC in positions of power, LGBT characters with vital roles in the plot, fast paced action, a complete lack of sappiness, a hot dash of romance, and hilarious situations, then this is the series for you!


Karen Chance's official site

Buy Midnight's Daughter

Wednesday, 21 May 2014

Banishing The Dark (Arcadia Bell #4) by Jenn Bennett




Arc provided by Gallery, Threshold, Pocket Books through Netgalley
Release Date: May, 27th



And here it is. The last book of the Arcadia Bell series...
Banishing the Dark picks up a few weeks after the ~you know what happened~ in the last pages of Binding The Shadows (book #3).

Feelings are running high, Cady's sociopath of a mother continues lurking on the horizon waiting for a chance to attack _long story ~go read the first book!~ _ and Cady is starting to run out of ideas.
So what does she do?
Well, I could tell you, but then I would ruin the book for you!
So, no telling ;)

Let me just say that reading this was heartbreaking, awe inducing, funny _ Jupe is in it, so, what did you expect? _ and completely addictive!

I like the fact that Cady isn't your average urban fantasy heroine.
She really tried to lead a normal life _ well as normal as one can have, being the owner of a bar that caters to earthbounds_ only when people didn't let her _ there was the sacrifice attempts and things of the sort _ did she have to come to terms with the other "aspect" of her life.

So I guess it was expected that this series wouldn't have a... let's say "energizer bunny" duration.
You know the type, right? And it lasts and lasts, _okay... do you think that's in character with the characters?_ lasts _when will this series end?_, lasts _Okay I'm done with this *****!! *throws book in rage and promises never to touch the series again*

No one can accuse the Arcadia Bell series of that!
What you can say is, that it ended with a very positive bang, surfing the "biggest waves" of the urban fantasy world!

There are so many quotable quotes that I could place here to leave you all salivating, but I CAN'T, because this is an arc!
The characters are as great as ever.
I just love the quirky demon family Cady got for herself. I love their interactions, and the way they are always there for one another!
I love Lon, even with his pirate moustache... and in spite of his old age! lol ;)

Then there's Jupe who is the cutest, most infuriating, "huggable" teen ever created! I love him, even when he is being his usual big mouthed self!
Oh, and I can totally see him having his own series! ;) *wink*
Well, he and another member of the Butler family! That ending, lol, was priceless!

Definitely recommended for first reads, and re-reads, which is something I would love to do if I didn't have a pile of arcs to read!
So what are you waiting for to start this series?


Buy "Banishing The Dark"
@Bookdepository.com (With Free Worldwide Delivery!)

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