Wednesday, January 20, 2016

Book Review: The Wrath and the Dawn





Stars: 4 stars!
Author: Renee Ahdieh
Genre: Young Adult Fantasy
Publisher: G.P. Putnam's Sons Books for Young Readers
Amazon

Review:
My first 1001 Arabian Nights retelling and boy was it a good one! Got this rec from Ivy Book Bindings, who I almost always steers me in the right direction as far as great fantasy goes. This was a total winner, great pacing, beautifully written, and with an EPIC love story at the center of everything. I had to knock off a star though because the ending made me WANT TO SCREAM. I know there is going to be a sequel, but this installment did not resolve anything and it left all the characters in the worst way and I just wanted to keep flipping to the next page because I was sure that I missed something.

Aside from the lack of ending, this book was a home-run. It might be because I haven't read many books like this. The setting in the Arabian desert, the amazing clothing, the kings, sultans, princesses, the food, the palace etc. The whole middle-eastern fairy tale thing completely rocked my world. I wanted to dive in, curl up and take a nap on Shazi's platform bed covered in colorful pillows. 

But even without all of that, I think I would have loved this book. Shahrzad is a fierce heroine. Fierce like Beyonce, but good with a bow like Katniss. She's absolutely great-- and the way that she falls in love with Khalid against her own will was just delicious. Khalid is a tortured hero, but not really in the  typically angsty way. Although honestly what we know about him for most of the book really is what we DON'T know about him. Once his secret is fully revealed (which if you know the story, I guess you know going in) you realize he sort of does have the weight of the world on his shoulders and there is really no good way for him to spin it. 

I'm not sure where the author is going with the next book-- I read the synopsis and thought that is seemed a bit of a departure from where she left our characters, but I'll take it. I wish it was coming out before May though!



Tuesday, January 19, 2016

Review: The V Girl




Stars: 1
Author: Mya Roberts
Genre: YA Dystopian
Publisher:


Review:
DNF 16% 

*NetGalley eARC

Sadly this book did not work for me AT ALL. And I don't think it is really a good one for kids to read. It's pretty explicitly focused on sex, but in a way that feels both completely unrealistic and very voyeuristic. I did not understand the premise of the dystopian world set forth by the author. I did not finish this book (not sure that matters in this case), but there was a quite a lot of info-dumping at the beginning that the author uses to try to world build, but that didn't explain in a way that makes sense how the world had ended up in this very, very messed up place.

From what I could understand there was a civil war happening in the America and has been for 21 years. And apparently soldiers on one or both sides had been given drugs to turn them into violent, sex-crazed super-soldiers, and thus are allowed to rape people because that seemed the best way to keep them in line?  But it was unclear who was still fighting and why. And also, why, when there women available (Lila makes mention of them) to have sex with the soldiers willingly did they need to turn to rape? I mean I guess that happens a lot in warfare, but to turn it into an established practice and legalize it seems bizarre. And also, why was sex and rage and being a virgin the central focus of everything and everyone? Surely there were more important conflicts in a society riddled by a war lasting more than two decades than who is and isn't having sex with who consensually or not!

Then there was the whole inciting incident where Lila doesn't want to get raped so she plans to have sex with her friend Rey before the troops come to town. It just didn't really make sense. She wants to have sex, but she doesn't. Rey won't have sex with her and she's upset and really wants to do it especially after she is rejected, so she goes and sits in the woods and watches two other people have sex. Also there is an incident where she is swimming naked in the river and comes upon the hero and somehow ends up sliding off a rock, naked, butt-first onto his head. See what I mean? There is really very little sense to the world-building.

I really couldn't follow. The writing also felt choppy and all over the place. Lila would have a thought and then two or three lines down have another that would directly contradict the first. The "hero" Aleksey had that sort of weird, old-school romance-hero thing going on: he was big like a lion and had long, flowing hair. Gag me please.

The way that all of the characters talk about sex all the time was also unnerving and not in the way that pushes the readers' boundaries or makes them think about things in new ways, in the way that makes you feel uncomfortable. For example Lila's sister, Azalea, is talking to Lila about Aleksey and wondering if Lila has considered him for her "emergency de-flowering" by saying, "He towers above soldiers so his truth must be...extraordinary. Too much for a tight girl." Really?! That's both awkward and weird. Lila's father talks the same way about sex to his kids, some of them young. I think the author was trying to convey the necessary frankness in this world and differences in boundaries between this world and ours, but it completely misses the mark for me.

I couldn't finish this book because there was really nothing I liked enough about it to keep me reading. I also think it is 100% an adult story because it doesn't have any ANYTHING that I consider important for young adults to read and feels very inappropriate.



Monday, January 18, 2016

Book Review: Burning




Stars: 2
Author: Danielle Rollins
Genre: Ya Fiction
Publisher: Bloomsbury USA


Review: 
I did not like this book, but it that doesn't mean it is a bad book. In fact, I think a lot of kids might like it. It's a bit edgy (in that the teens in the book are in a juvenile detention center and they have committed crimes, some of them seem like they are sincerely dangerous and disturbed). It has a very, very Orange is the New Black vibe right from page one. I could almost picture Brunesfield as Litchfield. Also, there is a quite a bit of violence, some of it a bit gory, and there is a mystery/thriller element with a paranormal twist. I found it to be well-paced, but not particularly original. The story didn't totally lose me until after about 60% when the dangerous purpose of the SciGirls club is finally revealed (cue the cheesy, creepy music).

I didn't mind the heroine, Angela, but she didn't really do much for me either. She is reasonably well-fleshed out and her two friends: Cara and Issie are also reasonably well-drawn, but none of them were particularly compelling for me. Quite frankly, I didn't care what happened to any of them. The mystery centers on a newly incarcerated young girl named Jessica. Over the first 40% of the book we come to find out Jessica has the mysterious and horrifying ability to set people and things on fire-- with her mind! (*gasp* ) However, after the initial mystery surrounding Jessica is revealed, the story fell flat for me. I easily predicted that the new, "good" doctor at the prison, was not really good and that there would be a romance between Angela and the guard (really?! Straight rip-off from Orange is the New Black *sigh*). I didn't love any of that. And  I really didn't love the conspiracy theory secret-organization-who-takes-girls-from-juvie-for-secret-experiments-because-no-one-will-notice-or-care angle. There is a cliff-hanger at the end, but by that point, I was skimming. I wouldn't pick up the next one. For a younger, less-jaded reader this book might work, but it didn't for me.




Friday, January 15, 2016

TBR January 2016

Here's what's in the works for January, I hope...


Net Galley arcs:




Borrowed from the library:



Purchased: 


Haven't bought yet, but I'm thinking about it:

Audiobook:






Wednesday, January 13, 2016

Book Review: Dumplin'


Stars: 4
Author: Julie Murphy
Genre: Young adult fiction
Publisher: Balzer & Bray

I fought against liking this book, I'm not sure why, but I did. In the end, it overcame all of the negativity I could throw against it and was a really excellent read-- and not just for girls who have felt "fat," or bad about themselves their whole lives-- this is an empowering story for anyone who has struggled with body image or self-esteem. My initial concern with the book came from thinking that this would be a book that encouraged girls to be unhealthy. I think everyone should be happy in their body, no matter the size, but eating healthy and maintaining a healthy weight is important, especially for teens. The blurb makes it sounds like Will (Dumplin') is one of those "fat" girls that is all in your face about how she's fat and she's proud and she doesn't care if that means she is unhealthy.

It turns out that Will, like all of us, has a confident front that she puts on, but is insecure deep down. But she's insecure about lots of things in her life, not just her weight, I guess you could say that most of them stem from her weight, but really this is more than just a story about a girl with body-image issues.

I LOVED the setting in Texas. Somehow a Texas setting always feels like you are reading about some exotic foreign country (if you are living in the Northeast like me). I also loved the excellent development of the secondary characters. Will's mom was well-fleshed out, and Will's aunt Lucy, though deceased, plays a big, important role in the story-- a complex role. Will has really complicated feelings about her aunt and the things that she struggled wit h in her life (Lucy was morbidly obese). The other girls competing as the ugly ducklings of the pageant are pretty great and are given more than just the token-misfit roles here. And lastly, Dolly Parton plays a big role in the story which sets the whole story apart.

There is (I hesitate to call it a love triangle) some conflict for Will about her feelings for Bo versus Mitch. I liked the way that conflict was resolved. Although you can see going along that Mitch-- the nice guy-- is going to get the short end of the stick. It's hard to watch Will treat Mitch badly and know what she is doing, but continue to do it anyway. But I could relate to that, and I think lots of others will too sometimes you hurt people carelessly and then feel bad about it.

Ultimately, I enjoyed the storyline with the pageant, and Dolly Parton references, and how Murphy resolves everything. And it's not some silly, ridiculous, tied-up-in-a-bow perfect ending, it felt legit.

I immediately picked up Murphy's first novel: Side Effects May Vary, because this was a great read.


Wednesday, January 6, 2016

Review: Isn't She Lovely

Rating: 3 stars
Author: Lauren Layne
Genre: New Adult
Publisher: Flirt

It worked, it didn't work. I really don't know. I liked it and yet it didn't really make much of a lasting impression. 

Here I am about a week later struggling to remember anything that made much of an impression from this book. It's a the premise is that two college students decide to do a real-life Pygmalion scenario. Only we've got the goth-girl with a troubled past and the fancy rich boy with a broken heart. 

Don't worry if you can't remember the story of Pygmalion. It's Elizabeth Doolittle or Julia Roberts with Richard Gere, but fortunately they explain all in the book, with examples. 

The relationship is sweet and moves at a reasonable speed. There is no insta-love (thank god!). The thing I liked best was that Stephanie leaves Ethan for a really good reason at the end of the book. She feels like he isn't going to accept her for who she truly is, not the reinvented polished "pretty woman" version of herself.  

The way Ethan gets their HEA, well that was precious and hilarious. I liked it a lot. 

It's also well-written, with some depth of characterization. It's a nice little light read.

Monday, January 4, 2016

Review: Me, Early and the Dying Girl

Me and Earl and the Dying Girl

Stars: 4
Author: Jesse Andrews
Publisher: Harry N. Abrams
Genre: Young adult fiction

I laughed out loud while reading this book-- a lot. His description of hot girls as moose tromping through the forest over chipmunks (guys like him) was fantastic. Equally great was the whole bit with the accidentally getting high, really that whole episode, ending in him getting ice cream all over his entire body, including his ankles-- was very funny. 


That being said I kind of got over Greg's self-loathing by the end of the book. In fact, his whole world view got to be so much convincing the reader that he doesn't care, and by extension you, the reader, doesn't care, that I wasn't even affected by Rachel's death at the end. There was really no emotional punch to what happens because you know going in that is what is going to happen, but really also because Greg spends the entire book telling the reader that he really thinks the book is a piece of garbage, that he does nothing out of the goodness of his heart, cares about no one, and he thinks he is a terrible person. It's all a bit too Holden Caufield of him. 

By the end, I started to agree with him. On the other hand, I thought the writing was witty and frankly hilarious. Greg's inner monologue is a thing of beauty. All the secondary characters equal parts ridiculous and vivid. I liked the whole thing. Andrews has Greg narrate the book using both first person narration, but also lapses into screenplay style interactions at times and perhaps my favorite-- bulleted listed in lieu of written dialogue. 

Greg's obviously an anti-hero but I appreciated that this book stays well away from all the teen book stereotypes. It was very refreshing. (Which I felt made the movie version o the book less awesome-- because they included the obligatory teenage prom and a lot of stuff at the end around Rachel's death to specifically pull on your heart-strings) but I digress. I appreciate the utter lack of romance and teen cliches in this book. 

A final note: Earl is fantastically awesome. Not only is Earl just about the best character ever, but he sounds like what you would expect him to sound like. He's just awesome. The book wouldn't have been a tenth as good as it was without short, angry, chain-smoking Earl-- who deep down seems to get people and Rachel in particular, a lot better that Greg ever does.

Saturday, January 2, 2016

End of Year Survey and Best of 2015

From The Perpetual Page Turner!!! A Survey!!

6th Annual End Of Year Survey – 2015 edition!! (abbreviated version)




Number Of Books You Read: 124
Number of Re-Reads: 0
Genre You Read The Most From: Romance



1. Best Book You Read In 2015?

 3. Most surprising (in a good way or bad way) book you read?  

The Jade Temptress by Jeannie Lin...didn't expect to like a romance set in imperial China.

 4. Book You “Pushed” The Most People To Read (And They Did)?

 Downside Ghosts series by Stacia Kane

 5. Best series you started in 2015? 

Downside Ghosts by Stacia Kane

 6. Favorite new author you discovered in 2015?

 Amy Harmon

7. Best book from a genre you don’t typically read/was out of your comfort zone?

 New to me genre that I'm in total love with is fantasy romance read: Radiance by Grace Draven or Warprize by Elizabeth Vaughn
Or The Martian by Andy Weir

 8. Most action-packed/thrilling/unputdownable book of the year?

 The Martian by Andy Weir. OMG could not get enough!! Not my usual fare at all. The audio book was AMAZEballs.

10. Favorite cover of a book you read in 2015?

 The Law of Moses by Amy Harmon

11. Most memorable character of 2015?

 Terrible from the Downside Ghosts by Stacia Kane. For a character described as hulking and ugly I just couldn't get enough.

12. Most beautifully written book read in 2015?

 Either Making Faces by Amy Harmon or God-Shaped Hole by Tiffanie DeBartolo

13. Most Thought-Provoking/ Life-Changing Book of 2015?

 What Alice Forgot by Liane Moriarty-- probably because it was most relevant to my life, not sure it would be impactful for everyone.

14. Book you can’t believe you waited UNTIL 2015 to finally read? 

Freak the Mighty by Rodman Philbrick. This feels like something I should have read in high school, but somehow I didn't. So moving, so poignant and just...I don't even know. 

16.Shortest & Longest Book You Read In 2015?

Shortest: His Road Home by Anna Richland
Longest: The Land of the Beautiful Dead by R Lee Smith

 17. Book That Shocked You The Most

Slow Surrender by Cecilia Tan in the Struck by Lightening series. I didn't end up liking the series, but the first novella ends on a cliff-hanger and it made me want to punch someone.

18. OTP OF THE YEAR (you will go down with this ship!)

 Definitely Chess and Terrible from the Downside Ghosts...so, so, so good!

19. Favorite Non-Romantic Relationship Of The Year

 Gotta be Earl and Greg from Me, Earl and the Dying Girl by Jesse Andrews

20. Favorite Book You Read in 2015 From An Author You’ve Read Previously

 Reality Boy by A.S. King-- the woman can write. Read and LOVED, LOVED, LOVED Please Excuse Vera Dietz from her last year.

21. Best Book You Read In 2015 That You Read Based SOLELY On A Recommendation From Somebody Else/Peer Pressure:

 I will literally read anything that Jayne from Dear Author recommends...such as Taming the Legend by Kat Latham

22. Newest fictional crush from a book you read in 2015?

 Max Stella from Beautiful Stranger by Christina Lauren. Also, notably one of the hottest initial meeting scenes, maybe ever. Gotta say I love that series.

23. Best 2015 debut you read?

 Didn't read any 2015 debuts...but A Bollywood Affair by Sonali Dev was her debut in 2014 and it was excellent.

24. Best Worldbuilding/Most Vivid Setting You Read This Year?

 Wicked as They Come by Delilah S. Dawson for a very unique spin on an alternate world/reality with vampires who aren't really like vampires. It had a bizarrely awesome Alice in Wonderland vibe.

25. Book That Put A Smile On Your Face/Was The Most FUN To Read?

 Me, Earl and the Dying Girl by Jesse Andrews. (Started in 2015 and finished in 2016, but nothing else was funny this year.)

26. Book That Made You Cry Or Nearly Cry in 2015?

 God Shaped Hole by Tiffanie DeBartolo. You know what will happen going in, but that didn't seem to have any effect on me as I sat there bawling my eyes out at the end!

27. Hidden Gem Of The Year?

 Good Time Bad Boy by Sonya Clark. I have no idea why other people aren't reading this romance the washed-up country music star was like my crack.

28. Book That Crushed Your Soul?

God-Shaped Hole by Tiffanie DeBartolo seriously. She also crushed me with her other book How To Kill A Rockstar. I'd been waiting until this one was released in ebook form from her backlog.

29. Most Unique Book You Read In 2015?

 Beck and Call by Jane Harvey-Berrick. Diary of a male escort-- but there's really nothing sexy about it.
10.  Did you complete any reading challenges or goals that you had set for yourself at the beginning of this year?
I didn't complete my reading challenge on Goodreads for the first time since 2011. I was only at 124 out of 150. It did go back to grad school though, so I'm blaming it on that and I was a little more conservative with my goal for this year. 

1. One Book You Didn’t Get To In 2015 But Will Be Your Number 1 Priority in 2016?

  Six of Crows by Leah Bardugo

2. Book You Are Most Anticipating For 2016 (non-debut)?

 Honestly probably Dirty by Kylie Scott, her Stage Dive books are a lot of fun and I think this new spin off series will be a light and fun read.

 4. Series Ending/A Sequel You Are Most Anticipating in 2016?

 Hidden Legacy Series by Ilona Andrews. Book one Burn for Me was out last year, but the next in the series isn't expected until 2017! Ahh!

5. One Thing You Hope To Accomplish Or Do In Your Reading/Blogging Life In 2016?

Write at least one post every two weeks. 

Review: Struck by Lightening #1-3


Stars: 2.5
Author: Cecilia Tan
Publisher: Hachette Book Group
Genre: Romance/Erotica

As a whole work I'm very unsure how to rate these books. I feel like the first book was maybe a 3.5 star read, but it lacked an ending which certainly knocked it back a star. Then there is the fact that the first book feels like almost a completely different story than the next two, though one does not work without the other two which makes it confusing. The second two books are very, very short, more like novellas which was aggravating since they are the same price. 
Slow Surrender is more like novel length, but it feels like the author just didn't feel like giving the reader the ending because she wanted it to be a trilogy. The trouble then is that the ending isn't provided for the reader until Slow Seduction, but there is a lot that really isn't needed in those last two books and so I feel like the whole thing could just be condensed into one volume and share the reader a lot of trouble and reduce the amount of skimming.

Slow Surrender grabbed my attention because of the very mysterious James who is introduced right away as he asks Karina a question when she waitressing. They immediately begin playing a "game" of seduction. Karina doesn't know the rules, and neither does the reader. That works well and draws the reader into the story. The reader remains in the dark about who James is and his intentions with Karina throughout the entire book. That mystery provides thrilling aspect that makes you want to keep reading. There are definitely obvious clues as to James' true identity, but it is still fun to read about Karina and James' encounters because for the whole first volume it feels like they are virtual strangers becoming more and more intimate without their relationship progressing in any "normal" way.

However, James' true identity was a bit of a deal-breaker, really a jump-the-shark moment for me because it just seemed utterly ridiculous. 

SPOILER!! Seriously, I'm going to spoil it, stop reading.


It turns out that not only is James a rich, reclusive, dominant, and a billionaire  (so I'm totally fine with him up to this point), he is also--- wait for it--- a international rocker star of MYSTERY. I mean that literally, he is this ridiculously well-known rock star (known for his rock operas, of course! you know, like all those rock stars that are known for such things) who has always kept his real identity a secret from his fans by using masks during performances and hiding literally from the press. 

Now, I don't have any problem with the idea of hidden identities or rock stars. In fact, I like both tropes in my romance, but this whole scenario seemed a bit over the top. And I'll tell you why: James is initially presented to the reader as a sort of refined business man type. He's constantly in and out of meetings, and going various places with his driver in his limo, talking on his phone and he's always very, very busy. Classic, billionaire romance hero stuff, you know. THEN we find out that James is also a gifted artist not just a rich guy who asks random waitresses to stick marbles in their panties. In fact, it turns out that his glassworks are re-known in the art community and he has displayed his work at various art shows, also keeping his true artist identity a secret. THEN we find out that James is also very involved in the BDSM scene and is a member of an exclusive and secretive BDSM club where he attends and is a well-known and much coveted dominant.  Finally, we also find out that he is a gifted modern dancer, and performs on stage when in his rock-star persona with other dancers.  **Just a quick insert here-- he practices and performs for his "rock operas" wearing spandex pants and a mid-drift top. Karina of course thinks this is so HAWT. I do not. I think that might actual have been the exact moment that this character was lost to me. I cannot in good conscious believe that a man who has been described as urbane and sophisticated, driving around in a limo in NYC wearing three piece suits would then don a pair of spandex leggings and a belly shirt and prance about on a stage doing modern dance.


I don't know about you but for me James has WAY TOO MANY THINGS GOING ON FOR ONE CHARACTER.  Like WAY too many. He loses all credibility by book three because there is just too much going on. He cannot be amazing at everything and it doesn't even make sense for all of these interests to be combined in one character. In the first book the reader doesn't really know or understand the many facets of James the Amazing Spandex Prancer, but by book three you are blown away by the sheer amount of things happening with him, and not in a good way.

So that whole angle really didn't work for me, and it basically made the books not work for me. 

SPOILER END.

However, what did work for me is the very good writing and excellent portrayal of the BDSM culture. The D/s scenes that James and Karina play out with each other I felt were well-done and pretty stand out for the genre as a whole. I wish actually that this book had focused only on D/s element between the two characters because there is a lot to explore there as Karina experiences being a submissive with James for the very first time. The reader gets to see her go through that as she realizes that she really enjoys it and she is sort of flummoxed abut her feelings. Also, the latter two books briefly, but in my opinion much too superficially, explore Karina's mental state as she wonders if she enjoys being a submissive in general, or if it is just James that gets her going. That would have made a better, more emotionally potent book for me.

The whole thing should be condensed in to one volume and all the other nonsense in James character should be taken out. Tan should also get rid of the whole bit with Karina going to London and almost becoming a submissive at the secret BDSM club, but then doing actually doing it, and go straight to the reconciliation between her and James. If I was editing this book that is what I'd do.