Showing posts with label 4.5 star reviews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 4.5 star reviews. Show all posts

July 22, 2015

Review: The Scandalous Sisterhood of Prickwillow Place by Julie Berry

Title: The Scandalous Sisterhood of Prickwillow Place
Author: Julie Berry
Published: 2014, Roaring Brook Press
Genre: Historical Fiction, Comedy
Audience: Middle Grade
Source: Library
Find it: Goodreads


The seven students of St. Etheldreda’s School for Young Ladies thought that their Sunday dinner was like any other. They expected to eat their poor meal of buttered bread and hot beans while their headmistress and her brother ate veal. But this Sunday does not turn out as expected, as, upon eating the veal, both Mrs. Plackett and Mr. Godding fall to the ground, dead.

The unexpected turn of events has left the girls in an anxious state. Rather than being concerned about the fate of their headmistress and her brother, or even about who would have poisoned them and why, the girls instead worry about their own situations. Once the village of Ely and their parents find out about Mrs. Plackett’s demise, they’re sure to be sent away to their homes or other boarding schools, never to see each other again. So the girls make a pact: they’ll bury Mrs. Plackett and Mr. Godding and find a way to keep the school going with no one the wiser.

To put it simply, The Scandalous Sisterhood of Prickwillow Place is a farce. This is a story of exaggerations and is frequently tongue-in-cheek. The story takes place in Ely, England in 1900 and focuses on the absurdity and hilarity that ensues as seven friends try to cover up their headmistress’ murder. The seven leading ladies of this tale are: Dear Roberta, who is both sweet and genuinely good, Disgraceful Mary Jane, who enjoys the power of seduction, Dour Elinor, who fascinated with all aspects of mortality, Dull Martha, who is a bit slow on the uptake, Pocked Louise, who harbors a love of science, Smooth Kitty, who is the leader of their little band, and Stout Alice, whose heart belongs to the stage.

Underlying improbable situations, however, are some worthwhile messages, including that of sisterhood. As one of the girls points out, none of them have any sisters. The friendships they’ve formed with each other are therefore that much more powerful, that much more important to them. Theirs is a sisterhood formed not simply by blood, but by choice, and it’s one they’re willing to do just about anything to keep intact.

Woven within the farcical elements is a more typical murder mystery story. Who killed Mrs. Plackett? Why? Are the girls themselves in danger? Despite the small town atmosphere that Ely has, Berry has created a story full of red herrings, where nothing is cut and dry, and where each person remains a suspect until the big reveal. The mystery aspect is very well done, and combined with the humor it makes for a very readable, entertaining book.

The Scandalous Sisterhood of Prickwillow Place is a delight to read in novel form, but it is something I could see becoming even stronger if told on the stage. The characters could become more distinct, the humor more pronounced, the wit that much more apparent if made into a play.

As a book, though, it still provides an absolutely memorable reading experience. Berry has created a story that believably pulls together elements of historical fiction, farce, murder mystery, and sisterhood. It’s absolutely worth reading.

Rating:
4.5 stars

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January 28, 2015

Review: The Young Elites by Marie Lu



The Young Elites by Marie Lu
Series: The Young Elites, #1
Published: 2014,
Genre: Young Adult Fantasy
Format: Hardcover
Source: Library



Energy courses through me in relentless waves, feeding me even as I try to ignore the flood of power in my veins. In spite of everything, I feel a strange sense of glee.
All this chaos is of my own creation.



Although she survived the blood fever that crippled her country’s population, Adelina Amouteru is still suffering from its effects. Of everyone who became infected from the plague, only children survived, but their survival came at a price: physical disfigurements that has left them objects of pity and fear, and given them the collective name of Malfettos. Adelina herself is now silver-haired and missing an eye. A byproduct of the disease also gave some Malfettos supernatural powers, and those special Malfettos are referred to as the Young Elites.

The stigma surrounding Malfettos has ensured that they’re now essentially second-class citizens, even within their own families. Adelina has spent most of her life watching her father favor her younger, beautiful sister Violetta, who is everything that Adelina was supposed to be. She’s unwillingly put up with her family until she learns that she’s to be given away as a mistress to an older wealthy man - her status as a Malfetto ensures that she could never be properly married. Deciding that she can no longer bear this treatment, Adelina runs away and eventually finds herself under the protection of the Dagger Society, a small group of Young Elites. From them she learns that she possesses powers beyond reckoning. Enzo Valenciano, the leader of the Dagger Society, is none other than the dethroned heir of the throne, who gives his fellow society members the chance to retaliate against all those who have wronged them in the past.
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December 12, 2014

Review: Doll Bones by Holly Black



Doll Bones by Holly Black
Published: 2013, Margaret K. McElderry Books
Genre: Middle Grade Fantasy
Source: Library


It made him feel, for a moment, like maybe no stories were lies… Maybe all stories were true ones.


Although at twelve years old friends Poppy, Alice, and Zach are now past the age where they should be playing with action figure toys, none of them is quite ready to give up their games. For Poppy, their games give her some love and attention lacking in her home life. For orphaned Alice, their games allow her to escape the strict rules that come with living with her grandmother. And for Zach, playing with Poppy and Alice has always been an important part of his life. They’ve constructed elaborate tales around their toys and created fantastical worlds.

One day, however, Zach’s father throws all of Zach’s toys away, deciding that it’s past time for his son to stop playing with them. Heartbroken, Zach refuses to play with new toys, and also chooses to keep the truth from Poppy and Alice, instead saying that he’s simply no longer interested in playing anymore. Not only their game, but their friendship itself is at stake when Poppy reveals she’s been receiving dreams from the Queen, a china doll kept locked away in her family’s cabinet. The Queen apparently contains the ashes of a murdered girl, who asks that they be laid to rest.

And so, for the first time in their years of friendship and playing fantastical games, Poppy, Alice, and Zach embark on a real quest.
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August 28, 2014

Review: Lies We Tell Ourselves by Robin Talley



Lies We Tell Ourselves by Robin Talley
Published: September 30, 2014, Harlequin Teen
Genre: Young Adult Historical Fiction, LGBT
Source: Publisher via Netgalley


I can’t shake the feeling someone’s been lying to me all along. Because they don’t think I’m smart enough to understand the truth.
I’ve had enough.
It’s time I figured out the truth for myself.


Along with a few other students considered to be the crème de la crème of Johns, the all-black high school for Davisburg, Virginia, Sarah Dunbar is enrolled to attend her senior year at Jefferson, the previously all-white high school. No one thought that school integration would be easy, as the white people of Davisburg have spent five years fighting against the Supreme Court’s desegregation laws. Sarah, her younger sister Ruth, and a few of their friends know that desegregation is going to be tough and potentially dangerous, but that knowledge doesn’t prevent them from supporting the NAACP’s cause, and fighting for the right to be a part of the first school integration in Virginia.

But there’s a big difference between taking a stance on an issue on a theoretical basis and then enduring the consequences of that stance on a very real level.

Among the more vocal of the desegregation opponents is the editor of the town’s local newspaper, who happens to be the father of Linda Hairston, a senior of Jefferson High. Linda knows that integration is wrong, because that’s all she’s been told her entire life. And nothing in her life thus far has forced her to think otherwise.

But witnessing the atrocities that the black students endure from her fellow classmates and becoming acquainted with Sarah makes Linda begin to question her firmly entrenched beliefs.
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June 9, 2014

Review: Something Real by Heather Demetrios


Something Real by Heather Demetrios
Published: 2014, Henry Holt and Company
Genre: Young Adult Contemporary
Source: Library

I’m sitting here on the Kaye Gibbons Show, and all I can think is that the whole country is sick. Sick with this idea that it’s good to be known and seen by as many people as possible, to show every part of our lives to the public at large. Whether it’s Facebook photos, blogs, or reality TV, it’s like nobody is content to just live life. The worth of our existence seems to be measured in pixels and megabytes and “likes.” Those of us whose lives can be downloaded seem to have the most value--until someone more outrageous comes along to claim their time in the spotlight.




Everyone in the United States was able to witness the first thirteen years of Bonnie Baker’s life, from her birth until the reality television show starring her family was cancelled. Adjusting to a normal life over the past four years - one without instant recognition or constant cameras - hasn’t been easy, but Bonnie (who has rechristened herself as Chloe) is finally getting to the point where she can let the demons of her childhood go. She’s a senior at a public high school now and may not have any idea of what she wants to do next, but at least she gets to choose (without tens of thousands of people watching her).

But then her mother and stepfather throw a completely unexpected curveball in Chloe’s direction: they’re starting the show up once more. Providing for thirteen children is more than they can manage on their own, and everyone seems eager to be part of America’s most-liked family once more. Everyone except for Chloe. She has two best friends and a crush who looks like he may become something more very soon, and she is determined to prevent the show from ruining everything good in her life.
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May 13, 2014

Review: “Night of Cake & Puppets” by Laini Taylor



“Night of Cake & Puppets” by Laini Taylor
Series: Daughter of Smoke & Bone, #2.5
Published: 2013, Little, Brown Books for Young Readers
Genre: Young Adult Fantasy
Source: Purchased
Contains spoilers for Daughter of Smoke & Bone (my review), Days of Blood & Starlight (my review)

And...it’s like all my life I’ve been this tower standing at the edge of the ocean for some obscure purpose, and only now, almost eighteen years in, has someone thought to flip the switch that reveals that I’m not a tower at all. I’m a lighthouse. It’s like waking up. I am incandescent.


“Night of Cake & Puppets” is a purely delightful novella. The few novellas I have read, coupled with the many reviews I’ve seen for those I haven’t read myself, have convinced that the in-between novellas trend currently so popular among young adult series is not really for me.

If an author writes an in-between novella for a series, there are a couple of criteria that must be met in order for me to be a satisfied reader. I don’t want to read about novellas that simply rehash events that already took place within the series proper from another perspective. Neither do I want to read novellas that are so new that readers who chose not to read this “supplemental” material feel lost in comparison to those who did. Essentially, the novella should function on some level as its own work, much like I expect individual novels within the series to do. It should be its own work, but pay homage to the series proper and tie together elements, while also expanding my understanding of the world/characters/general plot.

And I’ll be damned if Laini Taylor doesn’t check all these buttons and then some in “Night of Cake & Puppets.”

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March 11, 2014

Review: The Strange and Beautiful Sorrows of Ava Lavender by Leslye Walton



The Strange and Beautiful Sorrows of Ava Lavender by Leslye Walton
Published: March 25, 2014, Candlewick Press
Genre: Young Adult Historical Fantasy, Magical Realism
Source: From publisher via Netgalley
Goodreads · Amazon · Barnes & Noble

I've been told things happen as they should: My grandmother fell in love three times before her nineteenth birthday. My mother found love with the neighbor boy when she was six. And I, I was born with wings, a misfit who didn't dare to expect something as grandiose as love. It’s our fate, our destiny, that determines such things, isn't it?
Perhaps that was just something I told myself. Because what else was there for me – a misfit, an untouchable, an outsider?
What could I say when I was alone at night and the shadows came? How else could I calm the thud of my beating heart but with the words: This is my fate. What else was there to do but blindly follow its path?


What drew me to this book was the promise of a story filled with magical realism. After reading works by some of its greatest contributors (Isabel Allende, Jorge Luis Borges, and Gabriel García Márquez, to name a few), I’ve become quite fond of this literary subgenre. The magical realism genre is most commonly associated with Latin American literature, and that’s how I’ve come to associate it. It was with no small degree of excitement and trepidation, therefore, that I set out to read Walton’s debut.

Fortunately, I can attest to the fact that The Strange and Beautiful Sorrows of Ava Lavender is a quiet, beautifully wrought tale and that does justice to the magical realism genre and also adds a historical United States perspective.

Ava Lavender is born with a pair of wings attached to her shoulder blades. The doctors inform her mother and grandmother that it would be difficult, if not impossible, to remove the infant’s wings, as they are fully attached to her body, veins, tendons, muscles, and all. And so Ava and her twin brother Henry are taken home to live a sheltered childhood with their mother Viviane, their grandmother Emilienne, and family friend Gabe in Seattle during the mid-1900s. But as strange as the circumstances surrounding Ava’s birth may be, they are only a small part of the peculiarities that surround her family.


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March 7, 2014

Review: The Lies of Locke Lamora by Scott Lynch



The Lies of Locke Lamora by Scott Lynch
Series: Gentleman Bastard, #1
Published: 2006, Bantam Spectra
Genre: Adult Fantasy
Source: Purchased
Goodreads · Amazon · Barnes & Noble

“Some day, Locke Lamora,” he said, “some day, you’re going to fuck up so magnificently, so ambitiously, so overwhelmingly that the sky will light up and the moons will spin and the gods themselves will shit comets with glee. And I just hope I’m still around to see it.”
“Oh please,” said Locke. “It’ll never happen.” 


I’ve resisted writing a review of this book for nearly a month. Yes: resisted. It’s time I own up to that fact. It’s easy enough to say that other things - that life - got in the way of me recording my thoughts on this book, but that’s not entirely true. It’s just that I lack the words to properly describe my experience reading this book. At first it was a bit of a struggle to read. I liked it well enough, but was having trouble connecting to both the plot and the characters, which made this already-hefty book feel even longer. Then the second half of this novel hit and, while I still wasn’t reading it very quickly, I found myself savoring each and every detail. And now I still can’t get this story and these characters out of my head. Yes, The Lies of Locke Lamora was well worth the time it took for me to get fully invested in it.

As a child, Locke Lamora was one of the few lucky survivors of the Black Whisper, a plague that decimated his childhood district in the city of Camorr. Few options are available to children orphaned as he is, none too pleasant. But the seven-year-old Locke takes fate into his own hands by sneaking along with the children conscripted by the Thiefmaker, a petty criminal who lives in the city’s graveyard Shades’ Hill. He takes boys and girls to be his eyes, ears, and hands in the city of Camorr. Although he allows Locke to stow away with him and become part of his “family,” the Thiefmaker gets more than he bargained for, for Locke proves not only to be extremely adept at thievery, but puts their entire enterprise at risk with his outlandish schemes.


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