Wow. Just wow.
I really do not know what other words I can use to put across how much I loved this book. I am honestly struggling to write something that isn't just "asdfghjkl".
Maybe, I should just start at the beginning...
When I first picked this book up I was a bit sceptical because of the hype that surrounded it. I was scared more than anything that I wouldn't enjoy it as much as it seems a lot of people did. I think that is part of the reason I put it off for so long (it may have also had something to do with the ever growing TBR pile I have). As soon as I picked this book up though I questioned myself so much.
I loved the idea behind this book too. I loved that it was a Beauty and the Beast retelling, especially seen as Beauty and the Beast is one of my favourite stories of all time. It was such a good and different retelling. It was never something I would have expected and I loved every minute of it. It may have started as a retelling but this book truly has its own life.
Ok, so the story goes. Feyre is a simple young girl whose family are poor. Feyre provides most of the food for the family by hunting and while on this hunting trip she kills a fairy in wolf form. This forces a series of events to unravel which ends with Feyre being whisked away to live in the fairy lands. There Feyre has to settle into her new life and along the way finds out secrets about the place she is living in.
I think my favourite character in this book was Lucien. When we first meet Lucien he is very stand-offish with Feyre which is understandable considering she just killed a friend of his. Slowly though you begin to see more of Lucien and his personality. He turns out to be a great friend. He is wary when it comes to conflict but isn't afraid to face it head on either. He is very protective of those he cares about and would do anything to help them in some way even if he has to face the consequences himself. I love the relationship that Lucien and Feyre have, even if there is still some work to be done with their budding friendship.
I also loved Feyre as the main character. She is this totally independent, strong-willed character that would go to the ends of the earth for those she loves (almost literally). She also doesn't take no for an answer. I think the reason I like Feyre so much is because in most YA books the lead female always seems to be dying for any form of attention from the male lead whereas Feyre didn't want to have feelings for Tamlin, she didn't really want anything to do with him at all in the beginning but she grew to care for him and want to look out for him as much as he was looking out for her.
There are so many points in this book that I could talk about, things that I could reference or compare to Beauty and the Beast. I could go on and on forever about how great I think the storyline is or how amazing the writing is but I really believe it is something you need to experience. This book really is just an experience.
So my final words on this book are these, if you haven't already read this book then I highly recommend that you do. You really are missing out. If you have read this book then you know what I mean.
I am now off to pick up A Court Of Mist And Fury because I need more of this world in my life.
Monday, 28 November 2016
Monday, 21 November 2016
Initiate by Laura L. Fox
I thoroughly enjoyed this book. It was released on November 15th but I was lucky enough to get my hands on an early copy from the publisher.
Initiate is the debut novel for author Laura L. Fox and is also the first book in The D'Andari'i Cycle.
The plot of Initiate surrounds Riga Garrison. Riga is a teenager who has lived her whole life in an underground research facility in the middle of the Antarctic known as the "Tunnel". Life for Riga seems normal enough, she goes to school, hangs out with her friends and doesn't have the best relationship with her mother. There is more to life in the Tunnel than Riga first believes however. Riga's life is turned upside down by the discovery of an animal that she believe has been extinct for a number of years. This puts Riga on a course to discovering secrets kept from her whole community and leaves her facing exile to the unknown wasteland on the surface.
I loved the setting of this book. It's rare to find a book that totally encompasses a setting like Antarctica. Laura L. Fox did a beautiful job at combining the senses to fit the setting. I love how she added colour to the world using blues, greens and whites as well continuously mentioning the cold and the ice that surrounded the characters. It was such a different way to get the reader totally invested in the world.
This was definitely a great introduction to the world that Fox has created. She has the excitement and the emotional investment already with this story and I for one cannot wait to see where this story goes next. I want to find out the truth to more secrets with Riga as she discovers the new world she has found herself in.
This is a book that I would definitely pick up again and I am excited to see what Fox brings us next.
Thursday, 29 September 2016
Lumberjanes Volume 1: Beware the Kitten Holy
I have never read a comic/graphic novel quite like Lumberjanes. It is truly an adventure.
The girls that this story is centred around are not the typical kind of girls that you get in books. These girls are all so totally different but all with one thing in common, they love a good adventure.
I seriously could not put this volume down and the second I finished it I was tempted to go and get the next one right then. The combination of the mystery and adventure, and the fun, only made for an amazing read that makes you want to be friends with five lumberjanes just so that you can get in on the action too.
On top of the amazing story, the artwork for this particular comic is crazy good. It captures the essence of scout camps while also having more excitement added into it. The layout of it being the Lumberjane handbook is such a good idea and with each chapter being a different badge just makes you become more involved in the story than you already would be. I like the use of photographs of the girls that they seem to have stuck in their guide book because it adds to the essence of them being away from home and looking for somewhere to store their memorable moments.
I honestly cannot wait to get my hands on the next volume and see where this story and these characters go next. I just wish I could get my hands on it right now like it could materialise right into my lap.
Friday, 5 August 2016
The Lightning Thief by Rick Riordan (Percy Jackson and the Olympians)
Percy Jackson is such a great narrator in this book. He is a typical 12 year old boy who is labeled a troublemaker. He is funny and quirky and happy to find a place and people who finally accept him for who he is. Having a brother who is only a year and a half younger than Percy I could fully picture his character when I was reading. I loved the way that Percy described everything that was going on and all of the people he was meeting.
The events that occurred in this book was so gripping but full of funny little comments that made you laugh along the way. The Greek Gods that the trio of adventurers met along their journey were described in such detail and with such wit that really allows you to picture these powerful characters in your mind when you are reading.
I did begin to notice the differences towards the end of the book between it and the film. There was other differences all throughout but it became more noticeable towards the end. The most noticeable part was the way that Percy found out that Luke was the friend who would betray him.
Overall I enjoyed this book. It was a fun, light-hearted read that I would recommend to anyone who is looking for something entertaining but not overly serious.
Sunday, 10 July 2016
Zenith by Sasha Alsberg and Lindsay Cummings
I could not for the life of me put my kindle down while reading this. I read it in a day because of the length of it but the second I finished it I wanted the second part. The cover art of this book is also incredible and really does suit the story.
The story is centred around Andi who is a space pirate who is on the run from the government. She is known by many as the 'Bloody Baroness' and 'one of the most notorious criminals in all of Mirabel' but has more than one level to her personality. She cares about her crew who are both her comrades and her family. It really is something totally different to a lot of Sci-fi adventures, especially with it being split up into different parts. This part is a great introduction to what is to come and also to the characters that are to be involved in the coming adventures.
The reason I picked up this book was really based on the fact that Sasha Alsberg (abookutopia on YouTube) was co-writing it. Lindsay Cummings is also an incredible author so my anticipation for this book was very high.
I really did enjoy this the story and I am not only saying that because of who it is written by. You would never know that this book was written by two people because the whole story flows so seamlessly together. Sasha and Lindsay really should be proud of this first installment of their story.
The story is centred around Andi who is a space pirate who is on the run from the government. She is known by many as the 'Bloody Baroness' and 'one of the most notorious criminals in all of Mirabel' but has more than one level to her personality. She cares about her crew who are both her comrades and her family. It really is something totally different to a lot of Sci-fi adventures, especially with it being split up into different parts. This part is a great introduction to what is to come and also to the characters that are to be involved in the coming adventures.
The reason I picked up this book was really based on the fact that Sasha Alsberg (abookutopia on YouTube) was co-writing it. Lindsay Cummings is also an incredible author so my anticipation for this book was very high.
I really did enjoy this the story and I am not only saying that because of who it is written by. You would never know that this book was written by two people because the whole story flows so seamlessly together. Sasha and Lindsay really should be proud of this first installment of their story.
Me Before You by Jojo Moyes
Ok, so the story begins with one of the main characters, Louisa Clarke, losing her job. Now, a little back story on Louisa.She was working in a little café in the small town she lives in. This small town is her whole life, it's where she was born, grew up and lives as an adult. She still lives with her parents in their small four bedroom house on a council estate. She was in a long-term relationship with a guy she wasn't entirely sure she was in love with and unbeknown to her, she was stuck. She is then offered a job as a carer for quadriplegic Will Traynor. Will was the complete opposite to Louisa. He was a well-off businessman who basically had everything he could ever have wanted until his accident left him paralyzed.
The pair bicker and moan about everything the other does until eventually they realise that they are bonding. The begin to discuss current events and books and films and music. They are the perfect combination of friends and two people who are slowly and unknowingly falling in love.
Alongside the love story there is a lot of controversial topics in this book. The main one being assisted suicide. I am not looking to get into a long debate about the pros and cons of the whole thing but I do believe it was portrayed beautifully in this novel. That sounds crazy I know but it is true. It showed the mental state of someone who is debating the scenario and that even for them it is not an easy decision to make.
Like I said at the beginning this book is one that I would recommend to anyone. It is funny, witty, beautiful and amazingly written. I would like to state though this book does require a large amount of tissues towards the end. I will definitely be picking up After You, the sequel to this book just to see the aftermath of the things that took places in this book.
Wednesday, 8 June 2016
The Accident Season by Moïra Fowley-Doyle
The accident season is set in Ireland during October, just before Halloween. It is centred around a family and some of their close friends as they navigate their way through what they call The Accident Season. This is when, in the month of October, every year they are more accident prone than usual and their accidents are more serious than they are throughout the rest of the year.
This particular accident season is predicted by Bea, the witchy best friend of the accident prone family, to be the worst one yet. In the past there were deaths of close family members along with many serious injuries to those who survived but the one that the characters experience in the book is meant to be worse.
The book on a whole is full of mystery and secrets. The characters are all hiding things from one another and are all trying to solve the mystery that is the accident season. The story is full of twists and turns and questions which get answered in the final few chapters of the book.
Overall I found that this book was very easy to read and the story was very interesting. It did lack excitement in some areas but it definitely made up for it in others. Moïra Fowley-Doyle is amazing at describing the characters' surrounding to the point where you lose yourself in it. You really do seem to get lost in this book, in more ways than one, but I think that adds to the mystery and atmosphere that the book creates.
I was able to guess a lot of the twists in this book but that may be because it reminded me of We Were Liars by E. Lockhart. The secrets and the deceit were all very similar but I didn't mind that. It was good to see how two authors can write about two different plots, both containing accidents, and weave similar twists into them but still allowing the book to be unique in its own right, such as the fantasy element that Cara brought into the world of chaos that she was living in.
I did enjoy this book and loved how Moïra described and explained things. I think this is a book that I could read again too because of all the different elements. I could probably pick up more of the smaller details in the book now knowing all of the aspects of the story.
Thursday, 2 June 2016
The Sin Eater's Daughter by Melinda Salisbury
The Sin Eater's Daughter is not a book I had heard anything about when I picked it up. It was almost a relief having heard nothing about it because it meant that this was a book I was going into with an open mind.
When I first picked up this book I was very intrigued about the story. It is about a girl who is taken to live in the palace under the persona of the reincarnated daughter of two Gods that are worshiped in this particular kingdom. Under this persona, which she herself believes to be true, she becomes the personal assassin of the Queen for those who commit treason. There is one twist to her assassinations though, she kills them simply by touching them... or so she believes. The book follows Twylla as she learns the truth about the Queen, her true intentions and the truth about herself and her abilities.
Before being taken into the palace however, she was the Sin Eater's Daughter (hence the name of the book). The Sin Eater is a woman who comes to eat away all of the sins of a deceased person. The sins are represented by different foods that the Sin Eater must consume in order for the deceased to "move on to the next world". Being the Sin Eater's Daughter has some set backs for Twylla as she automatically associates certain foods with the sins they represent.
The story also tells a love story. Throughout the book Twylla slowly falls in love with her new guard who knows secrets about Twylla that not even she knows. The love story is quite cliched in a way that Twylla does not seem to like her new guard at all until something happens and she begins to realise he is not as bad as he seems. That is until the concluding action when Twylla discovers the truth behind his actions and the betrayal of her trust.
With their being almost two parts to this story it is quite difficult to understand and follow on occasion. The stories never truly seemed to merge until the last few chapters when the story began to pick up a bit. There also seemed to be a fair amount of information that wasn't all that necessary when it came to telling the story. That being said the book was incredibly well written and Melinda Salisbury did a really good job with the creation of this world and the characters in it. I will definitely be picking up the next book to this one just to find out where Melinda takes the story and the characters next.
Lady Midnight by Cassandra Clare
This book is phenomenal! I thought the other books in this world were good when I read them but this one takes it to a whole knew level.
From the very start of this book we are thrust into the world of Shadowhunters and Demons and Warlocks and Werewolves and Vampires...the list goes on. The action is introduced right from the beginning and continues all the way to the end. Lady Midnight is full of mystery, romance, fighting and lots and lots of plot twists.
I loved getting to know all of the characters that were introduced in City of Heavenly Fire in more depth and getting to see how the Dark War really effected them.
I thought that it was really interesting to see the way that Julian had adopted the role of their father. I liked how it wasn't an immediate thing, that it developed over time with him knowing that they needed someone who would look after them like that. I love the different relationships he has with each of his siblings and how well he knows each of them individually. I also loved to read about how much he adored them.
I loved learning more about Emma too. It was interesting to see how the death of her parents fueled everything that she did. It fueled her desire for revenge and it fueled how deeply she cared for the Blackthorns. It also fueled her impulsiveness and her carelessness, much like Jace from The Mortal Instruments series. The deaths of her parents, along with the events of the Dark War, very much shaped her into this kick-ass Shadowhunter.
It was good to get to know the rest of the Blackthorn children better too. They were all so young during City of Heavenly Fire that they were almost pushed to the side a little. None of them were old enough to fight or fully understand what was going on so nobody really considered how everything would effect them. Now they are all older and three of them are teenagers they understand everything better.
I think the Blackthorn who the war has most noticeably effected is Tavvy. Though he was only two years old during the war, and his siblings tried to hide it from him the best that they could, he still wakes up, five years later, having nightmares of it. He doesn't seem to understand a lot of what is going on around him but I think that is from his siblings still treating him as the child he was during the war. I think this is most noticeable when he solved the Lady Midnight riddle with his children's book. It was never something that crossed the minds of the older children so it was not something they thought to check.
The main premise of this book is the hunt to discover a murderer but in the background Emma is also searching for the person who killed her parents. Her parents were believed to have been killed by Sebastian Morgenstern during the Dark War but Emma has never believed that story. She knew that something more sinister had happened to her parents. As it turns out she was right. At the end of the book when the young group of Shadowhunters tracks down the murderer, they also unknowingly track down Emma's parents' killer. While confronting the killer, Emma learns that her parents deaths were the result of a failed experiment to see if a spell worked. If anything this left Emma feeling more heartbroken than ever. Her parents deaths had been the result of being in the wrong place at the wrong time.
Another underlying story is that of Mark Blackthorn, the half-faerie, half-shadowhunter boy. At the beginning of City of Heavenly Fire Mark Blackthorn is taken by Faerie and forced to become part of the Wild Hunt. At the beginning of this book, Mark is given back to his family to help them with their investigations of the killings. All the way through the book Mark struggles to readjust to the Shadowhunter world. He cannot decide if he truly belongs with his family of Shadowhunters or with the Faeries of the Wild Hunt. He is pressure by both sides to be part of their world and both sides have things that he wants. Through the whole book Mark refuses to have ruins put upon him but when he finally decides that he is a Shadowhunter he asks Julian to give them to him for the sake of saving Tavvy.
Not only do I love the world that Cassandra Clare has created with The Shadowhunter Chronicles but I love how she incorporates certain topics into her books without making them an issue. She has written about different sexual orientations all the way through the chronicles but in this book I noticed that she added in a little part about mental illness and learning difficulties. She wrote about how those who had them were treated differently than everyone else for it and how it was just that little bit harder for them to do things. They are very much ignored by the Clave and their families feel that it is necessary to protect them from the names and the humiliation they could face if their differences are discovered. I like the way Cassie described it and explained it with relevance to the story she was telling. She wrote in a way that drew your attention to it but also did not take you away from the story.
Also, the story at the end with all of the original characters in it absolutely made my day. I am so happy that Cassie added in an extra little bit to allow readers to find out what happened with all of the characters after the Dark War and after the stories in the Tales of the Shadowhunter Academy. It was good to know that they were all happy and enjoying life together with minimal disturbances.
This book well and truly left me with a book hangover. I never wanted the story to end and as soon as it did I just wanted to have the next book in my hands ready to continue on. This book hangover has now turned into a book slump to the point where nothing I read seems to keep my attention. I guess that is just the sign of a good book and an even better writer to leave you longing after characters after you have turned the last page.
Tuesday, 23 February 2016
Peter Pan by JM Barrie
How pretty is this cover?!?! I love it so much!!
The story in this book is one that I have grown up loving. I have seen every film adaptation and even the stage show. The only problem is I have never actually read JM Barrie's book. The only Peter Pan book I have read is the Disney one and I was about 5 or 6 when I read that. I thought it was about time that I read the original version of the story and I have to say, it was a good decision.
If you don't know the story of Peter Pan then 1. have you been living under a rock?! and 2. it is about a boy called Peter, his fairy friend Tinker Bell and the Darling children. There is one thing that is different about Peter though, he never grows up. Peter lives in Neverland. Neverland is a land of magic. It is full of Fairies, Pirates, Indians and some magical creatures. Most children only go there in there dreams but one night Peter takes the three Darling children there. That one simple act is the basis for the most amazing adventure any child could wish for.
This book had me hooked, no pun intended, from the first line. This line is simply "All children, except one, grow up." I love the concept of Peter never growing up and keeping his innocence forever. I know that in a way it is quite sad that he will never get to experience the world in all of the new ways that everyone else will but in a lot of ways it is amazing. He will forever get to play make-believe and have fun in ways that would only make people call you childish.
I think that everyone goes through a stage where they want to be Peter Pan. Where they want to live in a world with fairies and mermaids and crazy pirates who are scared of a crocodile who ticks like a clock. Where they want to run around all day having crazy adventures with their friends and for someone to tell them a bedtime story every night. I know I went through that stage. Peter Pan though, I think, is supposed to represent your childhood. Peter is innocent and care-free and loves nothing more than going on an adventure, much like a child.
I also know that Wendy is meant to represent something too. Wendy knows that she cannot stay in Neverland with Peter forever because she has a life and her family to get back to. She knows that there is more to learn about the world and that she is expected to grow up one day. She knows that one day she is supposed to fall in love and have her own family. She also knows that one day her time with Peter Pan will be nothing but a distant memory while for her own children it could be just beginning. What Wendy represents, or so I have come to discover, is a stage of acceptance. That acceptance is that you will have to grow up one day. cannot possible be a child forever no matter how much you wish it and one day you will eventually have to grow up.
With these two representations being stated, I found that when Wendy leaves Neverland and Peter at the window she is really saying goodbye to her childhood. She has realised that although she may wish to be a child forever she knows she cannot. She promises Peter that she will never grow up and in a way this may be true. She may be grown on the outside but on the inside she is still the same little girl that went on the adventure through Neverland with the boy who plagued her dreams.
The ending of this book is both heart-breaking and wonderful. Though it could have been different I do think it is one that is worthy of such a brilliant story. In a way it is almost like JM Barrie himself is saying to you that each generation should get their chance to meet Peter and put themselves in the adventures that he has on Neverland.
JM Barrie really did know how to bring a story to life. His words were written so wonderfully that they still touch the lives of so many children. and adults, almost 80 years after his death. The way he brings the characters to life is tremendous. You can really picture them and their adventures in ways that are special in their own way. I can only dream of being able to tell a story the way he could and for it to have such an impact on the lives of so many. This book really did not disappoint me in any way, if anything is surpassed my expectations of it. The tale of Peter Pan truly has a special place in my heart and I think it always will. It is the kind of story that you share with your children in the hope that they will love it just as much as you.
I do believe in fairies, I do, I do... I also believe in Peter Pan.
The story in this book is one that I have grown up loving. I have seen every film adaptation and even the stage show. The only problem is I have never actually read JM Barrie's book. The only Peter Pan book I have read is the Disney one and I was about 5 or 6 when I read that. I thought it was about time that I read the original version of the story and I have to say, it was a good decision.
If you don't know the story of Peter Pan then 1. have you been living under a rock?! and 2. it is about a boy called Peter, his fairy friend Tinker Bell and the Darling children. There is one thing that is different about Peter though, he never grows up. Peter lives in Neverland. Neverland is a land of magic. It is full of Fairies, Pirates, Indians and some magical creatures. Most children only go there in there dreams but one night Peter takes the three Darling children there. That one simple act is the basis for the most amazing adventure any child could wish for.
This book had me hooked, no pun intended, from the first line. This line is simply "All children, except one, grow up." I love the concept of Peter never growing up and keeping his innocence forever. I know that in a way it is quite sad that he will never get to experience the world in all of the new ways that everyone else will but in a lot of ways it is amazing. He will forever get to play make-believe and have fun in ways that would only make people call you childish.
I think that everyone goes through a stage where they want to be Peter Pan. Where they want to live in a world with fairies and mermaids and crazy pirates who are scared of a crocodile who ticks like a clock. Where they want to run around all day having crazy adventures with their friends and for someone to tell them a bedtime story every night. I know I went through that stage. Peter Pan though, I think, is supposed to represent your childhood. Peter is innocent and care-free and loves nothing more than going on an adventure, much like a child.
I also know that Wendy is meant to represent something too. Wendy knows that she cannot stay in Neverland with Peter forever because she has a life and her family to get back to. She knows that there is more to learn about the world and that she is expected to grow up one day. She knows that one day she is supposed to fall in love and have her own family. She also knows that one day her time with Peter Pan will be nothing but a distant memory while for her own children it could be just beginning. What Wendy represents, or so I have come to discover, is a stage of acceptance. That acceptance is that you will have to grow up one day. cannot possible be a child forever no matter how much you wish it and one day you will eventually have to grow up.
With these two representations being stated, I found that when Wendy leaves Neverland and Peter at the window she is really saying goodbye to her childhood. She has realised that although she may wish to be a child forever she knows she cannot. She promises Peter that she will never grow up and in a way this may be true. She may be grown on the outside but on the inside she is still the same little girl that went on the adventure through Neverland with the boy who plagued her dreams.
The ending of this book is both heart-breaking and wonderful. Though it could have been different I do think it is one that is worthy of such a brilliant story. In a way it is almost like JM Barrie himself is saying to you that each generation should get their chance to meet Peter and put themselves in the adventures that he has on Neverland.
JM Barrie really did know how to bring a story to life. His words were written so wonderfully that they still touch the lives of so many children. and adults, almost 80 years after his death. The way he brings the characters to life is tremendous. You can really picture them and their adventures in ways that are special in their own way. I can only dream of being able to tell a story the way he could and for it to have such an impact on the lives of so many. This book really did not disappoint me in any way, if anything is surpassed my expectations of it. The tale of Peter Pan truly has a special place in my heart and I think it always will. It is the kind of story that you share with your children in the hope that they will love it just as much as you.
I do believe in fairies, I do, I do... I also believe in Peter Pan.
Sunday, 14 February 2016
The DUFF: Designated Ugly Fat Friend by Kody Keplinger
Both the book and the film are centred around 17 year old Bianca Piper and her struggles involved in her being labelled as the DUFF. While the film focuses on Bianca trying to solve the problems in her love life, the book is different. Bianca's love life does play a large role in the book but it also involves her issues at home and with her friends. In the book Bianca is characterised as a teenager better than in the film. The book allows her to go through more teenage issues that can be related to on a broad scale.
While reading this book I noticed a few topics that it brought up were ones that I had never really taken the time to think about.
One of the topics that this book brought up was labels. Specifically labels given to teenagers in high school. This book made me realise that everyone is given a label no matter how hard you try to run from it. Nowadays the labels given to people when they are in high school are getting more and more creative and are also getting a lot more personal. This book though helped me to realise that you don't need to let these labels define who you are. I know that this is easier said than done and sometimes it doesn't work but trust me, they don't all last forever. The only way you can stop seeing yourself as the label that others have given you is to stop seeing others as the labels they have been given.
Another topic that came up was distracting yourself from your problems. This is the topic that I related to most in the book. It made me realise just how often that I did things as a distraction from my real problem. I have allowed problems to get continually worse until I cannot avoid them anymore. This is something that Bianca goes through in the book. She continually uses Wesley to keep her mind off of the problems with her parents and her friends until she can no longer avoid the problems.
Overall I enjoyed this book. I liked how Kody Keplinger was able to make readers laugh and think at the same time. I liked her writing style and her characters and would love to pick up another of her books.
Monday, 1 February 2016
The Maze Runner Series by James Dashner
I want to start this off by saying WOW!!
From the minute I picked up these books I knew I was never going to be able to put them down. This world, this crazy fast-paced world, is one that I could not get enough of. The ending of every book left me both speechless and wanting more all at the same time. I am sad to say that the only reason I picked up these books was because of the films being released and not because I discovered them on my own. I am glad that I did find them though, no matter how or why it may have happened.
Book one was the one that captured my love for the series. The characters were all so authentic and made me wish that I could be a part of their world just for a minute so that I had the chance to meet them.
In a way I didn't need to be a part of their world though, I felt like I knew them and what they were like just from the words on the page. The language that they used took me some time to get my head around but after a few chapters it didn't matter what words they were using because I knew what they were saying. I understood their language and the way that they lived and the feelings that they had. I became a part of the group of people who were fighting for their lives everyday with the hope that there was something better on the other side of the crazy maze that they lived inside.
What I liked most about it all was that the relationships between the Gladers were ones that you make in everyday life, their bonds were just stronger because of the madness they were going through. The plot of the book was so different than most dystopian novels too. Yes, there was drama and yes, it was a survival story but it was such a different take on the whole thing. I loved how fast-paced the action was and loved that with every turn of the page there was something different going on.
Book two was a continuation of the first book. I started where the first left-off and so did the action. From the replacement of people in the group to the addition of a new group all trucked into a new environment, the book was action packed.
While this book introduced new characters and allowed you to get to know them, it also allowed you to better understand the existing characters. It allowed you to see how they would react in different situations. It was almost like you were WICKED and were watching this new experiment play out.
Overall the second book was a great sequel but I did feel that it was dragged out in places. Dragged out may be the wrong term to use because I felt that the information was all relevant and helped with the storyline but after beginning with so much action and ending with so much action, the middle seemed to be lacking something. That is not to say that I did not enjoy the book, I did, I just felt like there was something missing when compared with the first book in the series.
The third book was by far my favourite. The Death Cure was packed with everything that the other two books had and more. The plot of this book was to put an end to the experiments that the characters were going through. Somehow James Dashner was able to slip more emotion into this book than the others. The action seemed to be endless and the emotion seemed to be real. I could not put this book down. This book actually left me in a state of depression when it finally ended. This was not because of the ending itself but simple because it was the end. It was the end of Thomas' story and I wasn't ready to let him go yet. I sat on my couch in my living room just holding the book to my chest in a state of numbness. I tried re-reading the last few pages again and again but each time just seemed to make it worse instead of better. I was so bad that my mum even told me to put the book down and stop reading it.
Once I finished these three books and recovered from them ending, I decided to pick up the Prequel. The Kill Order tells the story of Mark and his comrades dealing with the beginning of the disease that Thomas and his friends are experiments to find a cure for. This book took me the longest to read. It was not as action filled as the others due to it being more of background on the Flare and how it came to be in the first place. I didn't feel that it was as good as the others but I would still give it a 3/5 stars.
The parts of this book that got me the most were the prologue and the epilogue. The prologue is from Teresa's point of view as she prepares to sends Thomas into the maze. It shows how she really felt about him and what they were doing. It made me realise how much he really meant to her and it made me forgive her for awful decisions she made in the trilogy. The epilogue is from Thomas' mother's perspective. It is the few moments that surround the time that Thomas was taken by WICKED. It shows that his mother gave him to them because she had caught the Flare and she knew that he could do great things to save other people from the fate that she was facing. It also explained how he got his name, Thomas was not his name when he left with WICKED.
Does this mean that Deedee is Teresa???
While reading these four books I discovered that James Dashner's writing is just incredible. He writes in a way that makes me remember exactly what happens weeks after I have finished reading it. His writing grasps my attention in a way that no other author has really done before. It makes me feel like I am there with the characters following them in their journey to save their friends. I honestly cannot get enough of it! His books are ones that I will read over and over again, I don't think I could ever get bored with them.
I will definitely be picking up more of James Dashner's books, including The Fever Code when it is released. If they are anything like this series then I cannot wait to get my hands on them.
Wednesday, 20 January 2016
Happy New Year!
OK, I know this is late, 20 days late, but this is the first chance I have had to sit down in front of my laptop and write something that was just a few words of a moan in a tweet.
Last year turned out not to be a great year to be reading, let alone starting a blog about it. I did it anyways. It was something that I have wanted to do for a while but just never got around to it. I think I did ok considering that this was my first year on here and my life was crazy last year.
All of this talk about how crazy last year was makes me sound like I am super busy all of the time and never stop but in reality there were just a lot of things to be done and milestones to be hit.
Last year I finished high school, I got my first job, I had my 18th birthday, I partially moved out of my family home, I started university and I made a blog in between all of that.
All of that doesn't seem like much but when it all come one after the other it turns into a crazy time.
All of this just seems like excuses for not reading or writing, or even being on my book-related twitter but really I'm just filling you in, whoever you are, on what my year has been like.
This year seems like it will be a little quieter than the last but I'm just going to take everyday as it comes. I have a truckload of books to read already and I cannot wait to tell you about every single one of them. I am doing any challenge or anything this year, I'm just going to see where the land of books takes me. My target on Goodreads is to read 30 books this year and hopefully I can do that in amongst everything else.
A new book review should be up soon about The Maze Runner Series by James Dashner so keep your eyes peeled for that.
Happy New Year and happy reading,
Emily
Last year turned out not to be a great year to be reading, let alone starting a blog about it. I did it anyways. It was something that I have wanted to do for a while but just never got around to it. I think I did ok considering that this was my first year on here and my life was crazy last year.
All of this talk about how crazy last year was makes me sound like I am super busy all of the time and never stop but in reality there were just a lot of things to be done and milestones to be hit.
Last year I finished high school, I got my first job, I had my 18th birthday, I partially moved out of my family home, I started university and I made a blog in between all of that.
All of that doesn't seem like much but when it all come one after the other it turns into a crazy time.
All of this just seems like excuses for not reading or writing, or even being on my book-related twitter but really I'm just filling you in, whoever you are, on what my year has been like.
This year seems like it will be a little quieter than the last but I'm just going to take everyday as it comes. I have a truckload of books to read already and I cannot wait to tell you about every single one of them. I am doing any challenge or anything this year, I'm just going to see where the land of books takes me. My target on Goodreads is to read 30 books this year and hopefully I can do that in amongst everything else.
A new book review should be up soon about The Maze Runner Series by James Dashner so keep your eyes peeled for that.
Happy New Year and happy reading,
Emily
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