Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Finnikin of the Rock - Melina Marchetta


I liked Finnikin of the Rock I really did, but I have to say there were some issues with the book. The premise was really interesting a country locked in a curse, with half it's people trapped inside with a mad king and the other half in exile, reviled by the people they now rely on to survive.

 Finnikin our main character is the son of the former Captain of the Lumateran Guard and he's living in exile, travelling from kingdom to kingdom hoping to convince one of the kingdoms of Skuldenore to take in the people of Lumatere. In the course of his journeys he picks up Evanjalin, a fellow exile who, like Finnikin, wants nothing more than to break the curse on Lumatere and end the reign of the false king inside. The story of how the curse came to be is a good one, and I won't spoil it here, it's very dark and scary, but as I was reading the book it felt like I had missed this huge important event. The way Marchetta wove the back story into Finnikin made it seem as though there was another book with other characters that came first. Considering the importance that Finnikin's father and Stepmother have in the story I felt like she should have at least perhaps written a prologue from one of their points of view. It just seemed a bit strange to be reading about a parent's love story from the child's point of view, especially since he was so young when it all took place and likely wouldn't remember it in any significant detail. 

Overall it was a good read, well worth picking up, though I have to say I liked the sequel Froi of the Exiles much much better! I would read Finnikin just to read Froi  and I have high expectations for the conclusion to the series Quintana of Charyn which frustratingly has been released in Australia but not yet in North America. 

Enjoy!


Monday, January 14, 2013

The Brides of Rollrock Island - Margo Lanagan


This was another book where the premise had me hooked and itching to read! Throughout the book I found myself enjoying the book but not as engaged as I had thought I would be until the climax. For probably fifty pages I was so tense that I almost forgot to breath and at the end of the action I had to physically pull myself away for a little while to regroup and finish the book. Because it was just so intense. 

The books setting is a little reminiscent of The Scorpio Races` as in it`s set on a small isolated island where magic is a seamless part of the culture and the Selkies of legend come to life (Selkies are seals who are turned into women for those of you unfamiliar with the term). In this book however the character we begin with is not a plucky young woman determined to earn her place in the world, but is instead a young woman who is constantly on the outskirts of society, mocked by her peers for both her appearance as well as her unusual abilities. Her home life is no better with her mother a horrible harpy and her sisters little better. She spends her childhood and adolescence completely miserable, until she decides to finally use her powers. But young Misskaella doesn`t use her power to improve her life, she uses it to ruin the lives of the women of the island. She brings beautiful, obedient seal women out of the ocean to become brides to the men of Rollrock Island, effectively driving the indigenous women off. 

This book was a roller coaster! At first you are so angry with the townsfolk for the way they treat Misskaella, then you`re so angry with her for being such a horrible witch and living up to their expectations of her, and then your feelings and emotions continue to swing this way and that as you see the story from the perspective of different islanders over a period of several decades. 

Well worth a read! And if you are struggling in the beginning please push through! It is worth it!!

Enjoy!

Grave Mercy - Robin LaFevers



This book was an interesting read. I was really taken by the premise, but kind of disappointed overall. It wasn't the best thing I've ever read but the plot was fairly interesting and quick paced. The story takes place in medieval Brittany (a region of France) where our heroine Ismae is born marked by the poison her mother took in order to abort her. She is a daughter of death, feared by her step father and sold to the pig farmer down the road when she reaches marriageable age. Before she can be ruined by a life of physical labour and hardship she is rescued by a group of nuns at the convent of St. Mortain who are assassins, fulfilling Death's wishes by killing those who are a threat to Brittany's independence. Ismae joins the nuns and becomes an expert assassin, particularly well trained in poison. However, things go slightly awry on her first mission and she ends up in the company of a nobleman bound for Brittany's royal court and the intrigue and deceit that comes along with it.

I have to be honest I wasn't really to fond of Ismae. She was a bit whiny. I was also a bit confused as to why the Abbess of the convent would send a woefully unprepared novice to the royal court when there were surely people more adequately prepared for the mission. Ismae spends quite a lot of time questioning her placement there, and while her loyalty to the besieged duchess is admirable, she was quite clearly not the woman for the job. I was also considerably more interested in another one of the novices who arrived at the same time as Ismae. Sybella was a much more engaging character and I was quite pleased to learn that she is the star of the second book in the series! another thing that really bothered me about this book was the fact that as a trained assassin Ismae should really be able to take on any and all opponents, and often she does, but occasionally her skills seem to abandon her and if there's one thing I dislike it's inconsistency. Finally and I'll say *SPOILER ALERT* Sex as a cure for poison? Not so sure about that...

All and all a decent read but not the top of my list!

Enjoy 
Morgan

The Raven Boys - Maggie Stiefvater


I just have to say first that I really love Maggie Stiefvater. Everything I read by her I really enjoy and The Raven Boys was no exception. Like The Scorpio Races I really loved how she blended mythical and magical elements into everyday life so that magic somehow blends perfectly into contemporary society. There's not really any sense of unbelieveability at all; the insertion of magic is done so masterfully that you just accept that things are the way she's written them. I read a lot of fantasy fiction and Stiefvater is up there with the best of them for sure!

 The Raven Boys takes place in a small town in the United States. The town's population is divided between the local townsfolk who live there year round and the Raven Boys who attend the prestigious Aglionby Academy. The locals tolerate the presence of spoiled rich boys, but there is no love lost between the two groups, so when Blue the daughter of the local psychic gets caught up with four of the most infamous Raven Boys adventure is sure to follow.

Blue is a really interesting character and I have to say that I really fell for her. She's the black sheep of her family, able to augment the psychic powers of her mother and female relatives, but unable to see the future or into the spirit realms. With her powers she is an important tool to the psychic's trade but she's always on the outside looking in, until one fateful night with her aunt in a graveyard. The relationships between the four Raven Boys we meet are also incredibly intricate and are such a wonderful aspect of the story. So often in YA fiction we are only privy to the relationships between the female protagonist and any of the men/ boys she comes in contact with. The relationships that those boys have with other boys is so rarely explored.

This book contains all the elements of a great story. A mystery, a quest, a coming of age, and even a romance or two.

Definitely worth a read!

Enjoy!

Monday, December 17, 2012

Leviathan - Scott Westerfield


There is nothing better than reading a good book and then realizing that both sequels have already been released so you won't have to wait at all before reading the next two books. This is exactly what happened to me with Leviathan. Leviathan is the story of Deryn Sharpe a young girl posing as a boy in order to serve in the British Air Force at the beginning of WWI and Prince Aleksander son of the murdered Arch Duke and Duchess of Austria- Hungary. Alek is on the run from German forces who he has discovered have murdered his parents, and Deryn is hiding her sex, pretending to be a boy, on board the airship Leviathan. They meet after an air battle between German forces and the Leviathan in the mountains of Switzerland.

Leviathan is not just a run of the mill historical fiction story. Westerfield has created a whole new conflict for his readers. In this war the British are using DNA technology in order to fabricate animals and weapons for military purposes. In fact the Leviathan is a hydrogen filled whale that contains entire ecosystems of other animals or 'beasties' as Deryn calls them. The Germans and their allies on the other hand use incredible machines and technology to fight their wars. His descriptions of these fantastical animals and machines are wonderful and the illustrations certainly added to my enjoyment of the book.

If you like historical fiction or alternate history this is the book for you!

Enjoy!

Sunday, December 16, 2012

The Diviners -- Libba Bray


Set in 1920's New York city The Diviners by Libba Bray walks a delightfully fine line between an action packed adventure and a creepy horror story. Much to her delight our protagonist Evie O' Neill has been banished from her small town home and sent to live with her uncle in New York. At home Evie was always one step across the line pushing the limits of acceptable behaviour, but in New York she's right at home frequenting speakeasies with her friends and living the high life of the young and wealthy in the 1920's. But Evie has a secret. She can read people's pasts from objects they have carried with them, and when her uncle is called upon to help investigators solve a string of occult related murders Evie begins to realize that her talent may have more importance and farther reaching consequences than she ever imagined.

I quite enjoyed this book! It was fast paced and in spite of its large size (over 500 pages) it never felt like I had to push through the "boring parts" to get to the end. Evie was a fun and lovely yet flawed main character and I enjoyed how seemingly disconnected story lines came together throughout the book. The ending especially left me wanting more, and I was surprised to find that characters that at first seemed harmless and secondary become such dastardly villains. Bray really knows how to create fantasy fiction that blends seamlessly into the real world, with myth and magic becoming an underground culture that we all secretly hope exists somewhere.

I'm not normally someone who can read an even slightly scary book and recover quickly so I have to say that they gruesome murders and evil spirits made me stay up late finishing chapters so I knew our heroine and her friends were safe and I dashing up stair cases at night time with shivers going down my spine.

Well worth a read!
Enjoy!

Thursday, December 13, 2012

Looking for Alaska - John Green


Another hit by John Green. The first book I read by him was The Fault in Our Stars which was recommended to me by a friend and was so heart breakingly lovely that I couldn't help but try and find every other book he's written and read them all. Looking for Alaska was just as well written, and the twist at the end had me sobbing.

Looking for Alaska is written from the perspective of Miles Halter, or "Pudge" a teenager looking for "the great perhaps". Pudge convinces his parents to send him to Culver Creek boarding school in Alabama where he meets the two people who will be the most important additions to his new life. There's his roommate Chip or "the Colonel" and the beautiful, outgoing Alaska Young. At Culver Creek pranks are the life blood of the student body. They play them regularly and on an escalating scale. Pudge's introduction to this particular aspect of life at Culver is to be wrapped in tape and thrown into the lake on campus.

The book is filled with typical teenage angst and tension, but it is really beautifully written and John Green has quickly become one of my favorite Young Adult authors.

Enjoy!