Book Review: Perfect Ruin by Lauren DeStefano

Perfect Ruin CoverBook: Perfect Ruin by Lauren DeStefano

Published October 2013 by Simon & Schuster|253 pages

Where I Got It: I own the e-book

Series: The Interment Chronicles #1

Genre: YA Dystopia

Blog Graphic-What It's About

On the floating city of Internment,you can be anything you dream – a novelist or a singer, a florist or a factory worker… Your life is yours to embrace or to squander. There’s only one rule: you don’t approach THE EDGE. If you do, it’s already over.

Morgan Stockhour knows getting too close to the edge of Internment, the floating city and her home, can lead to madness. Even though her older brother, Lex, was a Jumper, Morgan vows never to end up like him. There’s too much for her on Internment: her parents, best friend Pen, and her betrothed, Basil. Her life is ordinary and safe, even if she sometimes does wonder about the ground and why it’s forbidden.

Then a murder, the first in a generation, rocks the city. With whispers swirling and fear on the wind, Morgan can no longer stop herself from investigating, especially once she meets Judas. Betrothed to the victim, Judas is being blamed for the murder, but Morgan is convinced of his innocence. Secrets lay at the heart of Internment, but nothing can prepare Morgan for what she will find—or whom she will lose.

Blog Graphic- What I Thought

I liked Perfect Ruin!  It’s a really interesting concept, a floating city about earth.  It’s definitely a world where the ground is forbidden, and it makes you wonder why they’re floating above earth, why the ground is forbidden, and what’s really going on in this society.

It was hard to get into at first, but by the end, I was really curious about the ground and the Princess and their technology and medicine.  It was hard to get through at first, because I was really bored, but it does get more interesting as the book goes on.  It is a shame, though, because some of the things that happen in the beginning had the potential to grab my attention, and it just didn’t do that.

The concept of Jumpers was really weird at first, and it didn’t make a lot of sense, but it does get explained throughout the book.  Something I’m wondering, though, is how much sense the world is going to make by the end of the series.  I did lose interest in her Chemical Garden trilogy by the time I got around to the last book, and there were things about that last book that didn’t make sense.  It makes me wonder if that’s how this series will be, which makes me hesitant to keep reading, even though I really want to keep going.

Morgan fell really flat, as did a lot of the characters, and that might be why I had a hard time getting into it.  They didn’t really stand out, and Morgan didn’t really have a personality, so it was hard to get completely invested in her story, and even when a certain event happened, it was hard to feel or care about how it affected Morgan.  It’s not good when I can remember more about the main character’s brother and her best friend than the actual main character.  At least they had some personality and depth to them.  Maybe that will change in the following books, but in this one, Morgan made no impression on me whatsoever.

Still, I am interested in continuing the series at some point in the future, though I won’t be picking up the second book anytime soon.

Blog Graphic- My Rating

3 stars.  I liked it, because I thought the floating city to be pretty different, and I feel like there’s a really interesting world there. I’ll definitely be picking up the next book at some point, even though it probably won’t be soon.

Book Review: For Always by Danielle Sibarium

For Always CoverBook: For Always by Danielle Sibarium

Published January 2012 by KFR Communications|162 pages

Where I Got It: I own the e-book

Series: None

Genre: YA Contemporary

Blog Graphic-What It's About

You never really get over your first love. Such is the case for fourteen-year-old Stephanie Barrano, self-proclaimed misfit and death magnet. A freshman in high school, Stephanie is befriended by Jordan Brewer, a hot, in-demand senior, who pulls her from the outer circle of obscurity into the realm of acceptance. Jordan quickly works his way into Stephanie’s heart. He’s her everything. And the only person she trusts with the truth about her father’s death. But he won’t act on the strong feelings he has for her. Stephanie vows to wait for him, knowing in time she’ll win his heart.

Two months before her eighteenth birthday, Jordan serves as an impromptu prom date. After sharing a magical evening, Jordan leaves Stephanie with the promise of a future together. Then tragedy strikes. Jordan not only shuts Stephanie out, he also blames her for what happened. Feeling broken and beaten, will she try one last time to get through to Jordan or will she lose him forever?

Blog Graphic- What I Thought

I didn’t like For Always.  Really, I should have guessed that it wouldn’t be my thing, but it also seemed like it would be really cute and sweet, and instead, the romance drove me completely bonkers.

So, it felt like things were very one-sided- I got the impression that Stephanie was lot more into Jordan, and that he didn’t reciprocate.  I also got the impression he knew that she was into him, and that he strung her along, knowing she was super-into him.  I didn’t understand why she was so into him, and I really wish we saw more of them together, because Stephanie liking him made no sense to me.

Also, this was pretty tame, even by YA standards.  Granted, he refused to do anything with her, which might be why, but it made me feel like this was the YA version of Christian/Inspirational romance.  It was boring, and I felt like there was nothing between them.  It was pretty underwhelming, and it made me wish there were some sort of spark or something between them.  The pace was a little too slow, especially since I felt like there was really nothing between Stephanie and Jordan.  Maybe it was hard to get into because they don’t kiss for the first time until the book is almost over.  And then, out of the blue, he’s telling her mom that he wants to marry her one day.  It really came out of nowhere, and given that he didn’t seem interested in her for most of the book, it seemed out of place that he’d go from showing no interesting to marriage.

Stephanie’s best friend was also really confusing.  Sometimes, she seemed like an awesome friend, but there were other times where she seemed really shallow and self-absorbed.  Her mom barely made an appearance, and when we did see her mom, she seemed to freak out about stuff for no apparent reason.

And the formatting got really frustrating- there was a gap between freshman year Stephanie and senior year Stephanie, and there were quite a few blank pages in the gap.  Plus, the chapters were formatted a little weird, and it broke up the flow for me.

Other than that, I don’t have anything else I want to see.  I’m trying to come up with something else, but I can’t, so…

Blog Graphic- My Rating

1 star.  I couldn’t get into it, and the romance didn’t work for me at all.

Book Review: Pointe by Brandy Colbert

Pointe CoverBook: Pointe by Brandy Colbert

Published April 2014 by Penguin|237 pages

Where I Got It: I borrowed the e-book from the library

Series: None

Genre: YA Contemporary

Blog Graphic-What It's About

She’s eating again, dating guys who are almost appropriate, and well on her way to becoming an elite ballet dancer. But when her oldest friend, Donovan, returns home after spending four long years with his kidnapper, Theo starts reliving memories about his abduction—and his abductor.

Donovan isn’t talking about what happened, and even though Theo knows she didn’t do anything wrong, telling the truth would put everything she’s been living for at risk. But keeping quiet might be worse.

Brandy Colbert dazzles in this heartbreaking yet hopeful debut novel about learning how to let go of even our most shameful secrets.

Blog Graphic- What I Thought

I have really mixed feelings about Pointe.  I’m not sure how I feel about Theo, and I felt like the book I read was not the book I went in expecting.

Let’s start with the fact that the title, cover and summary made me feel like we were getting a completely different story than the one we got.  Going off of the title and cover, it seemed like we were getting a book about a ballerina, but ballet wasn’t a huge part of the book.  And the summary made it seem like the abduction was a huge part of the story, when it wasn’t.

So, considering how Theo wants to be elite ballet dancer, she doesn’t seem to act like one.  She drinks and smokes cigarettes and weed, and for someone who’s supposedly aspiring to be Misty Copeland, she doesn’t seem to take care of herself very well.  She hangs out with people who are into things that would get in the way of her dreams of dancing professionally.  And she spent a lot of time whining about how she was late because she had to take the train, as she wasn’t able to drive to her ballet studio.  And she didn’t seem to live and breathe ballet the way that Tally does in This Much Is True or Gigi, June and Bette do in Tiny Pretty Things, or even Michaela DePrince in her memoir Taking Flight.  It felt very fake to me, like she didn’t really want as much as we were supposed to believe.

And while we see memories of Donovan and the man who abducted him…it didn’t really come up the way I thought it would.  It barely came up, and the book is really more about Theo trying to deal with all of the issues she has than the ballet or even the abduction of her former best friend.

I will say that anorexia and statutory rape are two very important topics in Pointe, so if that’s something that is triggering for you, keep that in mind if you pick this book up.

Even though Theo doesn’t seem to have really good eating habits, it was another thing that I felt was a thing that was mentioned but not important. I did feel for Theo, who, at 13, had sex with someone much, much older than her, and didn’t realize that she had been raped and that she was too young to realize that she didn’t truly consent.  That made me sad for her, but I still didn’t completely care for Theo.  Yes, she’s flawed and does some really stupid things but it made me like her less.  Which is fine, because I’m fine with unlikable characters, but in this case, such a flawed character worked against the book.  I think it’s because there are too many elements (for me) that don’t get the attention that they should have.

Actually, I’m not sure what Colbert was trying to get at with Theo.  She’s supposedly driven and an awesome ballerina, and yet we don’t see that at all. Someone who wants to be a professional ballet dancer…would they really act like Theo does in the book?  It really makes no sense to me.

It felt like Theo’s memories and the abduction weren’t really given much thought until the end of the book, and I don’t think we even meet Donovan. If we do, then it clearly was enough for me to actually remember if we see him at all.  Which is weird, considering he’s alive and that’s what makes Theo remember things.

Still, I liked how Theo dealt with her love interest at the end of the book- it was really different but in a good way, and it somehow seems to fit with Theo.  It is sad that it wasn’t until the last couple of chapters or so that the book got to me emotionally.  It made me wish the entire book was like that.

Blog Graphic- My Rating

2 stars.  Pointe was okay, but I felt like it was unclear what kind of story Colbert want to tell.  There were some elements that could have been really poignant and emotional, and it wasn’t there for me.  There were a lot of issues that didn’t really get the attention that they deserved.

Book Review: Tangled by Carolyn Mackler

Tangled CoverBook: Tangled by Carolyn Mackler

Published December 2009 by HarperTeen|308 pages

Where I Got It: I borrowed the hardcover from the library

Series: None

Genre: YA Contemporary

Blog Graphic-What It's About

Paradise wasn’t supposed to suck.  

Not the state of being, but a resort in the Caribbean.

Jena, Dakota, Skye, and Owen are all there for different reasons, but at Paradise their lives become tangled together in ways none of them can predict. Paradise will change them all.

It will change Jena, whose first brush with romance takes her that much closer to having a life, and not just reading about those infinitely cooler and more exciting.

It will change Dakota, who needs the devastating truth about his past to make him realize that he doesn’t have to be a jerk just because people think he’s one.

It will change Skye, a heartbreakingly beautiful actress, who must come to terms with the fact that for once she has to stop playing a role or face the consequences.

And it will change Owen, who has never risked anything before and who will take the leap from his online life to a real one all because of a girl he met at Paradise…

From confused to confident and back again, one thing’s certain: Four months after it all begins, none of them will ever be the same.

Blog Graphic- What I Thought

I thought Tangled was okay!  It had a lot of potential to be really cute, but it wasn’t as cute or fun as I thought it would be.

I think a large part of it is how the story is told.  We get 4 teens, and they each get a section- each teen gets a month or so, before we move on to the next character.  The four stories don’t intersect as much as I though they would, and as far as the ending goes, I really expected all four of them to come together, and for all four stories to come together in some really interesting, big way.  And it didn’t, and I was disappointed with that, because what I thought was going to happen didn’t actually happen.  Not that I had something in mind, because I didn’t, but I was still expecting something to tie all of them together at the end.

I also thought there would be more time at Paradise, but instead we see what life is like for all of them after that trip.  Other than both girls meeting Dakota, and Jena finding a note that Skye left behind that sets up something in Skye’s section, I didn’t really get the point behind going to Paradise.  It almost didn’t matter that they all went, except it sort of does, and not in a way that adds much of anything to the story.

With the four characters getting their own story over the course of four months, you get some insight into each character, but it also broke up the flow of the story, and it made the book seem like four separate stories that randomly connect instead of one cohesive story.  It just made it hard to get into the book and even harder to get invested in any one character, especially since you basically get one character’s story and then you’re pretty much done with them because you’re not really going to see them again.

Blog Graphic- My Rating

2 stars.  It was okay, and I don’t really have strong enough feelings about it to care one way or another.

Book Review: If You Could Be Mine by Sara Farizan

If You Could Be Mine CoverBook: If You Could Be Mine by Sara Farizan

Published July 2013 by Algonquin Books|165 pages

Where I Got It: I borrowed the e-book from the library

Series: None

Genre: YA Contemporary

Blog Graphic-What It's About

In this stunning debut, a young Iranian American writer pulls back the curtain on one of the most hidden corners of a much-talked-about culture.

Seventeen-year-old Sahar has been in love with her best friend, Nasrin, since they were six. They’ve shared stolen kisses and romantic promises. But Iran is a dangerous place for two girls in love—Sahar and Nasrin could be beaten, imprisoned, even executed if their relationship came to light.

So they carry on in secret—until Nasrin’s parents announce that they’ve arranged for her marriage. Nasrin tries to persuade Sahar that they can go on as they have been, only now with new comforts provided by the decent, well-to-do doctor Nasrin will marry. But Sahar dreams of loving Nasrin exclusively—and openly.

Then Sahar discovers what seems like the perfect solution. In Iran, homosexuality may be a crime, but to be a man trapped in a woman’s body is seen as nature’s mistake, and sex reassignment is legal and accessible. As a man, Sahar could be the one to marry Nasrin. Sahar will never be able to love the one she wants, in the body she wants to be loved in, without risking her life. Is saving her love worth sacrificing her true self?

Blog Graphic- What I Thought

I liked If You Could Be Mine!  What I liked the most was that it shows- really well- what it’s like to be gay in a country like Iran.  While you get a sense of what Iran is like, I also felt like we didn’t get the full picture of what it’s like to live in Iran.  Not that you can get the full picture with such a short book, but there was a lot of potential there.  Still, it did make me pause for a little bit and think about what what it’s like to be a young woman in a different country, and what it’s like to be a young woman who’s also lesbian, in a country where it’s illegal.  It’s not something I generally think about, much less for someone in a different country, and this book is one story of someone’s experience.

I will say, though, that I don’t really understand why Sahar is so in love with Nasrin.  Nasrin seemed pretty self-absorbed and selfish, and Sahar was so much more willing to do whatever it took to make it work.  It seemed like they were on two completely different pages, and it really seemed like Nasrin took Sahar for granted.  The facade surrounding Nasrin does crumble a little bit, and I understand why she acted the way she did, but I felt like Sahar deserved better.  I feel for both of them, being in a situation where they can’t act on what they want, but it was a lot harder for me to feel for Nasrin, particularly because we don’t see her side of the story.  I also felt no chemistry between the two girls, and I wish we had more chemistry, because I felt like I was being told why Sahar was willing to go to such great lengths, but not actually seeing it for myself.

And even though I felt for Sahar much more than Nasrin, I still don’t know how I feel about Sahar.  I want her to be happy, but I don’t know if she’ll be able to be fully happy in Iran.  I didn’t really get a sense of who Sahar was, other than someone who was more devoted to someone than she really should have been.  Something about Sahar was a little bit…hollow, and I wished she actually talked to Nasrin about what she wanted to do, instead of just doing things and hoping it would work out in time.

In the end, not much has stuck with me, and I think it could have been better (and longer!) but overall, I still think there’s enough there to recommend it because it is a perspective that doesn’t seem very common in YA- you’ll see LGBT characters, or people of color, but I haven’t come across many books (if any) where you see that intersection.

Blog Graphic- My Rating

3 stars.  I liked If You Could Be Mine, but I didn’t care for Nasrin, and the relationship that she had with Sahar seemed really one-sided.

Book Review: Bitter Melon by Cara Chow

Bitter Melon CoverBook: Bitter Melon by Cara Chow

Published December 2010 by EgmontUSA|215 pages

Where I Got It: I own the e-book

Series: None

Genre: YA Contemporary

Blog Graphic-What It's About

Frances, a Chinese-American student at an academically competitive school in San Francisco, has always had it drilled into her to be obedient to her mother and to be a straight-A student so that she can go to med school.  But is being a doctor what she wants?  It has never even occurred to Frances to question her own feelings and desires until she accidentally winds up in speech class and finds herself with a hidden talent.  Does she dare to challenge the mother who has sacrificed everything for her?  Set in the 1980’s.

Blog Graphic- What I Thought

I think I liked Bitter Melon, but I’m also not sure how I feel about some of the things that happened in the book.  I felt like Frances and Derek had no chemistry, and her mom…I have such mixed feelings about her mom.

I think parental pressure is something we can all relate to in varying degrees.  Her mom did seem really extreme and slightly abusive.  On the one hand, I can picture parents acting the way her mom does, but at the same time, I really felt felt like the mom was an extreme take on the strict Asian parent stereotype.  I don’t think how how her mom acted is limited to any one group, but at the same time…I didn’t really like that her mom seemed like such an extreme stereotype.  I can’t even begin to imagine what it’s like to have the mother she does, and to have a life planned out for her…a life that she doesn’t want for herself, or to question if that’s the best life for her.

I wanted so much to feel for Frances, but I found that I didn’t particularly care for her or what happened to her.  She seemed really dense sometimes, and I didn’t really get the impression that speech was a hidden talent for her.  And I don’t like how she handled things at the end of the book at all. Granted, I don’t know if there was a better way, or what Frances could have done, but to a certain extent, I felt like she stooped to her mother’s level. Yes, her mother said and did some horrible things, but she still didn’t completely deserve what Frances did.  France getting her revenge, and embarrassing her mom seemed like such a stereotype of someone getting back at the person who treated them horribly.  I also wish that the book ended with more of a resolution between Frances and her mom, because things were a little too unresolved for my liking.

As for Frances and Derek, I really thought that they had no chemistry.  It seemed like he was supposed to be the reason why she finally stood up to her mom- at the very least, a major reason why.  Personally, I have no problem with that, but it could have had the potential to make the book a little bit lighter, but it didn’t- it just added conflict.  As for Frances making changes, and questioning things, I thought that her speech class and the speech tournaments could have done that in a much better way.

Except for the random pop culture references, I forgot that the book was even set in the 1980’s.  Okay, there’s no internet or cell phones, but even then, it seemed like the book could have been set a couple of decades later.  It could have made the book a lot more stifling, but it didn’t really add anything to the book.

Blog Graphic- My Rating

2 stars.  It was okay, and I had a hard time relating to Frances and even caring about what happened to her was hard.

Book Review: Marie Antoinette, Serial Killer by Katie Alender

Marie Antoinette, Serial Killer CoverBook: Marie Antoinette, Serial Killer by Katie Alender

Published September 2013 by Scholastic|225 pages

Where I Got It: I own the e-book

Series: None

Genre: YA Mystery/Thriller

Blog Graphic-What It's About

Colette Iselin is excited to go to Paris on a class trip. She’ll get to soak up the beauty and culture, and maybe even learn something about her family’s French roots.

But a series of gruesome murders are taking place across the city, putting everyone on edge. And as she tours museums and palaces, Colette keeps seeing a strange vision: a pale woman in a ball gown and powdered wig, who looks suspiciously like Marie Antoinette.

Colette knows her popular, status-obsessed friends won’t believe her, so she seeks out the help of a charming French boy. Together, they uncover a shocking secret involving a dark, hidden history. When Colette realizes she herself may hold the key to the mystery, her own life is suddenly in danger…

Acclaimed author Katie Alender brings heart-stopping suspense to this story of revenge, betrayal, intrigue- and one killer queen.

Blog Graphic- What I Thought

Marie Antoinette, Serial Killer was just okay for me.  I was really intrigued by the title, but I was ultimately not too interested in this book.

I like the idea, but the mystery and revenge and everything…I was expecting more Marie Antoinette in the book.  I was also expecting something more creepy, but it was more…shallow…then I expected it to be.  Then again, maybe I had higher expectations than I thought I did.

Still, you’d expect a book titled Marie Antoinette, Serial Killer to be more fun and campy, and instead, I think it tried to be more serious than maybe it should have been.  I don’t know enough about Marie Antoinette and the French Revolution or Paris as a setting to comment on the historical accuracy of the book, and I’m fairly certain there are going to be inaccuracies as far as the history goes…but like I said before, I was really expecting there to be more of a historical mystery.  And it felt like I was reading someone’s impression of Paris, instead of actually feeling like I was in Paris.  Randomly, Anna And The French Kiss and Isla And The Happily Ever After did a much better job at making me feel like I was in Paris.

The murder scenes were interesting at first, but after the first 1-2, there wasn’t much change in that part of the story.  I really wish they had been varied a little bit.

Colette was pretty whiny and selfish, and for someone who was supposed to be smart, she was fairly dumb at times.  Her brother drops out of his private school and goes to a public school so that Colette can stay at her school with friends…her one friend is a horrible human being, and her other one…just goes along with the mean one.  I just wanted Colette to actually stand up to the mean one and care less about the money and social status…she did, I guess, but by then I didn’t actually care, and it was way too late.

And an apology is the thing that saves Colette from a queen who was hellbent on revenge?  And Marie Antoinette just forgives her because Colette apologizes for what her ancestor did?  That’s it?  Really?  It wasn’t creepy like I thought, and we don’t really get a lot of Marie Antoinette.  If you want a book about a girl trying to solve a mystery (that’s also a fast read and pretty predictable), this might be something you’re interested in reading.  I just thought the book would be different, for some reason.

Blog Graphic- My Rating

2 stars.  MA, SK was okay.  I sort of don’t care enough to actively dislike it.

Book Review: The Sound By Sarah Alderson

The Sound CoverBook: The Sound by Sarah Alderson

Published August 2013 by Simon & Schuster|275 pages

Where I Got It: I own the e-book

Series: None

Genre: YA Contemporary

Blog Graphic-What It's About

When aspiring music journalist Ren Kingston takes a job nannying for a wealthy family on the exclusive island of Nantucket, playground for Boston’s elite, she’s hoping for a low-key summer reading books and blogging about bands. Boys are firmly off the agenda.

What she doesn’t count on is falling in with a bunch of party-loving private school kids who are hiding some dark secrets; falling (possibly) in love with the local bad boy; and falling out with a dangerous serial killer…

Blog Graphic- What I Thought

The Sound is another book I’m not sure how I feel about.  I’m glad I’m reading, especially after not reading anything for over a month, but this is the 2nd book I’ve read where I don’t completely know how I feel about it.

Now that I think about it, Ren didn’t do a lot of nannying.  We barely see her with the kids…or even interact with the parents.  It just seemed like a weird way to bring over to Nantucket, and an even weirder way to connect her to something that barely seemed to matter.  Why have the mystery of a serial killer if it’s pretty much mentioned in passing? It didn’t really add anything to the story.  Also, only two girls were killed, and for me, that’s too few people to be considered a serial killer.

Back to the nannying for a second: the few times we did see her with the kids, she doesn’t actually do her job. One of the kids is in day camp for the summer, and I fail to see why she needs a nanny.  We don’t even see her with the younger kid, and even when Ren goes out with the family (especially at parties), Ren tends to wander off and do her own thing.  The nanny thing makes no sense to me.

And the dark secrets?  They’re horrible, but I was expecting something different than the one major thing we got.

I don’t mind if characters are a little bit cliche, but most of the characters weren’t memorable, and I couldn’t tell most of them apart.  Ren, Jesse, and Brodie, one of the kids that Ren is a nanny for, are the only ones that actually stand out.  Ren, because she’s the main character, Jesse because he’s the bad boy Ren can’t stay away from, and Brodie because she is so incredibly unbelievable as a 4-year-old.  Jesse put a guy in a coma, and Ren is warned to stay away from him, and yet she still talks to him.  He would actually be okay if he didn’t put someone in a coma and I get why he put someone in a coma…but he still put someone in a coma.  And Brodie?  A four-year-old should not know about “bases” and ask you if you got to a particular base with someone.  Also, 4-year-olds should not be calling people skanktrons.  She either should have been older, or not acted the way she did in the book.  If that’s how she’s acting, then we have a serious problem.

Also irritating was the fact that girls were slut-shamed…and Ren’s best friend telling Ren that she just needed to have sex and get it over with and that waiting was stupid.  The name-calling in the book also got irritating by the end of the book.

Blog Graphic- My Rating

1 star.  I wasn’t sure how I felt about The Sound at first, but now that I’ve written down what I think about it, I’ve found that I really don’t like it.

Book Review: Taking The Reins by Katrina Abbott

Taking The Reins CoverBook: Taking The Reins by Katrina Abbott

Published January 2014 by Over The Cliff Publishing|154 Pages

Where I Got It: I own the e-book

Series: The Rosewoods #1

Genre: YA Contemporary

Blog Graphic-What It's About

 

Brooklyn Prescott (if that’s even her real name) is the new girl at The Rosewood Academy for Academic Excellence, now that she’s moved back to the States after two years living in London. Rosewood, a boarding school for children of the rich and famous and known for its celebutantes, is missing just one element important to any junior’s education: boys. But luckily for Brooklyn, and the rest of the Rosewood girls, there’s a boys’ boarding school, The Westwood Academy, just a few miles away.

On her very first day, Brooklyn meets Will, a gorgeous and flirty boy on campus to help with move in. But is he who she thinks he is? And what about Brady, the cute stable boy? Or Jared, the former child actor with his grown-up good looks who can always make her laugh? As Brooklyn settles in at Rosewood, she’s faced with new friends, new challenges and new opportunities to make herself into the girl she always wanted to be. Whoever that might be.

Taking The Reins is the first installment of The Rosewoods, an exciting new Young Adult series for readers who love fun, flirty love stories.

Blog Graphic- What I Thought

I’m not sure how I feel about Taking The Reins!  I felt like it ended very abruptly.  Actually (and I really hate to say this) but I felt like I got an installment or an excerpt of a story- it felt very incomplete and unfinished.  I know the other books in the series will continue the story, but I felt like I didn’t get enough of the story or the characters to know if I even want to keep going with the series.  I was expecting a more complete story going into this book, and I feel like I got the beginnings of one instead.

I’m not even really sure what else I can say about Taking The Reins.  It’s really short (slightly over 150 pages on my Nook), and that made it hard to get into- there easily could have been more to the story, and I feel pretty underwhelmed by it.  Nothing stands out, even though (at the time that I’m writing this review), I finished it a couple of days ago.  There just wasn’t enough of a story to get my attention, but I’m also not a fan of reading a book in installments, and I feel like I’ll be getting that with this series, if Taking The Reins is any indication.  I know it’s unfair to judge an entire series on one book, but at the same time, there just wasn’t anything that made me want to keep reading.  If I do continue (and I’m not sure if I want to), then I’ll probably read the entire series at once, so I won’t feel like I’m reading a story in installments (or if I do feel that way, I probably won’t feel that way as much as I would have if I didn’t read them all at once).

Blog Graphic- My Rating

2 stars.  It’s too short for me to get a good feel for the story, the characters, and where everything is headed.