Book Review: OCD, The Dude, and Me by Lauren Roedy Vaughn

OCD, The Dude And Me CoverBook: OCD, The Dude, and Me by Lauren Roedy Vaughn

Published March 2013 by Dial Books|234 pages

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

Series: None

Genre: YA Contemporary

Blog Graphic-What It's About

With frizzy orange hair, a plus-sized body, sarcastic demeanor, and “unique learning profile,” Danielle Levine doesn’t fit in even at her alternative high school. While navigating her doomed social life, she writes scathing, self-aware, and sometimes downright raunchy essays for English class. As a result of her unfiltered writing style, she is forced to see the school psychologist and enroll in a “social skills” class. But when she meets Daniel, another social misfit who is obsessed with the cult classic film The Big Lebowski, Danielle’s resolve to keep everyone at arm’s length starts to crumble.

Blog Graphic- What I Thought

I didn’t like OCD, The Dude And Me as much as I thought I would.  It really seemed like a book I would like, but I ended up being slightly disappointed.

For one thing, she doesn’t seem to be OCD at all, which is weird for a couple reasons.  One, we see her inner thoughts, so it’s weird that it doesn’t come up.  And two, other than needing her books to organized in a certain way, and being upset that they get knocked over and doesn’t have time to re-organize, or a reference to flicking a light switch on and off…I didn’t get the OCD part of it all.  She definitely has social anxiety, and possibly PTSD, but OCD seems random.  Because of the diary/essay format, she comes across as quirky more than anything else.

Two: I didn’t get her obsession with The Big Lebowski, which only shows up in the last third of the book, and for no reason.  If she’s so obsessed with it, why did it randomly come up?  I’ve never actually seen The Big Lebowski, so unless there are references in the book I’m not picking up on because of that, it seems to be a non-factor.

Three: For someone who’s supposed to be a senior in high school, she writes a lot younger than that.  The whole prom thing was slightly confusing, because I really forgot most of the time that she was older than she sounded.

Four: The essay and diary format was interesting but it felt like overkill and a little too much.  Granted, there were a few times where I couldn’t help but laugh, but it would randomly switch between essays, journal entries, notes, and letters, and it felt really jumbled and not very coherent.  Which is sort of understandable, given we get some inner thoughts, and it flowed okay, but not well enough.

Five: We don’t see much reflection or change in Danielle.  She seems to remain pretty much the same the entire book, and she fell pretty flat.  Also, for someone who hasn’t had a friend in years, she seemed to get close to Daniel pretty fast, which is surprising, considering she seems to have a lot of anxiety about talking to people. Maybe it’s because of the format, but given the format, I felt like we should have seen even a slightly different Danielle by the end of the book.

Six: What is so alternative about this high school?  All of the kids seem to be be perfectly fine, and it didn’t make sense why it was so alternative, because really, it came across as your typical high school.

Blog Graphic- My Rating

2 stars.  It was okay, but not the book I expected.  I’m feeling pretty ambivalent about the book.

Book Review: The Appearance Of Annie Van Sinderen by Katherine Howe

The Appearance Of Annie Van Sinderen CoverBook: The Appearance of Annie Van Sinderen by Katherine Howe

Published September 2015 by G.P. Putnam’s Sons|379 pages

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

Series: None

Genre: YA Mystery/Ghost StoriesBlog Graphic-What It's About

It’s summertime in New York City, and aspiring filmmaker Wes Auckerman has just arrived to start his summer term at NYU. While shooting a séance at a psychic’s in the East Village, he meets a mysterious, intoxicatingly beautiful girl named Annie.

As they start spending time together, Wes finds himself falling for her, drawn to her rose-petal lips and her entrancing glow. There’s just something about her that he can’t put his finger on, something faraway and otherworldly that compels him to fall even deeper. Annie’s from the city, and yet she seems just as out of place as Wes feels. Lost in the chaos of the busy city streets, she’s been searching for something—a missing ring. And now Annie is running out of time and needs Wes’s help. As they search together, Annie and Wes uncover secrets lurking around every corner, secrets that will reveal the truth of Annie’s dark past.

Blog Graphic- What I Thought

After reading Conversion a couple of years ago, I was really interested to see what else Howe would come up with. When I saw a copy of Annie Van Sinderen at the library, I knew I had to read it.

What I find most interesting about Annie is that it’s a ghost story that never mentions the word ghost.  It’s interesting that she can be seen by only a few people, and it makes you wonder why they can see her, and no one else can.  I did like that Wes and his friends were able to help her and figure out what was going on.  And why she’s still around.

I thought Annie was the most interesting character, and how she went in between present and past to be really interesting, especially once we got past the set-up/introducing of everyone.  Her story and everything that happened up to her death was very realistic, and even though I probably won’t read anything history-related soon, I still really want to read something historical.  Going in and out of past and present worked better than I thought it would, and it was a really nice surprise.  I’m also glad we got to see both past and present, because it made Annie’s story and how it connected to the present have a lot more depth.  I’m really glad we see how she ended up staying behind as a ghost.

It is interesting that it took so long for someone to see Annie.  I mean, there must have been people who could her before, right?  So what it is about 2015 that’s so special?  Because of Maddie?  I think I would have liked more of something about why now and not before.

It did start off pretty slow, but I think it’s because of everything that had to be introduced in order for the story to make sense, and I can’t think of a better way to tell the story.  It does pick up the pace after a while, though, once you get through the first part, it’s a really interesting read.

I didn’t find the other characters particularly interesting, but Maddie had a lot of potential, and I wish we saw more of her.

Blog Graphic- My Rating

3 stars.  Even though I liked it, it didn’t grab me the way Conversion did, and I wish things were tied up a little more than it was.

Book Review: Take A Chance by Abbi Glines

Take A Chance CoverBook: Take A Chance by Abbi Glines

Published February 2014 by Atria Books|228 pages

Where I Got It: I own the e-book

Series: Chance #1, Rosemary Beach #7

Genre: NA/Contemporary RomanceBlog Graphic-What It's About

From #1 New York Times bestselling author Abbi Glines comes the story of Grant, the sexy playboy who first captured readers hearts in Fallen Too Far.

When Harlow Manning’s rocker father goes on tour, he sends her to Rosemary Beach, Florida, to live with her half-sister, Nan. The problem: Nan despises her. Harlow has to keep her head down if she wants to get through the next nine months, which seems easy enough. Until gorgeous Grant Carter walks out of Nan’s room in nothing but his boxer briefs.

Grant made a huge mistake getting involved with a girl with venom in her veins. He’d known about Nan’s reputation, but still he couldn’t resist her. Nothing makes him regret the fling more than meeting Harlow, who sends his pulse racing. Yet Harlow wants nothing to do with a guy who could fall for her wicked half-sister; even if there are no strings between Grant and Nan. Grant is desperate to redeem himself in Harlow’s eyes, but did he ruin his chances before he even met her?

Blog Graphic- What I Thought

Of the Abbi Glines books I’ve read so far (just 2!), Take A Chance was my least favorite.  I wanted to like it more, but there were so many things that frustrated me.  It’s going to be long, because I’m feeling quite rant-y about this book.

Grant:

I didn’t like him at all!  He claimed that Harlow was really important to them, but I felt like his actions said otherwise.  She lost her virginity to him, and then he goes and sleeps with her half-sister a couple of months later, and continues to do so, even though he says he called her so many times and she never picked up.  She says she never got those calls, so either he’s lying, she is, or someone grabbed her phone and deleted her voice mails and texts and call history (which would be a really shitty thing for someone to do), but who knows what happened there.

Not only that but when she doesn’t want to have anything to do with him because he never called, and she goes out with someone…he has a threesome with two strangers who like pretending they’re twins.  JUST BECAUSE SHE GOES OUT WITH SOMEONE.  And yet, the next morning, he’s a changed man and wants to be with her.

However, his friend dies, and his friend’s girlfriend is, understandably, grieving over the loss of her boyfriend, and he doesn’t want to lose Harlow the way Bethy lost Jace.  I really felt like he was using that as an excuse to not get close to her.  He wants her and she supposedly means everything to him, but he doesn’t want to fight for her or their relationship.  When you add in the fact that he seems like how insecure she is, and how jealous she gets whenever Nan comes up in any capacity…I just don’t get why people like Grant, because in this book, he seems like a horrible person, especially with something that happens to Nan.

First, we have this quote, which irritated the hell out of me:

“If she’s lying, it might be me beating the shit out of her,” I warned him.

And this one:

“She better be telling the truth.”

Are you kidding me?  That made me hate Grant.  I was willing to give him a chance, but after that, no way in hell was he getting one.  He is not a good guy, and the fact he talks about beating Nan if she’s lying makes me hate him so much it’s not even funny.  Yeah, Nan doesn’t seem like the most pleasant person and she’s portrayed as a character that pretty much everyone hates because she’s supposedly this bitter, angry bitch.  But it was frustrating that Granted said/thought the things he did because no one deserves what happened to Nan.  No one.  Really, I felt bad for Nan, because people seem to treat her like crap for no apparent reason.  Whatever she may have done, she doesn’t deserve the things Grant said and might have done.  There is absolutely nothing good about a guy who’s willing to beat someone if she’s lying.

Harlow:

I know we’re supposed to like her, and think she’s this sweet, innocent, fragile girl who needs protecting (especially from Nan), but I didn’t like her either.  In the one scene we see her stand up to/confront Nan, she seemed to handle herself pretty well, so the fact that everyone seemed to think she needed protecting was frustrating.

One, she forgave Grant way too easily and way too much, especially for someone who doesn’t seem to trust people easily because of her father.  Also, do you really want to be with someone who likes your insecurity and thinks it’s hot?  Because if that’s what he likes/is into, he’s a guy you should stay far away from.

Two, this frustrating to read quote, from the beginning of the book:

“I was twenty years old.  It was time I became a real woman and had sex.  I was holding on to my virginity like some grand prize, and I wanted to experience a total connection with another human being.”

Here are my problems with this.  One, I think you’re a real woman regardless of whether you’ve had sex or not. You’re not lesser just because you’re twenty and a virgin.  Two, it sort of sounds like you’re having sex because you’re old enough, and not because you’re actually read, which…it sort of sounds like what’s going on here.  And also having read the entire book, it seems like maybe she wasn’t completely ready.  And three…actually, let’s forget about three, because I tried writing it out, and it sounds completely horrible no matter how I phrase it, so let’s just stick with two.

Three, this other quote:

“I was a slut.  Or trauma made me a slut.  I wasn’t sure…I knew about blowjobs.  I knew women must like it to do it. So I was curious.  But now that I had made him come in my hands and tasted him, I was embarrassed.  I didn’t do things like that.  It wasn’t me.”

There’s a lot more to that quote, but I wanted to highlight the things that really frustrated me.  I did feel bad that she just found out that the mom she thought was dead for years turned out to be alive the entire time.  And finding out about it had to have been hard- and that people handle finding out about stuff like that in all kinds of ways.  But it doesn’t make her a slut, and that she was so hard on herself wasn’t endearing, it was irritating.

And wanting and liking sex doesn’t make you a slut, which is what I got from her thoughts.  Or maybe it was referring to the timing, but still…my thoughts still stand.  Not only that…but…she only starting having sex in the last few months, how she supposed to know if she’s the kind of person who likes blowjobs?  Really, I kind of felt like there’s this underlying thing of good girls do it, but they don’t like it, and you’re not supposed to be the kind of person that does it and likes it.

And her congenital heart defect came out of fucking nowhere.  There was mention of a faint scar on her chest but other than that, I felt like there were no hints that something was up until the last couple chapters.  It felt really manipulative, like it was there just for the drama it would cause.  I get she doesn’t like people knowing because they treat her differently- like she’s sick, which she insists she isn’t because she’s been sick before, and she knows when she’s sick.

Two last things about Harlow: her reaction to what happened to Nan was horrible.  A guy beat Nan, and all she can think about is how she’s going to lose Grant, just because he went with Rush?  That’s insanely selfish, and highlights her insecurities.  Two, I thought she was too insecure about the people Grant’s slept with.  I knows it’s all new for her, and there’s nothing wrong with waiting to have sex at all, but if it’s that big of a problem for her, and it’s something she can’t seem to move past and if she’s going to be jealous and insecure, maybe she shouldn’t be Grant at this point.  In  general, she seems like she has a lot of growing up to do, and a relationship with anybody (but especially Grant) seems like a bad idea right now.

Random Thoughts:

  1. The memorial service for Jace.  His own friends seem to hate that they have to be there, and two of them randomly leave before anything happens.  Only one of them stays, and it’s basically because he has to stay, as the owner of the country club.
  2. Also, the fact that Bethy has to work the event.  Apparently, it occurred to no one to give her the night off so she could attend (which makes me wonder: did she ask to attend and get shot down, or did it not occur to her either?), and apparently no one could be bothered to check up on her to make sure she was okay at any point. Harlow and Blaire seemed to be the only people who remotely cared about Bethy.
  3. Also Grant seems way more concerned about the fact that Bethy lost Jace, and not at all concerned his friend died.  Yet, he doesn’t seem to care about what happens to her.
  4. I assumed it was more of a stand-alone series set within a larger series, but I was wrong.  I wish I had at least finished the Rush/Blaire series because I was confused as hell.  There’s a lot in terms of relationships between the characters and their history together that would have made more sense had I read at least the first few books.  Especially with the Nan stuff that happens…it makes no sense why people treat her the way they do, so the other books would probably explain that.  Thankfully, I don’t care about spoilers, but still, I don’t understand the point of focusing on different couples if I have to read the other books in order to understand what’s going on with the current one.
  5. The weird time jump at the beginning of the book.  We’re randomly jumping around in the first chapter or two and it made the beginning of the book super-confusing and hard to understand.  It wasn’t done well at all.
  6. There was no build-up to a relationship between Harlow and Grant.  Not only that, but it felt like it was more lust than love, and they didn’t do much except have sex or sit quietly next to each other.  There was no substance to their relationship, and the one time we see them go out, Grant is talking to other people (sort of understandable, but why does he abandon Harlow once they get there), and then he just leaves without telling her why he’s leaving.  Naturally, it’s left to someone else to explain, but he stills wants her to trust him. Relationship is a gross overstatement, considering they don’t actually talk to each other or go out to do things together.  Even if they try to talk, it’s usually one-sided, with one of them trying to explain, and the other one not wanting to talk or freaking out about the conversation, which seems like a horrible basis for a relationship. I have no doubt they’ll get their happily ever after even though they are two people who should not be together. At least in this book

Blog Graphic- My Rating

2 stars.  As much as this book frustrated me, I still went through it pretty fast, and for some bizarre reason, I still want to read the previous books in the series, and the next book in the series.  I don’t know that I have any interest in reading the series beyond the next book, but…there is something compelling about the series.

Book Review: Crown Of Midnight by Sarah J. Maas

Crown Of Midnight CoverBook: Crown Of Midnight by Sarah J. Maas

Published August 2013 by Bloomsbury|418 pages

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

Series: Throne Of Glass #2

Genre: YA Fantasy

Blog Graphic-What It's About

“A line that should never be crossed is about to be breached.

It puts this entire castle in jeopardy—and the life of your friend.”

From the throne of glass rules a king with a fist of iron and a soul as black as pitch. Assassin Celaena Sardothien won a brutal contest to become his Champion. Yet Celaena is far from loyal to the crown. She hides her secret vigilantly; she knows that the man she serves is bent on evil.

Keeping up the deadly charade becomes increasingly difficult when Celaena realizes she is not the only one seeking justice. As she tries to untangle the mysteries buried deep within the glass castle, her closest relationships suffer. It seems no one is above questioning her allegiances—not the Crown Prince Dorian; not Chaol, the Captain of the Guard; not even her best friend, Nehemia, a foreign princess with a rebel heart.

Then one terrible night, the secrets they have all been keeping lead to an unspeakable tragedy. As Celaena’s world shatters, she will be forced to give up the very thing most precious to her and decide once and for all where her true loyalties lie… and whom she is ultimately willing to fight for.

Blog Graphic- What I Thought

Why on earth did it take me so long to read Crown Of Midnight?  Why??!?!?!  I really liked it, and I wish I had picked it up sooner!

We see Celaena as the Kings Champion and we actually get a glimpse of Celaena as the bad-ass assassin that was mentioned and hinted at in Throne Of Glass.  I didn’t really get why she was this feared assassin in the first book, and we don’t get a lot of it in this book, but we do get a few glimpses of it in this book.  I really liked seeing that, and part of me is hoping we’ll see more of that Celaena in the next couple of books.  And we definitely learned quite a bit about Celaena and her family in this book…I still wish we knew more about her childhood, but I have the feeling that’s something that might be coming up in the next couple of books.

I’m not sure why I was so surprised by a certain revelation about her family history- I don’t if it’s because I remember basically nothing from Throne Of Glass (I actually wish I had re-read it, because I did feel a little lost) or if I just didn’t put it together and should have.  As for feeling a little lost, there were points where I was a little confused about what was going, and that’s probably because I got a little distracted at times.  But it did come together, and I’m feeling pretty good about the idea that we’ll be learning a lot more about what’s going on.

I did feel really invested as Celaena tried to figure out the riddle and everything else.  There are quite a few things that people don’t realize/figure out until it’s too late, and it makes me wonder what that means for the books to come.  Is it good?  Is it bad?  Or is it something that falls somewhere in the middle?  We all know it’s coming to come out sooner or later, and when it does…I don’t know what that will mean for some of the characters, especially Chaol and Dorian.

I’m feeling pretty ambivalent about Chaol and Celaena, who certainly has more important things to worry about. And yet, how differently would things have gone if he and Celaena didn’t have so many issues?  He did seem to realize the error of his ways, but it was too little, too late.  And even though he tried to protect her, in the end, it may or may not be his best decision.  We will see how that works out.

Oh, Nehemia!  I feel like we haven’t seen the last of her, and even though I was not expecting things to go a certain way for her, I’m still curious if she will continue to have a role in things.

Blog Graphic- My Rating

4 stars.  I really liked it, and I can’t wait to see where certain revelations take us!

Book Review: Until Friday Night by Abbi Glines

Until Friday Night CoverBook: Until Friday Night by Abbi Glines

Published August 2015 by Simon Pulse|336 pages

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

Series: The Field Party #1

Genre: YA Contemporary

Blog Graphic-What It's About

To everyone who knows him, West Ashby has always been that guy: the cocky, popular, way-too-handsome-for-his-own-good football god who led Lawton High to the state championships. But while West may be Big Man on Campus on the outside, on the inside he’s battling the grief that comes with watching his father slowly die of cancer.

Two years ago, Maggie Carleton’s life fell apart when her father murdered her mother. And after she told the police what happened, she stopped speaking and hasn’t spoken since. Even the move to Lawton, Alabama, couldn’t draw Maggie back out. So she stayed quiet, keeping her sorrow and her fractured heart hidden away.

As West’s pain becomes too much to handle, he knows he needs to talk to someone about his father—so in the dark shadows of a post-game party, he opens up to the one girl who he knows won’t tell anyone else.

West expected that talking about his dad would bring some relief, or at least a flood of emotions he couldn’t control. But he never expected the quiet new girl to reply, to reveal a pain even deeper than his own—or for them to form a connection so strong that he couldn’t ever let her go…

Blog Graphic- What I Thought

I picked this one up on a whim one day, and I’m glad I did, because I end up really liking it!  And even though I really liked it, there are definitely some issues I have with the book.

Like, I felt like I needed more of Maggie’s backstory.  She mentions mentions staying before moving to Alabama, but we’re never told what their relationship to her was, or why she was staying with them.  Even though we’re told the basics of why she moved to Alabama and why she doesn’t talk, I still felt like something was missing from her story.

Honestly, though, what is with the trope of not talking after witnessing/going through through something very traumatic?  People deal with stuff in a lot of different ways, and clearly, this was her way of dealing with it, but it really bugged me for some reason.  It also sort of bugged me that she only talked to one person, but at the same time, I think they needed each other.  Maggie needed to talk to someone, and West needed to talk to someone who would just listen.

And West dealing with a sick parent, and no one picking up on anything?  I don’t blame him, and yet…how did his closest friends not pick up on something being wrong?  Still, I liked that Maggie saw something that no one else did, and I think having each other helped them get through everything that had happened and was happening in their lives.  She seemed to get him in a way no one else did.

I’ve only read one other Abbi Glines book, and that was a few years ago, so I was surprised by how much it leaned towards YA.  It’s not a bad thing, but I assumed it would be more towards the NA side of things, even though the characters are in high school.  And just based off of the title and cover, I expected football and Friday nights to be more of a thing, and it really wasn’t a big thing like I thought it would be.

I really liked Maggie and West as friends, and part of me wishes they had remained friends, because I felt like there wasn’t a lot of chemistry between them.  I didn’t feel the romance, even though I really wanted to.

Still, it’s a really cute story, and I couldn’t help but want everything to be okay for both of them.

Blog Graphic- My Rating

4 stars.  I really liked it, and even though I didn’t feel the romance between Maggie and West, I really liked how supportive they were of each other.

Book Review: Glass Sword by Victoria Aveyard

Glass Sword CoverBook: Glass Sword by Victoria Aveyard

Published February 2016 by HarperTeen|444  pages

Where I Got It: I borrowed the hardcover from library

Series: Red Queen #2

Genre: YA Fantasy

Blog Graphic- What I Thought

If there’s one thing Mare Barrow knows, it’s that she’s different.

Mare Barrow’s blood is red—the color of common folk—but her Silver ability, the power to control lightning, has turned her into a weapon that the royal court tries to control.

The crown calls her an impossibility, a fake, but as she makes her escape from Maven, the prince—the friend—who betrayed her, Mare uncovers something startling: she is not the only one of her kind.

Pursued by Maven, now a vindictive king, Mare sets out to find and recruit other Red-and-Silver fighters to join in the struggle against her oppressors.

But Mare finds herself on a deadly path, at risk of becoming exactly the kind of monster she is trying to defeat.

Will she shatter under the weight of the lives that are the cost of rebellion? Or have treachery and betrayal hardened her forever?

The electrifying next installment in the Red Queen series escalates the struggle between the growing rebel army and the blood-segregated world they’ve always known—and pits Mare against the darkness that has grown in her soul.

Blog Graphic- What I Thought

After reading The Red Queen earlier this year, I knew I had to read The Glass Sword, so when I saw it at the library, I knew I had to check it out!

I really liked it, and I feel like the more we learn, the more questions I have about what’s going on.  The ending to this book had me wondering what would happen next, and it makes me glad that I read the first two fairly close together. There’s going to be waiting for the next book, of course, but at the same time, that means plenty of time to read both Red Queen and Glass Sword again.

There is a lot going on, and we see quite a few new characters.  There were definitely times where I had trouble keeping up with who was who, and who had what ability, and what was going on, and so I found myself re-reading parts of it because I kept missing stuff.  It’s not Aveyard at all, it’s just me not paying a lot of attention. Maybe another read will help things sink in.

There’s a lot of action, and there weren’t any lulls, which kept me reading, because I wanted to know what would happen next.  I’d be really curious to see what this series would be like if it were adapted into a movie (or even a t.v. show) because there are definitely parts of it that seem made for being on screen.

I really wish Cal and Mare had more chemistry.  It’s nice to see a fantasy that’s light on romance- actually, it seems pretty rare- but at the same time, it seems like there might be something between them, and yet them together…something seemed off.  I did like Mare, who really is different than the Mare we see in the first book. She’s selfish and makes mistakes, and yet…she really has been through a lot, and became someone who wanted to protect the newbloods as much as she could.  We really see what this is doing to her, and how much it’s changing her…into a much different person, who seems less naive and a little bit more cruel.

And doing what she did at the end of the book…it’s definitely a cliff-hanger for sure, and it makes me wonder what’s in store for the books to come.  It’s sort of surprising, since this series is 4 books, and the way it ended is what you’d expect for the end of a 2nd book of a trilogy.

I didn’t mind it all that much, though, because it has me hooked.  And again, it really raises the stakes and makes you wonder what’s in store for the next 2 books.

Now that I think about it, something about Mare reminds me of Tris from the Divergent trilogy.  Going through the things that both Tris and Mare go through, it changes them.  It’s been a while since I’ve read Divergent, and I don’t really know why I was suddenly reminded of Tris, but they both had to make some tough decisions.  I don’t really know where I’m going with this, so I’ll leave it at that.

Blog Graphic- My Rating

4 stars.  There are definitely some twists and turns, and there’s quite the cliffhanger at the end!  I can’t wait to see what happens next!

ARC Book Review: False Illusions by A. Cramton

False Illusions CoverBook: False Illusions by A. Cramton

Self-Published in April 2015|222 pages

Where I Got It: I received an e-ARC in exchange for a fair and honest review.

Series: False Illusions #1

Genre: NA Contemporary Romance

Blog Graphic-What It's About

Madison had it all: the wealth, the amazing condo and engaged to the boxing Heavy Weight Champion of the World.
But in reality all she had was loneliness.
Until he showed up.

Yoel’s plan was bulletproof.
Get in and get out, win the title.
He did his homework but not well enough.
He wasn’t prepared for her.

One night changes everything.
One lie blurs the lines.

When the lust and smoke clears will everything just be a false illusion?
Or will it be the biggest fight of all?

Blog Graphic- What I Thought

I absolutely loved this book!  I made the awesome mistake of starting it during my lunch break, and I was not happy when lunch was over because it meant I had to stop reading and go back to work!

I just loved the characters, and more than that, I loved Yoel and Madison together.  I love the chemistry they had, and when I was finished, I was really sad that I was finished, because I wanted to live in their world more.  I understood why Madison stayed with Marcus, but I was so glad when she broke things off with him and went to New York to do her own thing.  And her going to New York was even better once Yoel was involved!  I just love them together, and how they gave each other space, but also seemed to support each other.  They definitely had their ups and downs, but I loved that they worked it out.

Oh, Marcus!  I wasn’t a big fan of Marcus, but I also want to know what his deal is!  And Madison’s mom…even when she was being nice, I had a hard time liking her.  I definitely got the impression Madison’s happiness wasn’t important to her at all, but I’m glad Madison did what was right for her!  And that she and Yoel had such awesome friends (and that Yoel had a pretty cool family, from what I could tell).

Blog Graphic- My Rating

5 stars.  False Illusions really made me wish I read more contemporary romance.  I think I might have to after reading it!  The characters were amazing, and False Illusions was such a hard book to put down.

Book Review: Night Study by Maria V. Snyder

Night Study CoverBook: Night Study by Maria V. Snyder, Narrated by Gabra Zackman

Published January 2016 by Harlequin|Length: 11 hours, 33 minutes

Where I Got It: I got the audio book from audible.com

Series: Soulfinders #2

Genre: Adult Fantasy

Blog Graphic-What It's About

Ever since being kidnapped from the Illiais Jungle as a child, Yelena Zaltana’s has been fraught with peril. But the recent loss of her Soulfinding abilities has endangered her more than ever before. As she desperately searches for a way to reclaim her magic, her enemies are closing in, and neither Ixia nor Sitia are safe for her anymore. Especially since the growing discord between the two countries and the possibility of a war threatens everything Yelena holds dear.

Valek is determined to protect Yelena, but he’s quickly running out of options. The Commander suspects that his loyalties are divided, and he’s been keeping secrets from Valek…secrets that put him, Yelena and all their friends in terrible danger. As they uncover the various layers of the Commander’s mysterious plans, they realize it’s far more sinister that they could have ever imagined.

Blog Graphic- What I Thought

I really liked Shadow Study.  Even though I really like this series so far, I’m finding that I don’t like it as much as her Study series (which I want to re-read now, because it’s been a while, but that’s besides the point).

There’s a lot going on, and a lot of things are happening that I never expected.  Like, we get to spend a lot of time with Valek, and we learn so much about him…I’m not sure why I was surprised by one particular revelation, but yet, I didn’t expect it or how it came about.  Part of me wondered if maybe it has to do with the loss of Yelena’s magic, and why she lost it.  I still want to know more about what’s going on with her magic, since it’s definitely different…and it may or may not have to do with some stuff going on.  Yelena without magic is just weird, but you also get to see her adapt to life without it, and how much she really relied on it.  And you don’t realize how much her magic is needed until we need her to use it.

I can’t wait to see how the new characters fit in and how they change things, because I’m sure that will happen.  The changing things, I mean, not the fitting in thing, though I’m sure we’ll see that in the next book.

Speaking of the next book, I need to know what happens!  Will Sitia and Ixia go to war, or can they stop it? There are so many things that I never saw coming, and I’m really curious as to how it will all work out.  If you look up one more chapter in the dictionary, I swear you will see this book next to it, because every chapter ended on a cliffhanger, but it wasn’t annoying because I wanted to keep going.

And everything with Fisk and the Helper’s Guild…I liked getting more with them, and now I want more with them. Maybe, one day, there will be a book focused on Fisk, because he really is an interesting character.

Reviewing this book while not giving anything away is a lot harder then I thought!  Just believe me when I say that there’s a lot at stake, and I’m mostly looking forward to (but also dreading a little) the last book.

And since I listened to the audio book, we can’t forget about Gabra Zackman as the narrator.  She’s done such a great job narrating this series (and the Study series as well), and I can’t picture anyone else narrating these books.  Which reminds me, I really should take a look at what else she’s narrated…

Blog Graphic- My Rating

4 stars.  I really liked Night Study!  I don’t know how Snyder is going to tie everything together, but Night Study has me wanting to know what’s going to happen next!

Book Review: Simon Vs. The Homo Sapiens Agenda by Becky Albertalli

Simon Vs The Homo Sapiens Agenda CoverBook: Simon Vs. The Homo Sapiens Agenda by Becky Albertalli

Published April 2015 by Balzar + Bray|303 pages

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

Series: None

Genre: YA Contemporary

Blog Graphic-What It's About

Sixteen-year-old and not-so-openly gay Simon Spier prefers to save his drama for the school musical. But when an email falls into the wrong hands, his secret is at risk of being thrust into the spotlight. Now Simon is actually being blackmailed: if he doesn’t play wingman for class clown Martin, his sexual identity will become everyone’s business. Worse, the privacy of Blue, the pen name of the boy he’s been emailing, will be compromised.

With some messy dynamics emerging in his once tight-knit group of friends, and his email correspondence with Blue growing more flirtatious every day, Simon’s junior year has suddenly gotten all kinds of complicated. Now, change-averse Simon has to find a way to step out of his comfort zone before he’s pushed out—without alienating his friends, compromising himself, or fumbling a shot at happiness with the most confusing, adorable guy he’s never met.

Blog Graphic- What I Thought

I liked Simon vs. The Homo Sapiens Agenda!  It was cute, fun, funny, and there was a lot of heart to this book.

I really liked Simon, and I liked watching him and Blue fall in love even more.  I loved seeing their emails back and forth, and when they met in person…I was so happy that they finally got to meet each other.  Their romance is definitely cute, and it’s a good cute.  I really do think it’s because they’re emailing each other, and you get to see it unfold.

It just made me happy to see Simon surrounded by people who support him.  I really liked his relationships with his friends and his family, and yes, there are people who aren’t so supportive, and seem to be generally stupid, it was also nice to see that people have his back, and won’t put up with homophobia.  It’s (overall) a happy book, and I liked reading something so happy.

I will say, Martin…not a good guy.  Especially with how he blackmailed Simon.  And that other thing he did?  Not cool.  Not cool at all.  You don’t do what he did…it really wasn’t for him to tell, just because he didn’t get the girl. He really did take something away from Simon.  I get why Martin did what he did, and he did seem to feel bad about it, in the end, but it doesn’t mean I have to like it one bit.

And while I’m not a big quote person, I loved this quote a lot.

“Why is straight the default? Everyone should have to declare one way or another, and it shouldn’t be this big awkward thing whether you’re straight, gay, bi, or whatever. I’m just saying.”

And also this one:

“White shouldn’t be the default any more than straight should be the default. There shouldn’t even be a default.”

It really got me thinking (for a few minutes) about how there are defaults, especially with sexuality, and how there’s a certain default until proven otherwise.  Those two quotes are part of why I like Simon so much.  And he references Harry Potter a lot, which was also pretty awesome.  It’s just cute and funny, and that’s really all I have to say.

Actually, I really like the title.  It makes a lot more sense after reading the book, and when it clicked, I actually liked the title a lot more.  I’m not a big fan of the cover, but it fits with the book pretty well, and honestly, I’m not sure what would make a better cover.

Blog Graphic- My Rating

4 stars.  I didn’t like the whole thing with Martin (hence 4 stars, instead of 5), but overall, Simon is a great book for everyone who likes cute, sweet, light books.

Book Review: Rogue by Julie Kagawa

Rogue CoverBook: Rogue by Julie Kagawa

Published April 2015 by Harlequin Teen|457 pages

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

Series: Talon #2

Genre: YA Paranormal/Dragons

Blog Graphic-What It's About

From the limitless imagination of bestselling author Julie Kagawa comes the next fantastic adventure in the Talon Saga.

Deserter. Traitor. Rogue.

Ember Hill left the dragon organization Talon to take her chances with rebel dragon Cobalt and his crew of rogues. But Ember can’t forget the sacrifice made for her by the human boy who could have killed her—Garret Xavier Sebastian, a soldier of the dragonslaying Order of St. George, the boy who saved her from a Talon assassin, knowing that by doing so, he’d signed his own death warrant.

Determined to save Garret from execution, Ember must convince Cobalt to help her break into the Order’s headquarters. With assassins after them and Ember’s own brother helping Talon with the hunt, the rogues find an unexpected ally in Garret and a new perspective on the underground battle between Talon and St. George.

A reckoning is brewing and the secrets hidden by both sides are shocking and deadly. Soon Ember must decide: Should she retreat to fight another day…or start an all-out war?

Blog Graphic- What I Thought

I randomly picked up Talon when I was at the library, being really about what happened in this book.  I thought the first book in the series, Talon, was okay, and definitely my least favorite Julie Kagawa book, but she’s one of my favorite authors, and I knew I wanted to read this one.  Surprisingly, I liked it a lot more than I thought I would, and it makes me want to re-read the first book to see if maybe I just read it at the wrong time.

We pick up a while after where we left off in Talon, and there’s a lot going on in this book!  Like, we learn more about Cobalt, and why he left Talon, which I really liked, because I felt like he was really mysterious, and his chapters reveal a lot more about him than I expected.  I also liked his chapters (and Dante’s to an extent) because they show the lengths Talon will go to in order to eliminate those who aren’t with the program.

And everything with Ember’s brother hunting her down!  It’s not that surprising, and I totally get why Talon would want to test his loyalty.  Ember is important to him, but he’s in too deep with Talon, and I don’t think anything will change that.  Even though I want him to change his mind so badly!

I think what I liked the most was how Garret realized that not all dragons were bad, and that St. George really wasn’t everything it was cracked up to be.  And while it was never outright said, somehow I got the impression that there’s something either Talon and/or St. George is hiding.  Maybe it’s because we see Garret change, and I want someone to be hiding something, but I feel like there’s more going on than what we see in the book. There’s something about this book that’s very big picture.

Maybe it’s because we see different narrators- it worked really well in this book, and you see how big this world really is.  That might be why it seems like there’s something else going on with St. George and Talon.  You really do see a little bit of everything in this book!

We also have a love triangle, and I quite like this one!  Yes, Garret and Cobalt represent two different sides of Ember, and she is torn between balancing human and dragon, but you see how torn she is and how hard of a choice it is for her. It’s not clear who she would pick and in a weird way, I’m rooting for both.  It’s not the main focus of the book, since there’s so much going on, but it’s still a pretty important part of the book.

Blog Graphic- My Rating

4 stars.  I didn’t love it, but it was everything I wanted Talon to be.