GG 1 x 4: The Deer-Hunters

The Deer-Hunters originally aired October 26, 2000.  It was written by Jed Seidel and was directed by Alan Myerson.

In this episode, a deer hits Lorelei’s car while Rory drives to Chilton.  It causes her to miss a Shakespeare exam, which could have disastrous consequences for her GPA.

This is one of the more memorable episodes of Gilmore Girls…all because of a deer.

We start off with Rory shopping for school supplies.  Rory needs serious school supplies, because she’s going to a serious school.  Lorelei, of course, has to make fun of Rory for this.

Rory gets a bad grade on an essay, and starts worrying about her Shakespeare test.  She, of course, gets shit from Paris.  From there, we go to the Independence Inn, where Lorelei reads a review about the restaraunt at the inn.  I love Sookie’s reaction to her magic risotto being described as just fine.

I just love Mrs. Kim.  Every time I see her, I can’t help but laugh.  The way she says things just cracks me up.  And Drella playing Black Sabbath (I think).  Very funny.

We meet Max Medina, one of Rory’s teachers, at a parent-teacher meeting.  I like Max, and I’m glad he sticks around for a while.  This is when Lorelei finds out Rory got a bad grade on an essay, and Rory’s behavior afterwards makes much more sense to Lorelei.

No episode is complete without going to Luke’s.  Rory’s studying, and Luke feeds her.  They talk about Rory’s essay and how humiliated she felt.  Rory doubts herself and her ability to catch up at Chilton.

Sookie has Lorelei taste-test several different risottos and is totally freaking out.  It’s nothing unusual from Sookie.  She even talks to one of the waiters, trying to figure out what happened.

Lorelei helps Rory study, and she eventually falls asleep while studying.  She wakes up late, drives to school…and on her way, a deer hits her.  She doesn’t hit the deer, it hits her while she’s at a stop sign talking to Lane.  She arrives late for her Shakespeare test and isn’t allowed to take it.  She has a melt-down in class, yells at Paris and Tristan, and gets sent to the principal’s office.

Back at the Inn, Sookie discovers that the restaraunt critic ordered the wrong wine with the risotto.  Lorelei goes to Chilton to talk to Headmaster Charleston and Mr. Medina and has a freak-0ut of her own.  Headmaster Charleston refuses to change the rules and says that if Rory can’t handle the pressure, she shouldn’t be at Chilton.

Sookie goes to the critic’s house to serve him the risotto with the proper wine.

Rory and Lorelei talk about Rory’s future at Chilton while looking for the deer, and Rory decides to stay at Chilton.  Max calls and leaves a message for Rory saying that there is an extra credit opportunity for Rory that will make up for missing the test.

Pop culture references: Black Sabbath, B-52’s, Saved By The Bell, Flash Dance

Favorite lines and scenes: Rory and her multiple trips to get all her stuff off of the bus.

Rory and Lane playing Marco Polo at Kim’s Antique’s so Rory can find Lane.

Rory, to Tristan: “And the name is RORY.”

Final Thoughts: I like this episode.  It’s the whole getting hit by a deer, but everyone thinking she hit a deer that makes it memorable.  Rory’s still adjusting to Chilton, but I think she feels better about attending by the end of the episode.

The Deer-Hunters gets 3 mugs of coffee.

UnWholly

Book: UnWholly by Neal Shusterman

Published by Simon and Schuster

Purchased for my Nook (352 pages)

Genre: YA: Dystopic

Find out more: Goodreads~Barnes And Noble~Amazon~Neal Shusterman

Goodreads Summary: In a society where unwanted and troublesome teens are salvaged for their body parts, Connor, Risa and Lev continue to fight against the system that would ‘unwind’ them. Thanks to their high-profile revolt at the Happy Jack Harvest Camp, people can no longer turn a blind eye to unwinding. Ridding society of so-called troublesome teens might be convenient, but its morality has finally been brought into question and a new law passed. However, unwinding has become big business, and there are powerful political and corporate interests, not to mention the illegal ‘Parts Pirates’, that want to see it not only continue, but expand.

Connor, Risa and Lev each struggle to rescue as many AWOL teens as possible and offer them sanctuary. But life at the Graveyard is hard, rivalries bubble under the surface and the cracks are beginning to show.

And then there is Cam, a teen who does not exist. Made entirely out of parts from one hundred other ‘unwinds’, Cam is a 21st century Frankenstein, a rewound, struggling to find a true identity and meaning, and a place in society. But when a sadistic bounty hunter who takes “trophies” from all the ‘unwinds’ he captures starts to pursue Connor, Lev and Risa, Cam finds his own fate inextricably bound with theirs…

I so didn’t like UnWholly at first.  But you know, I really enjoyed it by the end.

There were several narrators throughout the book, and at first, I didn’t like the new additions to the novel.  I didn’t really care for the new narrators, who are Cam, Miracolina and Starkey.  Miracolina, I felt neutral about.  She was annoying, and I didn’t really like her, but I also didn’t care enough either way.  Starkey…I don’t think we’re supposed to like him, which is fine, because he’s pretty unlikeable.  Of the 3, Cam was the most interesting.  He’s composed entirely of body parts from Unwinds, and is the first of his kind.  I can’t imagine what that would have to be like, but even he was a little too unlikeable, with his desire to have Risa by his side.

As for Rise, Lev, and Connor, it was nice to see them and the journey they’ve taken since Unwind ended.  Things definitely come up and happen, and they have their work cut out for them.

I really liked learning about how unwinding came to be.  Things were pretty bad for teens- budget cuts in terms of school, unemployment…the future was not looking bright for them.  They protested and marched and became known as feral teens.  That, combined with new advancements in medicine, meant that there was an easier way to deal with teens misbehaving.  Especially when it’s going on as the 2nd civil war was going on.  I hope that’s not in our future, but it really does feel like it is a possibility.

Shusterman does such a good job at introducing characters and issues…and how he shows multiple perspectives on different issues.  I really like that it, because you can draw your own conclusions.  And it doesn’t feel like he’s taking a side, which is cool.  And good- he seems very willing to give time to both sides.  Neutral is good.

I kind of wish I re-read Unwind.  I know I read it a few months ago, but just so I could have everything super-fresh in my mind.  At times, it felt like very much like a sequel…like, hey, guys, here’s another book for you.  But overall, it’s a pretty good 2nd book, and didn’t really fall into the dreaded Middle Book Syndrome thing.

UnWholly gets a 4 out of 5.  It’s just as good as Unwind.

Wander Dust

Book: Wander Dust by Michelle Warren

Published by Kristine Michelle Preast

Purchased for my Nook (252 pages)

Genre: YA: Science Fiction- Time Travel and Fantasy

Find out more: Goodreads~Barnes And Noble~Amazon~Michelle Warren

Goodreads Summary: Ever since her sixteenth birthday, strange things keep happening to Seraphina Parrish.

The Lady in Black… burns Sera’s memories.

Unexplainable Premonitions… catapult her to other cities.

The Grungy Gang… wants to kill her.

And a beautiful, mysterious boy… stalks her.

But when Sera moves to Chicago, and her aunt reveals their family connection to a centuries old, secret society, she is immediately thrust into an unbelievable fantasy world, leading her on a quest to unravel the mysteries that plague her. In the end, their meanings crash into an epic struggle of loyalty and betrayal, and she’ll be forced to choose between the boy who has stolen her heart and the thing she desires most.

Wander Dust is the breathtaking fantasy that will catapult you through a story of time, adventure, and love.

I really liked Wander Dust.  The one thing I really loved was the fact that people worked in teams.  While Seraphina did go off on her own, she did make her way back to her team.  And they did help her out, and stuck by her.

I loved the whole idea of team work to travel back in time.  They actually did work together, which seems so rare in YA.  Plus, how can you go wrong with a relic to go back in time?

It does take a while for things to get moving, but it is clear that Warren has a really clear idea of the world and how things work.  It is cool that there are a lot of small details thrown in that make sense as you read it.  We’ve definitely scratched the surface with Wander Dust, and I can’t wait to read more!

A few things were cliche, like Seraphina noticing weird things happening to her after turning 16, or her mom not being dead after all.

It gets a 4 out of 5.  Some of it was cliche, but overall it was a fun, exciting read!

Beautiful

Book: Beautiful by Amy Reed

Published by Simon Pulse

Purchased for my Nook (240 pages)

Genre: YA: Contemporary

Find out more: Goodreads~Barnes And Noble~Amazon~Amy Reed

Goodreads Summary: When Cassie moves from the tiny town where she has always lived to a suburb of Seattle, she is determined to leave her boring, good-girl existence behind. This is Cassie’s chance to stop being invisible and become the kind of girl who’s worth noticing.

Stepping into her new identity turns out to be easier than Cassie could have ever imagined… one moment, one choice, changes everything.

Cassie’s new existence both thrills and terrifies her. Swept into a world of illicit parties and social landmines, she sheds her virginity, embraces the numbness she feels from the drugs, and floats through it all, knowing that she is now called beautiful. She ignores the dangers of her fast-paced life… but she can’t sidestep the secrets and the cruelty.

Cassie is trapped in a swift downward spiral tinged with violence and abuse, and no one—not even the one person she thought she could trust—can help her now.

Beautiful is an interesting book.  I wasn’t expecting it to be about a good girl gone bad- which is what I get for not reading the summary- and the title doesn’t quite match the plot.  Not that titles and actual content need to match up.

For a lot of the book, I was reminded of the movie 13- the one with Nikki Reed and Evan Rachel Wood.

It was a little hard to see Cassie’s descent into drugs and sex.  I don’t think it’s meant to be easy, and in all reality, there are a lot of girls like Cassie.  I definitely understand what it’s like to want to be not invisible.  And wanting to fit in.

The writing was interesting- not quite stream-of-consciousness but almost.  And that worked really well, because it felt like I was right there with Cassie.

The ending bothered me- she ends up moving away, and there is this weird gap where she’s no longer friends with Alex because of death threats and Cassie moving away.  You get a general idea of what happened, but given the fall she took, things seemed to wrap up a little too nicely.  Plus, her parents seemed to be utterly clueless as to what was going on.  It wasn’t a big surprise, from what we see of them.

I think I would have to give it a 3 out of 5.  It is an interesting book, but I don’t think Cassie fell hard enough.

The Princesses Of Iowa

Book: The Princesses Of Iowa by M. Molly Backes

Published by Candlewick Press

Purchased for my Nook (286 pages)

Genre: YA: Contemporary

Find out more: Goodreads~Barnes And Noble~Amazon~M. Molly Backes

Goodreads Summary: What does it mean to do wrong, when no one punishes you? A smart and unflinching look at friendship, the nature of entitlement, and growing up in the heartland.

Paige Sheridan has the perfect life. She’s pretty, rich, and popular, and her spot on the homecoming court is practically guaranteed. But when a night of partying ends in an it-could-have-been-so-much worse crash, everything changes. Her best friends start ignoring her, her boyfriend grows cold and distant, and her once-adoring younger sister now views her with contempt. The only bright spot is her creative writing class, led by a charismatic new teacher who encourages students to be true to themselves. But who is Paige, if not the homecoming princess everyone expects her to be? In this arresting and witty debut, a girl who was once high-school royalty must face a truth that money and status can’t fix, and choose between living the privileged life of a princess, or owning up to her mistakes and giving up everything she once held dear.

I really liked The Princesses Of Iowa.  I wasn’t sure about it at first, but by the end, I really enjoyed it.

It’s about nothing and everything all at the same time.  You mostly see how much the accident impacted Paige, but you also see how much of an effect it had on Nikki and Lacey…on a much smaller scale.

It was hard to feel sorry for them, even Lacey, who still had to go to physical therapy months after the accident.  But I really felt for Paige as she dealt with what happened through her creative writing class.  If I could have guaranteed I would have a teacher like Mr. Tremont, I so would have taken creative writing. Actually, if I had the time, I probably would have taken it in college, but maybe it would have jumped to the top of the list if I knew the teacher would be cool.

I wanted Paige to do the right thing, and in the end, she did.  She did make some questionable choices, but who doesn’t?

There is a touch of romance, and honestly?  If it were cut from the book, I would have been fine.  It almost felt like an afterthought.

There’s a lot going on, issue wise…not just drunk driving and the consequences, but other things too.  It didn’t feel like there were that many, but looking back, she threw a lot in, and did it well.

I loved that the characters did a really stupid thing and actually faced consequences for those actions.  It’s a nice change from the characters who do stupid stuff and never have to face any consequences for their actions.

I also liked the focus on becoming homecoming queen, and how it was something Paige thought she wanted…until she realized she didn’t want it.  I loved seeing her grow over the course of the novel.

It gets a 4 out of 5.

Half-Blood

Book: Half-Blood by Jennifer Armentrout

Published by Spencer Hill Press

Purchased for my Nook (242 pages)

Genre: YA: Paranormal- Mythology

Find out more: Goodreads~Barnes And Noble~Amazon~Jennifer Armentrout

Goodreads Summary: The Hematoi descend from the unions of gods and mortals, and the children of two Hematoi—pure-bloods—have godlike powers. Children of Hematoi and mortals—well, not so much. Half-bloods only have two options: become trained Sentinels who hunt and kill daimons or become servants in the homes of the pures.

Seventeen-year-old Alexandria would rather risk her life fighting than waste it scrubbing toilets, but she may end up slumming it anyway. There are several rules that students at the Covenant must follow. Alex has problems with them all, but especially rule #1:

Relationships between pures and halfs are forbidden.

Unfortunately, she’s crushing hard on the totally hot pure-blood Aiden. But falling for Aiden isn’t her biggest problem–staying alive long enough to graduate the Covenant and become a Sentinel is. If she fails in her duty, she faces a future worse than death or slavery: being turned into a daimon, and being hunted by Aiden. And that would kind of suck.

The whole time I was reading Half-Blood, I was reminded of Vampire Academy by Richelle Mead.  It’s Vampire Academy, but with a Greek mythology twist.

I loved the idea of Half-Blood.  The Hematoi, and pures and halfs…I love how the society is structured.  And I loved the idea of the Apollyon…and the rare occurrence of 2 Apollyons.  Of course, Alex happens to be the 2nd Apollyon.

Half-Blood just didn’t work for me though, and I think it’s because I couldn’t stop comparing it to Vampire Academy.  The 2 books are similar enough that I couldn’t really enjoy Half- Blood.

The characters were just okay.  Alex just annoyed me, with her need to take care of things, even when told not to…and even thought she needed a lot more training.  The only character that really stood out was Seth, who’s the first Apollyon.  His abilities are definitely mysterious, but also interesting.

Armentrout does keep you interested, and the novel moves along pretty well.  I wasn’t bored while reading it, which is always a plus.  I liked the references to Greek mythology.

Overall, I have to give it a 2 out of 5.  It was okay, and while I liked the concept, I was too reminded of VA to really enjoy it.

GG 1 x 3: Kill Me Now

Kill Me Now originally aired on October 19, 2000.  It was written by Joanne Waters and was directed by Adam Nimoy.

In Kill Me Now, Rory takes up golf as part of a school athletic requirement.  She grows fond of her grandfather, much to Lorelei’s dismay, during a trip to the country club he is a part of.  The staff of The Independence Inn get ready for a double wedding involving 2 sets of identical twins.

We open up with a previously on…segment.  Which is weird, considering this is the third episode.  But we then move on to Friday night dinner, where they talk about all the maids Emily has had.  Get used to that, because it becomes a running joke during the series.

We see the wedding preparations and the brides and grooms.  Well, more like seeing more of the brides than the grooms, because everyone knows wedding are all about the brides (and that the grooms are just there).  Anyway, I loved seeing Michel freak out over swans.

Rory golfing was amusing, and Richard’s expression was also amusing.  From there, we go to Jackson and Sookie at the Independence Inn.  Of course, they’re fighting over produce, and how Sookie wants to see the strawberries that Jackson didn’t bring.  I wish there were that many options for P.E. when I was in school.  Maybe I would have enjoyed it more.  Actually, probably not, because I’d rather watch sports than actually play them.

The mom of the brides was hilarious…and how she didn’t care for her daughters was a little sad.  But also a little funny.  Distance just seems to be the best thing for them.  And the conversation about all the twins getting married and who’s who and what would be considered cheating is so Lorelei, Sookie and Michel.

Lorelei watching Rory talk to Richard on the phone after the golfing trip was interesting.  I never noticed it before…it’s not that she’s upset or really happy that they’re talking.  But there’s something about her expression that’s interesting.

What I thought was really interesting was Lorelei’s reaction to Rory liking the day she spent golfing with Richard.  It’s not the life Lorelei wanted and it never occured to her that Rory might want it.

Pop culture references include the twins from the doublemint commercial and Madonna’s marriage to Sean Penn.

Favorite lines and scenes: Lorelei: “How do you mix up Anton and Sophia?”

Richard: “What do you mean?”

Lorelei: “One’s a man and one’s a woman.”

Final thoughts: I thought this episode was just okay.  I think this is the episode where Rory starts to become closer to her grandparents but it’s not the most memorable episode in the season (or the series for that matter).

It gets a 2.5 out of 5 mugs.

Take A Bow

Book: Take A Bow by Elizabeth Eulberg

Published by Scholastic, Inc

Purchased for my Nook (288 pages)

Genre: YA: Contemporary

Find out more: Goodreads~Barnes And Noble~Amazon~Elizabeth Eulberg

Goodreads Summary: From the fantastic author of The Lonely Hearts Club and Prom & Prejudice comes a story of all the drama and comedy of four friends who grow into themselves at a performing arts high school.

Emme, Sophie, Ethan, and Carter are seniors at a performing arts school, getting ready for their Senior Showcase recital, where the pressure is on to appeal to colleges, dance academies, and professionals in show business. For Sophie, a singer, it’s been great to be friends with Emme, who composes songs for her, and to date Carter, soap opera heartthrob who gets plenty of press coverage. Emme and Ethan have been in a band together through all four years of school, but wonder if they could be more than just friends and bandmates. Carter has been acting since he was a baby, and isn’t sure how to admit that he’d rather paint than perform. The Senior Showcase is going to make or break each of the four, in a funny, touching, spectacular finale that only Elizabeth Eulberg could perform.

I loved, loved, loved Take A Bow!  This is such a cute book, and I love that it takes place at a performing arts school.

I loved the cast of characters- you have a former child star, a girl who prefers to be behind the scenes but is super-talented, a guy who gives in to his dark side, and a girl who is desperate to be in the spotlight.  Are they a little cliche?  Of course.  But it was good snapshot of different students who might attend a performing arts high school.

Can I just say how much I love Emme?  Because I just love her!  I’m also not a fan of Sophie.  I couldn’t stand her, but I think she’s supposed to be rather unlikeable.  Carter and Ethan, I’m neutral about.

I loved seeing a performing arts school, especially the focus on music.  I totally want to be a singer now!

I thought the multiple narrators worked really well, and each chapter really did feel like they were narrated by someone different.  It was good to see the year through the eyes of 4 very different people, and how their stories connected.

I was surprised at how well the performing arts translated to the page.  The performances were described really well, and I really wanted to see them in person.  Everything was so full of life that I couldn’t help love the characters, the classes, the auditions and the performances.  I also loved the prologue, when they all auditioned, and the epilogue, which is their graduation.  It really added to the story, to see where they started and where they going.

It gets a 5 out of 5.

Bound

Book: Bound by Kira Saito

Published by Smashwords

Purchased for my Nook

Genre: YA: Paranormal- Romance

Find out more: Goodreads~Kira Saito

Goodreads Summary: Sixteen year old Arelia LaRue lives in New Orleans where the music is loud, voodoo queens inhabit every street corner, and the ghosts are alive and well. Despite her surroundings, all she wants is to help her Grand-mere Bea pay the rent and save up for college. 

When her best friend Sabrina convinces her to take a well-paying summer job at the infamous Darkwood plantation, owned by the wealthy LaPlante family, Arelia agrees. 

However, at Darkwood strange things start to happen, and gorgeous Lucus LaPlante insists that he needs her help. Soon, the powers that Arelia has been denying all her life, come out to play and she discovers mysteries about herself that she could have never imagined.

I really liked Bound.  One, it takes place on a plantation in New Orleans, and two, Arelia finds out she’s a voodoo queen.  I thought that was a really interesting twist on the paranormal, because how often do you see voodoo in a novel?

I loved the setting, and while you didn’t see New Orleans, I loved how Saito described the plantation.  It has the right combination of beauty, history and creepiness.  I don’t think we’ll be seeing too much of New Orleans in the rest of the series but you could definitely tell they were in New Orleans (and not just because of the focus on voodoo).

Arelia was pretty gullible, but it wasn’t too annoying.  I just don’t get why she was friends with Sabrina.  Arelia’s just a good person, and wants to help…and Sabrina is pretty opposite of that.  Opposites attract, I suppose.  I am a little distrustful of Lucas, especially because of how he acted at the end of the book.  Ivan, on the other hand, is really mysterious and cryptic, and I wonder what role he’ll play in the rest of the series.

I’m not a big fan of the ending- it was definitely a cliffhanger, but it ended pretty abruptly.  Like Saito forgot to write the ending of a novel, and not just the ending to a chapter.  But now I really want to read the next book, so it’s not all that bad.

Plus, the cover is so pretty!  It fits so well with the book, and sometimes they don’t.

I thought the whole concept of being the one to help Lucas not be trapped at Darkwood was really interesting.

It gets a 4 out of 5 for being entertaining and interesting.

Update: Sorry about accidentally publishing it before it was ready!

Wondrous Strange

Book: Wondrous Strange by Lesley Livingston

Published by HarperTeen

Purchased for my Nook (352 pages)

Genre: YA: Paranormal- Fairies

Find out more: Goodreads~Barnes And Noble~Amazon~Lesley Livingston

Goodreads Summary: Since the dawn of time, the Faerie have taken. . . .

Seventeen-year-old actress Kelley Winslow always thought faeries were just something from childhood stories. Then she meets Sonny Flannery. He’s a changeling—a mortal taken as an infant and raised among Faerie—and within short order he’s turned Kelley’s heart inside out and her life upside down.

For Kelley’s beloved Central Park isn’t just a park—it’s a gateway between her ordinary city and the Faerie’s dangerous, bewitching Otherworld. Now Kelley’s eyes are opening not just to the Faerie that surround her, but to the heritage that awaits her . . . a destiny both wondrous and strange.

I didn’t like Wondrous Strange at first.  But by the end of the book, I couldn’t wait to see what happened next.

There’s a lot of setting up in Wondrous Strange, and it isn’t until the end that things really pick up.  I’m glad I gave it a chance, because it is interesting.  I like the idea of four different courts, and the Janus, who protect the gate that Oberon closed (except for one day a year).  There’s some interesting fairy mythology in this book.

Now that I think about it, there were quite a few clues in the book that I didn’t pick up on.  I really liked the theater aspect of the novel.  And how fairies popped up everywhere.

Wondrous Strange is narrated by Kelly and Sonny.  I thought their stories were interesting together, and I think it worked better with the two of them as narrators than either of them on their own.

Kelley did handle things a little too well.  You find out you’re the daughter of a fairie, and you act like it’s perfectly normal?  It was a little weird for her at first, I think, but overall, she was a tad bit okay with the family secret.  Of course, I’m totally basing her reaction on what I’d do if I found I was the daughter of 2 fairies…which would be freaking out.  Kelley did crack me up, I have to admit.

As for the other characters, they were just okay.  None really stood out, except for Sonny, but there’s something off about him.  It was hard to care about most of them in this book, but maybe in the next book…

I give Wondrous Strange a 3 out of 5.  I enjoyed it, especially towards the end, but it took a little too long to get going.