Review: Patrick Freivald – Twice Shy

 Twice Shy
Patrick Freivald

Ani is dead. That’s nothing new to her or her mom, but the rest of her classmates can’t know or she’ll be incinerated. As a carrier of zombie virus, she won’t ever grow old.

What attracted me to this YA novel was the front cover. Your eyes are immediately drawn to the black corset (just my type of style) and then the boots with the strange feet (which once you read the blurb of it being a zombie novel make sense) and then finally you notice the little white thing sitting next to her.


The concept of Ani being a zombie is introduced slowly and subtly, but if you’ve already read the blurb it’s a bit lost. Something that wasn’t clear to me was that Ani had been infected with zombie virus since she was a baby, yet she only started showing zombie symptoms in the last two years.

The author goes for what seems like sarcasm most of the time, but it just doesn’t do it for me. The humour (is there any?) is just highschool bullying, and I suppose I was supposed to think it was funny that Ani’s mom is dating Mike’s dad.

I wasn’t convineced by Ani’s interactions with her mother at all. The superficial hugs and so forth didn’t really show me that Ani loved her mother – it seemed like her mother was doing everything humanly possible for her, but yet Ani didn’t care. Also Ani’s mother fears becoming a zombie so much that she would kill herself first – which doesn’t fit in with constantly keeping Ani alive.

The ending was pathetic. As I was reading this on a Kindle app, I noticed that at 90% read there was still a lot of story that should have been told. The ending, complete with ‘THE END’ printed on it, was such a let down. It was obvious that it wasn’t going to be a happy ending and I actually found myself hoping she would be incinerated because Ani was so damn annoying.

I thought the point of being a zombie was that they couldn’t feel pain. I didn’t understand how a cut on Ani’s forehead needed extra special attention while she’s cutting herself with razors frequently.

The initial image painted of Ani screamed opposites to me. I had no idea what was happening most of the time. She’s happily pretending to be emo, and then the next minute she wants to rock out to pop music. It seemed to me like music was the key to who she was, as as art, but there was no feeling of backstory – perhaps being creative was linked to being a zombie?

I didn’t like the use of abbreviations by the author, including FML. ZV for zombie virus. Ugh, it seems like an attempt to seem ‘hip’, but it just didn’t work for me.

I would recommend this book for older teens, as it involves mentions of self-harm and foul language that are not necessary for a younger reader to encounter. The self-harm is particularly disturbing, as it’s painted as a release for Ani. The drug use is also not great.

I did not enjoy this book, and I’m not sure I would actually ‘recommend’ it at all. It took me around 3 hours to read, and I wish I could have those 3 hours back. If it had been a book I had bought for myself, not one that I was expecting to review, I probably would have stopped reading after the first chapter or two.

I received this ebook free for an honest review. My review has not been influenced by my correspondence with the author’s management company.

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Review: Laurie Hergenham – the Australian short story

the Australian short story
Laurie Hergenham (ed)
This is a novel I had to read for a literature class. It is not really a novel, as it suggested, it is a collection of short stories. It covers quite a long time period, around 100 years, from Peter Carey to Henry Lawson.

As befitting my usual treatment of literature studies books, I didn’t read all of the short stories in this collection. I read and studied just three: Short Shift Saturday by Gavin Casey, Josie by Vance Palmer and Happiness by Katherine Susannah Prichard.

Short Shift Saturday is a gritty short story written in a realist manner. It’s longer than the other two, and I felt that it was easier to understand and get into the depth of the characters.

Josie is an odd ducky. The whole short story is an odd ducky. It was a bit hard to read, and it certainly wasn’t enjoyable. In a way, it was more disgusting than anything. It makes the point of the outsider in Australian early culture.

Happiness is told from the perspective of an Aboriginal woman. It feels like a setup, and I wasn’t entirely convinced about the authenticity of feeling.

As a whole, I hated the unit of study that this book was part of, and I really didn’t do well on any of it. For this particular assessment, I had jetlag! You can tell it’s been on my mind for a while to review this book, because I went on holiday more than a month ago.

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It is not currently available from Amazon, although you may find it on The Book Depository (affiliate link).1star

Review: Liam O’Shiel – Eirelan

Eirelan
Liam O’Shiel

Eirelan is a land under constant attack. Wartime has forced thoughts of the family behind battle plans and wounds with no ending in sight. The characters battle for their survival with no real sense of the future being any brighter. This novel documents how the scales begin to tip, and life is even more on a dagger’s edge.

13173379The perspective changes in the first couple of chapters gave me unhappy feelings – I like to follow one character, or perhaps two, all the way through the novel otherwise I get confused about their names (I do this in real life too). O’Shiel managed it very well, and despite swapping between the characters, I felt like I was getting to know them well and I could keep track of which was which with ease.

I struggled to get a full picture of the novel’s contents. It wasn’t clear to me why Eirelan was being invaded in the first place. The first 200 or so pages built for me an image of a series of ever lasting battles, and an impending final push, but I didn’t see why that was happening. I couldn’t understand why they were fighting, or it was that I didn’t care? I didn’t get a bigger picture, a sense of climax, just a series of small battles which all were destroying the characters’ souls. The dreams that each of the characters had were neatly slipped into the text though. This all improved in the second half of the novel, and I couldn’t put it down.

The dialogue often seemed stilted and artificial, as did some of the scenery descriptions. There were also several instances where I noted far too much listing! At the same time though, the information about how a ship works, and the log entries and so forth were valuable and I enjoyed reading them.

I haven’t really decided how I feel about chapters starting with little quotes/notes/diary entries since I read the ‘Quantum Physics’ book which completely put my off quotes. The diary entries and things work well here though, because often it provides a concrete link between the two flanking chapters. That grounding helped with the perspective changes.

Conor is obsessed with his dream of the cottage and children. I can understand it, but I’m not sure why he feels compelled to bring it up with everyone he meets. Things in Marien’s past are hinted at slowly and subtly, and I really felt like I was guessing correctly – a bit of mystery was good all the way through.

I liked the undertones of Mairin and Conor’s relationship, and the swift decisions that must be made in wartime. It all seemed a little incestuous really because everyone seemed to have known each other for an age before they became partners. That wasn’t a negative for me at all because it made it easier for me to keep track of them.

A sign that I loved this book was that by the time I was nearing the last 200 pages or so I was dreading getting to the end because I loved the characters so much. Why did some of them have to die? Ah yes, the battle scenes were excellent, even though the perspective changed a fair bit there too, and I really wanted to skip ahead to find out what was going to happen next for that particular character.

There are deeper themes in this book too, the endless cycle of war and peace that even our current world seems unable to let go of. It seems to be human nature – but what this novel tries to point out is that we are all humans, and we all are essentially the same when it comes to having families and loving eachother.

I usually love Celtic/Gaelic literature, and I wasn’t disappointed by this novel despite a couple of nit-picky things I have mentioned (as always, I find it easier to comment on the bad rather than the good). It was one of the few Goodreads: First Reads books that I had marked as to-read before I even knew I had won it. I was super excited to receive it in the mail and set about reading it right there and then. It has caused me to neglect other things I should be doing – a sign that it’s a good one!

I’ve marked this book as both fantasy and historical fiction. I don’t think it’s strictly either – although it is  not obvious til the second half of the book, it is set in the future (if I missed it in the first half, it was because I was too engrossed in the characters). Fantasy to me involves magic and impossible things – something that this novel lacks. But then again, it’s not really historical fiction (as far as my limited knowledge tells me), because of the women being allowed to fight (it seems like all of the women are on ships or are Bows) and having political roles. Eirelan sounds almost exactly like Ireland! And at one point, there is a map shown to Marien which has England and other ‘real’ countries on it.

I’d likely recommend this book for adults and teens who like Celtic/Gaelic fiction and enjoy a good battle scene. For some reason it feels to me like a teenage book, but the descriptions of violence make me suggest it is for older teens. I guess there is not as much depth as I expect for a purely adult book, although it is certainly thick enough to be one at almost 800 pages.

4.5 stars from me (from Goodreads) and I can’t wait to read the second novel in this series. Earlier reviews have complained of typos in the kindle copy, the majority of those have been ironed out in my beautiful hard copy with creamy pages.

I received this book to review through the Goodreads: First Reads program, but I was not compensated in any other way to write a positive review. All opinions are my own and unbiased despite receiving a free book.

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The author, Liam O’Shiel, talking about Eirelan

Six months of writing a doctoral dissertation left me desperate to write something for fun. I’d written science fiction on and off for many years and so got started on a science fiction novel set in the future. Then something unusual happened: the story evolved to one set in the chronological future . . . but in the technological past. Not a “nuclear holocaust” tale, but rather a story much further into the future, at a time when nuclear weapons and nearly all the high technology of our own time has faded away. Global warming has given way to the Earth’s natural cooling cycle: an Ice Age approaches in Europe. In the British Isles and Brittany, Gaelic-speaking cultures have survived and even thrived for nearly 1,000 years and now are faced with destruction. Cold brings want, want breeds desperation, desperation spawns violence. The people at the center of “Eirelan” are struggling to survive, yes, but why? Not just to stay alive themselves. They seek to preserve for their children and grandchildren a world of music, poetry, art, craft, and spiritual values, in a word, their heritage passed down through the centuries. Conor and Mairin and Feth and Sean and all the rest, while very different as individuals, yearn for a time of peace and security for those who will come after them. “Eirelan” is their story and to be truthful, it feels as if they told their story to me and I wrote it down. I live part-time in their world, more threatening in some ways than ours, yet more rewarding in some ways too. If you enter their world, I hope you will find it welcoming and exciting. I am continuing to write this saga, whose ending I do not yet know.

Review: Gregory Kuhn – Why Quantum Physicists Don’t Get Fat

Why Quantum Physicists Don’t Get Fat
Gregory Kuhn
This ‘novel’ is a weightloss guideline book. To clarify, I don’t actually need to lose weight, nor have I been actively trying to lose weight (other than reducing portion sizes because I now have a desk job). I have been the size I am now for the last 5 or so years, maybe longer, and I have never been overweight. I’m always interested in various weight things though, as now that I’m in my 20s I don’t want to find overnight I have gained a bunch of weight.
15814165I liked the way the book used a couple of headlining scientist quotes for each chapter. However I got a bit annoyed with them as time went on as it felt like they interrupted the flow of the text, and as relevant as some of them were, other just felt like filler.
Kuhn really is quite sneaky in the way he positions the reader to take his opinion on and follow his weightloss strategies. You find yourself nodding along, and then bam! He hits you with something new. I loved the analogy of the browser for weight loss strategies. Neat! It explained the idea of changing the way you think to lose weight, and changing the strategies you use to do it.
The language is simple to understand and easy to read, even the more theoretical parts. I found myself 20% of the way through the book (thanks Kindle Cloud for telling me where I was up to) and not knowing how I got that far into it! Things went downhill from there though.
Chapter 9 is where the author loses me. He suddenly begins suggesting that our expectation that our parents love us makes the universe make them send us material expressions of love. Now, I agree to some extent that expectations can drive what you have been given, but also that those expectations do not magically change the cosmos. He then goes on to suggest that the real you is making the decisions, which seems a little counter-intuitive  if you imagine that if that was your parents, they can’t be really making the decision sanymore, because it is you who is suggesting to them that they should give you presents.
As a scientist, I can’t accept Chapter 10 either. Those neuropeptides that do signal, which are created when you have a thought, they don’t support the evidence he just presented. Perhaps I’m clinging to old science here (and I’m sure that is what he would suggest), but I have no reason to. The suggestion that my cells have been reprogrammed by years of thinking ‘I’m smart’ to expect to be anything other than being smart is ludicrous. It’s still possible to make stupid decisions, even if you are thinking (or perhaps because you are thinking) ‘I’m smart’. I particularly have a problem with this style of thinking, because it implies that people with mental illnesses have programmed themselves to expect to be sick. If cognitive behaviour therapy (which is aimed at changing the way you intitively think) worked the way this author is suggesting fat busting works, there wouldn’t be any more mental illness.
So you can probably tell that by this point in the book I was feeling pretty irritated at the author. I kept reading though in the hopes that the second half of the book would be better because it was time for part 2.
The conversational tone of this novel made me as the reader feel like it was me alone being talked to. I can imagine that this is something that some people would like, because it brings to mind a supportive figure who is going to help you through your weight-loss goals.
Chapter 12 and 13 make excellent points, and I can understand their relevance. Feelings are a thermometer for your state of being! I do agree that feelings play a powerful role, but not that you can overcome everything with them as the author is suggesting. The author then suggests that because I feel that some of the things he has said are ‘silly’, I either don’t have unwanted weight, or I’m not in enough pain over my weight to try something new.
You must honestly feel good about everything you eat. If you eat the cake, you must truely appreciate it. Don’t eat it, if it doesn’t make you feel good. What this book asks of you is a complete mindset chnge, that even with a manual like this one, is very hard to achieve on your own. It is easy to continue to eat the way you always have, but you now need to feel good about whatever it is you are doing to try lose weight.
I was looking for a real rational approach to losing weight, a handbook of approach, things that I could use to prevent gaining weight. I didn’t find it here, and I didn’t really find anything here particularly worthwhile. This book really seems like another fad ‘diet’ to me – change the way you think, and the weight will magically drop off. Don’t bother reading the whole thing – skip straight to chapter 15-17 with the eating, moving and 6  major points, and you will probably have gotten the most out of this book with the least effort.
This is an ebook that I received after missing out on a hard copy through Goodreads First Reads program. This has not influenced my review in any way – my opinion is my own.

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Review: A.J. Conway – My Nova

My Nova
A.J. Conway
Dean Craver has never liked technology. The invention of ‘the Youth’ only serves to prove him right. Dean has to follow a non-nonsensical poem to try and work out what’s going on, but really he has no idea (nor does anyone else on the planet). My Nova is a sci-fi novel.
14421741Read on for my review, scroll down for some words from the author!
I have to admit that the front cover with its neat like poem form thing put me off reading the book. I didn’t understand what it was. It was not until I had read about half the book before I realised the significance of the front cover – indeed it was still a little confusing. But that was the point!
I turned to the first page of the story and was instantly rather confused. My first thought was ‘uh oh, I don’t think I’m going to like this book, I hope it’s not going to be a drag to read’. I then proceeded to get somewhat irritated with the author for using ‘rather’ a million time!
After that slow start, the storyline picked up. I’d say the first 50 or so pages didn’t do anything for me, but then I really got into the story as the action started happening. Indeed, I found it difficult to put down.
The idea of ‘the Youth’ sounded like a totally good idea /sarcasm/. It reminded me a bit of I-Robot, and a little of George Orwell’s 1984 in the potential that these ‘Young’ had to spy on their ‘parents’. The various equipment used to keep the elderly alive reminded me of the movie The Island as well. This novel is not a summation of those things though, the elements Conway has used have been blended into a different whole.
I’m sort of glad that this is a stand-alone book. If it was a trilogy, I would feel more like Dean might survive against all the odds, and I would feel less tension about the situations he finds himself in. Instead, I was compelled to keep reading because I thought he was going to die and lose Nova! Arg! It was gripping to the very end, and in the last 100 or so pages I had trouble concentrating on other things.

I was very unhappy with the ending though. It suddenly felt like the author had stopped editing her work, and that she had forgotten that Nova could talk. Well, that’s the way it read anyway. It was all too neat and dandy, and if some of those circumstances were true, then where the hell were they while the USA was going under? Take my advice, just stop reading it after that final showdown and you’ll feel much more satisfied.

I enjoyed the novel after my initial reservations. Dean was really quite a likeable character, although I felt like a little more background would have been nice. Those darn Carnies! Who would have thought drugging and drinking could lead to such a colourful end?
I found it interesting that the novel was set mainly in New Orleans. Coincidence that they had horrible floods when the levies broke there a couple of years ago? Perhaps. Conway is an Australian author, but I decided to just take her word for it that that was the way the police system and such worked. I can understand why she didn’t set it in Australia – we have too much wide open space for this to actually occur. I did feel a little confused as to whether the rest of the world still existed, and whether the moon mission was acceptable to all of them.
There are a couple of editing niggles that I picked up while reading – they might not bother other people, but they almost always throw me out of reading. There were some incorrect tenses, a couple of ‘it’s’ where there should have been ‘its’ and some typos. I would imagine that these will be improve if a second edition was printed.  All in all, pretty typical of a privately published novel, although editing in professional houses has become far less strict in recent days, much to my dismay.
It’s not clear to me why some technologies are functioning and others aren’t. The things that have artificial intelligence, such as the Youth and the robot digesters are still working, yet none of the other technology is. Perhaps because they were plugged into one main power source, and the Youth are separate entities? This is explained a little more later in the book, but I still felt confused.
I would have liked to see more deadline times for Dean, such as some brief statistics for how long he could survive without dialysis, even with charcoal tablets. As it was, that part of the novel created a impending sense of urgncy – Dean, the one guy who seems to have any chance of stopping the invasion, is dying by slow, vomiting inches. This bit was no doubt informed by Conway’s medical background.
I think it’s a little far to call this ‘the thinking person’s literature’. Yes, it’s a good read, but I wouldn’t have said it was good enough to replace a classic piece of literature like 1984 for apocalyptic scenarios. It’s an enjoyable read to be sure, but probably not a reread for me.
I’d recommend this book for adults, and teenagers. There is a fair bit of foul language, which I think just serves to remind the reader that this novel is a possible outcome of the way our society is developing. There also a large amount of wanton violence against robots and humans alike, so if you don’t like that, perhaps don’t read this book.

I received a free copy in return for an honest review, and was not monetarily compensated in any way for my time. My opinion has not been altered in any way by the provision of this free copy, or any of the correspondence I exchanged with the author.

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Or from the author’s website4star

The writer, AJ Conway, talking about  My Nova

 ‘My Nova’ was the first novel I ever wrote, originally thought up when I was 13. Eight years later and it still contains those fundamental child-like aspects of sci-fi that we all love: the grey, lifeless future, the narrowing of human contact with one another, and the god complex Mankind develops in response to artificial intelligent design. Despite reviews that place ‘My Nova’ on the same shelf as ‘I, Robot’ or Speilburg’s ‘AI’, its original inspiration was actually from the classic, ‘The Time Machine’, and a brief scene where the Moon was blown apart.

Review: Steve Smallman & Joelle Dreidemy – The Lamb Who Came to Dinner

The Lamb Who Came to Dinner
Steve Smallman & Joelle Dreidemy
It’s cold outside and a little lamb is knocking at the door. The wolf is rather hungry, but he couldn’t possibly eat a frozen lamb, it will give him indigestion! What shall he do?
2886232So you’ve probably realised by now, but this is a kid’s book! I ran into it because I happened to turn on the tv and Bookaboo was on! Bookaboo is awesome, it’s on ABC4Kids and it promotes reading. Bookaboo is a rock-star drum-playing dog who can’t go on stage unless he has had a book read to him. A pretty awesome idea if I ever heard one. I could totally apply that idea to my entire reading life.
I don’t normally review children’s books (I can’t say I read many of them) but this one deserved a special mention. The animation was pretty cool, and the original graphics in the book were very nice. It draws on so many other little children’s novels in ways (reminds me of the three little pigs crossed with Mary had a little lamb), but it is a unique blend. There are even some puns for older readers.
I don’t know how Meatloaf got a job reading this book on the show. I can’t say I’ve ever heard (and recognised) any of his music before, but he does an awesome job of making the story come to life. So awesome! His sound effects are pretty cool too.

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Even if you don’t have kids, you should watch the reading of it with Meatloaf.5star

Review: Thea Astley – It’s Raining in Mango

It’s Raining in Mango
Thea Astley
It’s Raining in Mango is a required novel I read for Australian Literature and History B at Griffith University. It is a typical Australian gritty novel, but the themes in it are varied and have the potential to be enjoyable.

1670400I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again. I hate Australian literature. Astley is an Australian author who has received the Miles Franklin award four times – just like Tim Winton, who is far more well known. Do you wonder why that is? It’s that Tim Winton writes accessible, modern fiction (that I’m also not particularly fond of), and Astley prefers to tackle the racism of early Australian history. Or at least she does in this novel.

It’s Raining in Mango covers five generations of the Laffey family. It takes quite a bit of getting used to, because the perspective jumps generations quite frequently. I really don’t like perspective jumps at all, and these ones also overlap in time. For example, Connie calls Will to tell him Harry has died, but then it jumps to Will going away for the war and he comes back as Harry dies.
I was surprised to find mid-way through this book a gay storyline. It turns out that Will is queer, but he finds it impossibly hard to accept it within the contraints of early Australian society. It’s sad to see that he can’t accept himself, and seems to be doomed to be lonely. At one point, it appears that he has sex with Connie instead, to comfort him from the horrors of war – but I can’t quite be sure.
The underlying themes of the book, as I mentioned before, include racism against the Australian Aboriginals, and also the judgement of women and men’s sexual choices. That’s one of the more interesting themes to me – in depicting the typical men and prostitutes, but also presenting a young prostitute’s side of things. Also, Connie’s son seems to be out of wedlock as well, so at least within the Laffey family, noone seems to mind about what women do with their bodies.
I borrowed this book from my local library because I didn’t think I’d care about it enough to want it on my shelves. There are a variety of covers it has had, but Amazon appears not to have any of them at the moment.

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Review: Cassandra Webb – Life

Life. Family. Magic.
Cassandra Webb
Kemia is a caring, if somewhat unexperienced young woman. At 16, she seems like she still has a child’s imagination, but the ability to hear others’ thoughts sets her apart from most of her adopted family. Faced with the threat of starvation if she doesn’t hunt and go to the town, the other option might be dreaded marriage.

Read on for my review, scroll on down for some words from the author!

The first chapter packs a powerful message, and introduces me to the character in a great way. I felt immediately drawn into the storyline – I wanted to know if Kemia had family, or if she was hunting by herself, and why she had these urges to save small children at the threat of losing her own life. It also introduces the system of magic well – Armoured Dragons that can kill with a sound. I loved this idea of dragons, and I was drawn to the fact that it was the dragon’s song which was dangerous.

I was worried that this story would disappoint me, but I found myself pleasantly surprised. The world building the author has put in, and the time she has obviously spent on this project is great. Webb has young children, and it reads into the text nicely. I tend to pick up how accurate a relationship the author has with children (although I’ve been wrong before) because sometimes the things expected of children in novels is unrealistic.
The dialogue was a little stilted for me, but I imagine that the later chapters and later drafts will improve this novel. Also, the details of the knife jolted me out of the narrative. I appreciated that the author wanted to get its importance across, but it just seemed awkward after the human contact that had just been displayed. I wasn’t convinced by the introduction to the marriage storyline. For some reason the dialogue there just felt stilted, and I felt like more could have been done with it.
Webb is good at grabbing the reader’s attention back though, as evidenced by my Ah moment! I was just thinking to myself, how inappropriate for Kemia to consider a haircut, and then her ma picks it up too! I wondered almost immediately whether Kemia was also able to do this, and the author didn’t keep me waiting to guess.
I didn’t know why there was a chapter titled ‘Bonus material’. I think it could have fitted in nicely into the end of Chapter 1, or as Chapter 2. I don’t always read bonuses, and so if I hadn’t in this case I could have missed out on something that gave me more insight into Kemia’s relationships with the other characters.
I did not like the way each sentence had its own line, or almost. I appreciated that it broke up the somewhat stream-of-counciousness narrative style, which can be overwhelming in large clumps of text. Also the format of publishing online can often be disruptive, and laying things out with lots of ‘blank space’ is a good thing.

There was a little much ‘telling’ rather than ‘showing’, but again I have hope that Webb will improve as the novel goes on. It is just so hard to get a good impression from a couple of chapters! I did fine myself at the end of Chapter 4 and thinking ‘Oh no, that’s it for another week!’

I got off on both a good foot and a bad foot for this novel. I was requested by the author to review her book, so that was exciting. I’m not sure I’ll ever get over the excitement of someone actually asking me to read books for pleasure! The bad thing was that when I went to the Blurb of the book, I found it a little fragmented and I got confused about what the story was actually about. The good thing about this being an online book means that it is easy for the author to fix that! She has also recently updated the page.
I don’t know whether I will keep reading this novel past the first couple of chapters, as I’ve never been particularly good at remembering to check. I do use GoogleReader religiously now to keep up with all the other reviewing blogs (and some makeup/nail art blogs) so it might have a chance. Not necessarily though, as I like to read my novels in a big hit. I find it useful to keep a novel on my laptop in order to read it wherever I am though, and without having the foresight to open the page before travelling, it isn’t possible with this novel. It is certainly not a critique of Webb’s writing.
I’d recommend this book for older children and teens at this stage. Unless the later (unpublished) chapters contain huge amounts of sex and violence, I don’t think this will change. I don’t think there was anything particularly contentious – just a good, easy read.
I was asked by the author to review this book, but I have not received any monetary compensation, or had her opinion influence the review I have given in any way.

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This book is available freely online at Life. Family. Magic.4star

The writer, Cassandra Webb, talking about seeing ourselves in fiction.

If I could be any character from any book I would like to be Miles Tuck, from Natalie Babbitt’s Tuck Everlasting. Simply because he has not only immortality but a desire to really exist, not just linger, in the world. This is exactly what I would do if I discovered I was immortal.
In ‘Life’ the characters unfortunately aren’t immortal, and there is such a range of personalities. Some days I wish I had Ysabel’s silk touch but mostly I feel rough around the edges like young Tadhgh. I asked a few friends and family members who they consider me to be similar to and was grateful no one suggested the soul crashing slave trader, Zakkai.
But that got me thinking. Maybe when we read a book and we see a little of ourselves here and there in the characters it is a good indication that we know ourselves, we are self aware. What if the most important thing when, diving head first into fictional worlds, isn’t our self awareness, but finding characters that lift us up higher. Chara
cters that slip into our dreams, that know just the right words to say in those wrong moments, that make us laugh and cry and love.
If this is the case, and I could swallow the Warlock Slaman’s magical concoction and slip into Kemla’s world just for a day, then I would most like to be carefree, fun loving, trickster, Adah. I’d love to spend a day hunting, bettering my skills and playing tricks on my siblings without a hint of worry about the dangers in life. And without having to think about any of the everyday worries that we all have in the real world.
Which character is your all time favourite and if you have begun reading ‘Life’ which character would you trade places with for a day?

Review: Jacqueline Carey – Kushiel’s Dart

Kushiel’s Dart
Jacqueline Carey

Phedre has been both blessed and cursed with Kushiel’s Dart. Born to a whore, she’s brought up to be a whore – but in the end she ends up being so much more. An epic that could have been split up into multiple parts in my opinion.

153008The tone and narration of this novel made me feel distanced from the main character. Even as she was describing things to me, they were narrated as if they were distant events in the past. That’s how the first say, 300 pages got to me, but then I started really getting into the novel and I didn’t pay any attention to that anymore.
I often forgot Phadre’s name because the novel is told from the first person perspective. I eventually caught on though, I kind of had to with the length of the book.
This is a 900 page epic in tiny writing, so it’s no wonder it has taken me so long to get around to reading it. Plus it was on the reward book shelf anyway. The progression is very slow – on page 100 Phadre is only just getting out into the ‘community’ now that she has undergone years of book training. You just wonder what on earth is going on.
It is not explained clearly what exactly Kushiel’s Dart is for a long time, and it frustrated me almost to the point that I wanted to google it! I think the crux of it is that she gets sexual pleasure out of being hurt. I didn’t really understand why it was such a big thing, as there is a whole house of those people available in her city.
This is an epic. A true epic. Just as one ‘story’ comes to a close, the next starts up. You get to travel the breadth of the land, and it’s a descriptive, pleasurable journey that I can’t complain about. I’m going to get my hands on the other books in the series as a must have as soon as I have a chance to shop (and have money).
I found myself struggling to care about the intrigues presented in the first part of the book. They even didn’t become clear to me as I continued reading – the overall impression I got was that there was too much going on for me to really grasp in one read. This is a reread to be sure – there are things I am sure I have missed.
I imagined that her tattoo was a little different from what you can see on the front cover. In fact, when I compare this cover to the other, I can’t see how her marque could possibly look like that from that angle. It is still pretty cool though. I liked the description of how it was done as well, and the way she responded fit in with the rest of her characterisation.
Phadre is pushed to the limit in so many different ways. So so many! Just as you think she’s getting there on improving things for herself and enjoying life, it turns out that Kushiel’s Dart is doing an awesome job of dodging things up for her.
The ending was quite bittersweet, which I enjoyed. It wasn’t a happily-ever-after, which sometimes irritates me, as you don’t really worry about the characters in the book because you know they will all survive.
I’d recommend this for adults and mature teens. The sex in it is not gratuitous, it is used as currency, but it’s not offensive. Certainly not the erotica I was expecting, after being recommended this book after reading Fifty Shades of Grey.

Find it on:
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Review: Winner of 25 Followers & 100 Reviews Giveaway

Winner of 25 Followers & 100 Reviews Giveaway
And the winner is… Michelle E Dunne. I’ve emailed you Michelle at the email address you gave me. Thanks for entering everyone, and I look forward to getting to another giveaway milestone soon. 
During this giveaway I reached 68 followers via GFC (an increase from 39 followers), 26 followers via Twitter (an increase from 6 followers) and 51 followers via Facebook (an increase from 20). You have no idea how happy this makes me!
Here’s to another 100 reviews, and another 100 followers on any of those platforms! Keep reading everyone, and keep smiling.