Thursday, February 27, 2014

Dream With Little Angels by Michael Hieber

Dream With Little Angels started out strong with a haunting scene from 1975. On a lonely autumn day a brilliantly described willow tree is hiding and shielding the broken dead body of a small child in a way that makes you feel for the small girl even though, at this point, the reader knows absolutely nothing about her. Then shoot forward twelve years when everything starts going downhill.

At this point the story begins to be narrated by Abe Teal an eleven year old boy with a big imagination, dozens of questions, and a mother who is a detective on the tiny town’s police force. Abe also has a fourteen year old sister and although he indicates they were very close in the past, especially after the death of the grandfather they loved so much, she’s growing up and in her “rough” stages of becoming a woman (at least that’s what his mom says).

The suspicions start when a new neighbor moves in across the street, seeming as though he sets off a chain of events including the disappearance of town road kill, loud noises in the middle of the night, and finally the disappearance of another young girl. To me it all sounded like a recipe for a good mystery. Is the neighbor really as shady as he seems or is a red herring? I wanted to know and was even sure I could deal with the overly exaggerated Southern accents. And I did stick it out but there was just so much that made me almost wish I hadn’t.

I did not like any of the characters. Abe’s mother was so hot headed and emotional that I’m surprised she wasn’t suspended from the force (she actually pulls a gun on the boy hooking up with her daughter. I mean yes he is far too old for her but he was not being violent nor did he have a weapon). Abe would behave like a typical eleven year old but his thoughts portrayed anything but. His best friend Dewey behaved like an even younger boy yet he was overly curious about sex, relationships and shooting guns. Abe’s sister Carrie is the brattiest girl ever. Case in point: her mother, who worked on the original case and the newer ones, is of course concerned for her daughter so she allows Carrie to go out on a Saturday only if Carrie is home before dinner. Carrie returns hours after her curfew. Then she has the gall to be offended when her mother wants to ground her! Really? There’s someone out there kidnapping young girls and she really doesn’t understand why she shouldn’t be doing things like that? If she learned from the situation I might have been able to forgive her but another girl goes missing and next thing we know Carrie is sneaking out at night. I’m all for a little teenage rebellion but I’m kind of offended by the idea that a fourteen year old girl would be more worried about hooking up with boys when girls her age are being taken.

The biggest issue for me? Abe is only eleven. I understand that losing your dad when you’re young and growing up with a mom on the police force would mean you’d grow up fast but whoa boy. Throughout this story his mom discussed the murder and rape of the first girl in loud voices in the middle of the living room. She fully knew Abe was listening when she was talking to other police officers in the department and didn’t stop it. And, when one of the girls goes missing and then is found, his mother allows him to go to the murder scene and see the body with its slit throat and everything! And all because she felt there was something he needed to learn from it. I mean I know it’s good for kids of all ages to be aware and look out for themselves but do they really need evidence of rape and murder shoved in their face?

So all in all I liked the setup and the idea of the story but when it came to believability of the characters and the situations the put themselves in it fell really flat.

Sunday, February 23, 2014

The Tyrant’s Daughter by J.C. Carleson

Note: I received a copy of The Tyrant’s Daughter through NetGalley in exchange for a review.

Honestly I’m not entirely certain why I picked The Tyrant’s Daughter off of the NetGalley website because it’s not a genre that I typically choose. I’m usually drawn primarily to fantasy, historical fiction, or mystery and I would not consider The Tyrant’s Daughter to be any of the above. Instead it was a very realistic examination of how a teenage girl named Laila deals with some very big changes in her life.

When the story begins Laila and her family, exiles from an unnamed Muslim country, are getting used to their recent move to the United States. Soon enough Laila, who grew up believing her father to be a King soon learns that others called him by much worse names such as tyrant, dictator and that he was the reason why hundreds were killed back in her home country. So not only does she have to deal with learning a very different, very unfamiliar culture she is also worried about what she’s learning about her father and as to why her mother keeps alternating between meeting with CIA agents and meeting with rebels who would have violently opposed her father’s rule.

What I really liked was the emotional growth that Laila went through during the course of the novel. It was interesting because it was so realistic, meaning that at the very base of things she had thoughts that would be very common for teenagers everywhere but she also had the views associated with being a fish out of water, a girl trying to fit into a country that was not her own. She was a relatable and very fleshed out character as were most of her friends and family members.

I especially liked how throughout the novel she wavered as to what she truly wanted to embrace, her Muslim values and upbringing or her chance at a different life in America, and at the end she made the best of both choices by taking matters into her hands. So although I wasn’t as interested in this as I have been in other books I’m still glad I took the chance to read it.

Thursday, February 20, 2014

Innocence by Dean Koontz

The only reason I picked this book up at the library was because the insert flap, about a man who lives in exile under a city and a woman who soon finds a strong bond with, reminded me a bit of the 1980’s television show “Beauty and the Beast.” But I’m honestly not even sure why I bothered finishing this book and the only reason I’m guessing is because I wanted to see exactly what it was about the main male character, Addison, so despicable for others to look at

The setup is that Addison has been living under the streets of New York for years because whenever someone sees him, especially when they look into his eyes, they feel a loathing so intense that the situation becomes life threatening. Then he meets a woman named Gwyneth who decorates herself like a harlequin stylized marionette and can’t stand to be touched. Since they are both so eccentric they get along swimmingly but be warned, any conversations they have are halted and stilted and just plain boring.

One of the issues I had a problem with was the pacing of the story. The writing was so verbose that it took forever for the story to progress, especially since every other little “chapter” was a flashback. And then all the pieces, the supernatural elements that were thrown together. There are smoky or ghostly figures, bad ones Addison calls Fogs and good ones he calls Clears whose main purpose seemed to be to inform him when someone was really corrupt or something major was going to happen. The story of the psychopath murderer who was obsessed with marionettes and the marionettes end up chasing Addison and Gwyneth down.

And now for the spoilers!

Approximately fifty pages to the end the reader discovers that, with absolutely no warning, that there’s suddenly a virus on the loose that’s going to kill pretty much everyone on the planet. But low and behold the thing that sets Addison and Gwyneth and a few other kids they’ve found along the way, is that they have no Original Sin. That’s why people always want to kill them because when someone looked at them they saw all their sins reflected back upon them and they didn’t like it. But wait! This anomaly also means that Addison, Gwyneth and the kids are pretty much immune to any disease. Oh goodness. It was like reading several different stories, that had nothing to do with each other, all wrapped up in one and then Koontz decides to throw in a distinction level event but oh yeah the main characters get to survive it all. Groan.   

Sunday, February 16, 2014

Alienated by Melissa Landers

Note: I received an advanced copy of Alienated (though I actually didn’t get it started and finished in advance of its release!) from NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.

Alienated is the story of Cara, a human teenage girl, and Aeylx, an alien, and their involvement in the first every exchange program between the humans and the genetically similar L’ehirs. This novel had it all! Lively characters that jumped out of the pages/Kindle screen, conflict, and romance!

When Alienated starts Cara is being offered an incredible chance to be one of the first ever humans to host a L’ehir exchange student, and then to travel to L’ehir to be an exchange student and then at the end she’d get a scholarship for any college or university who’ll accept her. Sounds like an awesome opportunity, right? But Cara has more to worry about then how much she might miss her friends and family if she goes to another planet for a year of school. She has to worry that she might lose her friends when she’s still on Earth since there are so many people that are against any contact with the L’ehir’s. A brief look into Aeylx’s life shows that he and his fellow foreign exchange students want even less to do with the humans than the humans want with them.

But then, after spending months practically glued to each other’s sides (one of the rules they were given) and prosecution from Cara’s schoolmates, Cara and Aelyx’s relationship changes. That changes everything and even when the humans start treating the L’ehir’s horribly (a move that very well might bite them in the butt later on) they stick together in the cutest way. For the rest you’ll have to read for yourself (a move that I will very much encourage!)

I very much loved the characterization of all the characters, even the secondary ones were fleshed out and so lively that I was surprised to see that Alienated was the first novel by Melissa Landers. Although we humans haven’t made contact with life from other planets (at least not as far as I’m aware) I thought the depictions of how the two species interacted were very believable. How some characters were willing right off the bat to keep an open mind while others learned, like Cara and Aelyx learned how compatible they really were, how some were fanatically pro-L’ehir while others behaved as though the very idea of peace between the two planets would be a death sentence for everyone.

And because of all of the above I am very much looking forward to the second installment in this series and I’m sad that it won’t be coming out for another year!

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

The Girl Who Was Supposed to Die by April Henry

WARNING: The following review is full of spoilers! Read at your own risk.

I went into The Girl Who Was Supposed to Die expecting a heart pounding thriller. I mean, that’s what you expect when the blurb on the inside cover reads  “She doesn’t know who she is. She doesn’t know where she is, or why. All she knows when she comes to in a ransacked cabin is that two men are arguing over whether or not to kill her. And that she must run.”

And yes, the first few chapters of the 213 page book are pretty fast paced and interesting as the main character wakes up, overhears the threats against her life and reacts defensively without understanding how she knows how to do the stuff she’s doing. Then she finally leaves the cabin where she’d been held captive and it starts to go downhill with a series of very contrived and horribly unrealistic plot points.

She steals a car, talks to a security guard and tells him about her torture at the hands of the two men from the beginning and then he gets a mysterious phone call telling him the girl is an escaped mental patient. I’d think you’d at least be a little suspicious about that and wonder which story is true, right? But nope, he chooses to wait with her and have the “doctors” come get her instead of calling around to see whose story is true. Sigh. But at least she learns her name is Katie.

Then, once she gets herself out of that situation, she ends up falling asleep at a McDonald’s and is helped by the compassionate night-shift worker named Ty who just so happens to be cool enough to help her even when the men come after her, spreading more lies about her mental issues. So basically the next few people she meet are all so interested in helping her even though the only things they know is that Katie: has a gun, might be crazy, and is being hunted by creepy dudes. Oh and there’s also a story out that she shot the security guard from earlier on. Yep, two boys that have struggled most of their lives are totally into helping possibly crazy murderers. But help her they do.

The next big plot point is that Ty and Katie (who we have discovered is actually Cady) have stolen a car and are going back to her house when they just so happen to hear a news broadcast from Cady’s aunt. So of course they decide to go visit her in the fancy hotel she’s staying at because if someone is being hunted there’d be no way your pursuers would think to look for you there. And it’s very obvious from the get go that the aunt is suspicious as all heck. Low and behold, we find out a few hours later that the aunt is no aunt at all but is actually working one of the bad guys! (Doesn’t Cady have friends that would know the lady wasn’t her aunt? How did the lady know Cady’s memory was so far gone that she could pretend to be an aunt? Those questions are never answered. How convenient!)

Now this is when we finally reach the point where Cady’s memories return and we find out why she’s being hunted. It’s all about viruses and vaccines! There was absolutely no indication before page 137 out of 213 that the story was going to have anything to do with viruses, etc. I mean, couldn’t you have at least had a prologue where someone dies in the way the virus kills? Or have Cady wake up at the beginning and notice sciencey equipment in the cabin? No? Oh okay.

Then the rest of the ending is so fast paced it’s ridiculous. In 30-40 pages the reader learns the sciencey virus stuff, and that the company Cady’s parents are working for keep killing off people they don’t like, and that Cady’s parents ran away and took her little brother and now he has the virus! So who has to go get the vaccine from the scary company who is responsible for the deaths of at least five people so far? Cady and Ty of course! And it’s oh so easy. They literally get into the building, past security, and to the room with the vaccine in about thirty minutes. There is a stand off with the bad guy but that only lasts for about two minutes and Cady ends up past out again. Guess what happens when she wakes up? Everything is perfectly okay and all the good guys are alive and the bad guys are in jail!

Then to add to that unbelievably there’s an addition of a little epilogue three months later where Cady and Ty are skiing where Cady’s parents plan to rebuild the cabin from the beginning of the story. Though there are bad memories there of being tortured and almost murdered Cady is okay with it because it’s only 45 minutes away from where Ty lives. Because Ty, even though he goes to high school, works part-time at McDonald’s, and has rent and a car to pay for he can totally afford to text Cady all the time and go on weekend vacations to go skiing with her. Right.

What gets me is that there was so much potential for a good story here. With a few extra plot points, about a hundred more pages, and some better dialogue and characterization this could have been awesome. But sadly it was not.

Sunday, February 9, 2014

Lost Lake by Sarah Addison Allen

Note: I received a free copy of Lost Lake by Sarah Addison Allen from NetGalley in exchange for a review.

I first stumbled across Sarah Addison Allen’s books on a random day when I was reshelving books in the library and the cover of Garden Spells caught my attention because it looked like a scent out of a fairy tale. I loved it and voraciously finished off all of the books of hers that the library had over the course of about six months afterwards. Then, when I saw there were no more books published yet, I kept checking the author’s websites and was first worried when I saw she was battling cancer and then happy when I saw that she was given a clean bill of health and had another book on the way.

Lost Lake is the story of the Lost Lake Cottages and how its history has changed and affected the lives of a very eccentric group of people. Eby the older woman who loved adventures and her husband and isn’t sure what to do with her life when a decade after her husband’s death everything around the lake is changing. Kate, Eby’s great niece, has recently lost a husband of her own and is relearning how to live life without him and to raise her eccentric daughter. Lisette is the mute French woman Eby saved after a disastrous date decades ago. Jack is the quiet man with a crush. Selma has charms to make men fall in love with her. Bulahdeen is the ever happy retired schoolteacher with a sad past and a want for happy endings.  Wes, the townie Kate spent time with when they were twelve and never really forgotten.

The story itself is an interesting combination of female relationships and the past combining with the present. It was easy enough to see that the past was going to be important to the story since the prologue started out in the past and then fast forwarded to the present. What I wasn’t expecting was that we’d see past glimpses of the lives of each and every main character but I’m glad that it did. It definitely emphasized one of the big points of the book, that the past can truly affect how one handles their future.

I did enjoy this story because of how Sarah weaves little supernatural/fantasy elements into your basic general fiction tale just like always. But it just wasn’t as thrilling to me as the rest of her stories possibly because of how many characters it focused on. (There was almost too many to be handled in just a few hundred pages and it seemed a little odd when we learned the past histories of what felt more like just minor characters). Otherwise it was still a really good story and it’s not going to stop me from reading anything else Sarah writes.


Friday, February 7, 2014

Confessions of a Murder Suspect by James Patterson and Maxine Paetro

I will admit that before this I never once opened a James Patterson novel. I know he’s written hundreds of best sellers and he is a very popular author (I work in a library and I see the waiting lists for when one of his new books come out) and I’ve read the synopsis for many of them but I’ve never wanted to read one. I can’t exactly pinpoint why, they just never sparked an interest. And then I saw Confessions of a Murder Suspect on the shelves a few months. I read the inside covers and thought it looked interesting but never bothered to take it home until now and I am glad I did.

First of all I’d like to mention the writing style before I go into details on the characters/plot. The book was written in first person which is actually kind of a novelty nowadays (at least in the books I read). And not only that but there are sections, chapters called “Confessions” where Tandi speaks directly to the reader even addressing them as “reader” meaning it’s likely the confessions are diary entries. In these sections we get to go even farther into Tandy’s mind. In the main sections she is more active as she searches for her parents murderers. In the Confessions sections we see her use her try to remember the things her therapist has forced her to forget. Tandy is raw and more willing to admit her faults but hints at more to come.

Now back into the story and here’s the interesting thing about the Angel kids; right off the bat you can tell they aren’t quite normal. All of them are too smart, too powerful, too talented and Tandy is so good at hiding her emotions that, as someone else tells her, she kind of acts like a robot. And when I learned that the Angel family ran a pharmaceutical company I thought it was kind of clear exactly where the Angel’s get their almost supernatural qualities from.

Even though I thought the reveal about their “powers” was predictable I still thought the story was interesting and ended up being very unique. It was also interesting that Tandy hit on the idea of an unreliable narrator because of her issue with memories. It added an extra element to the story when she even questioned whether or not she was guilty of the crime and suspected her brothers.

Confessions of a Murder Suspect kept me guessing towards the end which is definitely a good thing for a mystery. It was also interesting because each of the characters had very distinct personalities and even though they were deemed “perfect” Tandy, as narrator, was able to let everyone into her mind and her family enough to see that that certainly was not the case. Which is good because who wants to read about dull characters?

Tuesday, February 4, 2014

Torrent by Lisa T. Bergren

Honestly I’m just really glad I finally finished this book series. Maybe I shouldn’t have read all three back to back, I don’t know. It started out interestingly enough and I started to feel enough sympathy for the characters that I wanted to see how their stories ended but now I almost wish I just would’ve spent the fifteen minutes it took to Google the spoilers for this series (especially when I reached the end and discovered it was exactly as I had predicted it about thirty pages into the first book). The only saving grace was that there were a few surprises.

Torrent is the third book in the River of Time Series and it begins with not only Lia, Gabi, and their mom returning to medieval Italy, but their father as well. And once again the disbelief lasts for less than an hour and he’s already using swords to take out enemies. I’m sorry but if time travel did happen in real life, and you were given ten minutes of heads up about it, I really think it would take you more than thirty minutes to understand that it’s “really” happening. Sigh.

Here’s where I’m going to get a little spoilery about things so watch out. One of the twists I did not see coming was when Gabi was basically kidnapped and was told she could either face torture or marry Lord Greco, who we had read about earlier in the series. She spends the whole time with him trying to decide if he’s really on her side or not, and wondering if he’s in love with her and *boom* she kind of starts to fall for him as well. But not really because she knows how much she really loves Marcello. This, of course, leads to confusion when she’s finally returned to Marcello later on.

The other plot point I have issue with is the decision to stay and live in medieval Italy. Yes, Gabi is in love with Marcello and Lia is on her way to falling for Luca, but their other reason for staying, because they’re not sure their dad will survive if they go to the present time since he had died in their recent past. But we already know that when they do time travel the group has to go to the “present” before they can go back again. Which means after they picked up their father they would have been in the “present” for at least a few seconds. Their father obviously didn’t die so that argument is invalid.

And the conversation about what happens if the plague starts and affects them…oh dear. Marcello and Gabi agree that if one of her family members comes down with the plague they will go back through the tunnel and to the present. And everyone agrees! You know even though there’s going to be a possibility that Gabi will be pregnant or have children by the time that happens. They don’t even think about that even though the conversation happens just days before Marcello and Gabi’s wedding. If you were going with a realistic family conversation (and that’s what I expect even if it’s somewhat of a fantasy story) then things like that would have come up.

So although this book was interesting at points, and there were even some surprising bits, I didn’t think that it was anything super new or fresh.

Sunday, February 2, 2014

Witch Finder by Ruth Warburton

Note: I received a free copy of “Witch Finder” by Ruth Warburton from NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.

I loved the idea of “Witch Finder” the instant I read the description for it. I think my top two favorite genres are fantasy and historical so a story about witches and witch hunters in 1880 sounded perfect for me. The premise is that in London 1880 there is a brotherhood who dedicates themselves to hunting and killing witches, thinking they are all evil.

Luke is on his way to joining the brotherhood but has to complete one final task: killing his first witch, a witch whose name he picked from a random list the men had compiled. His victim is sixteen year old Rosa Greenwood who is not only a powerful witch in her own right but her family is linked to an even more powerful witch named Sebastian.

Even from that brief description it’s kind of easy to imagine where this story is going to go (a strong young man is assigned to kill an even younger girl so of course something romantic is bound to happen) but what’s interesting is to see how the romance unfolds. Especially when Luke, within the first few pages, is given the ultimatum that he either has to kill Rosa or be killed himself. The reader (at least I did!) really wanted to know if and how the characters survived.

The book switched back and forth between Luke and Rosa’s point of view and I’m glad that it did. What with everything going on around both characters, both are kind of being forced into doing things they don’t want to do in order to honor their families wishes or memories, it was nice to actually get into their heads to see what they are thinking. That made it a little bit easier to handle the bad things the characters did because the reader knew how horrible and human their musings were before they did them.

I really don’t think this is much of a spoiler to say because I think the book description made the romance inevitable but don’t read farther if you don’t want to know. My biggest gripe with this story is that Luke’s change of heart seems to happen pretty fast. I know he only spent time around Rosa for a month but it seemed like one day he was flinching away when she got near and the next day he was hoping he’d get just another chance to touch her skin. My only guess is that he saw how she was treated by her family and that humanized her but I don’t recall him thinking much about how and why those feelings changed beyond him wondering if it was just because she was a pretty girl.

But other than that I thought the characters were very well done, the plot was very interesting and I can’t wait to find out what happens in the next installment!

Saturday, February 1, 2014

Cascade by Lisa T. Bergren

I’m still not completely sure about this book series. I enjoyed reading it and plan on finishing out the trilogy but there’s just something about it that rubs me the wrong way. Maybe it’s because all of the characters continue to be perfect or that even though the girls are stuck in a medieval world where dangers are all around you don’t worry for their safety because the healing portal is always there to save them. I’m not sure what it is but I just can’t admit to loving the series like I’ve admitted with others.

In “Cascade” Gabi and Lia from the first book are joined in Medieval Italy by their mother. While I like that the three women in the family are finally together (I can only imagine how their mother would have taken it had they stayed without letting her know where they were and what they were up to) it was a little jarring.

In the first book, although Gabi and Lia were so young, they felt much older. In this book, now that their mother is along, they immediately feel as though their maturity has disappeared. I think it’s because their mom doesn’t want to admit to herself that she her daughters are growing up but it shouldn’t be difficult for her to have learned what they went through earlier on.

What I still don’t understand about this series is that Lia and their mother question Gabi’s love of Marcello but not enough for it to make sense. Yes she feels this crazy connection with him but by the end of this book she is still dead set on wanting to live in Medieval Italy to be with him even though she’s only known him for a total of a few weeks and most of those weeks she’s been injured or captured. If the author would have spent a bit more time with the characters getting to experience peace and quiet then I would have found Gabi’s decisions more logical.

And another gripe I had and this one is a *spoiler*. We have a whole section devoted to everyone being fearful of the plague, and Luca even contracts it and yet nothing happens. People get really sick and then a battle happens and by the end of the book everyone that involves is still alive. It doesn’t make any sense at all!

So I am going to finish the series, basically so I can figure out exactly how Gabi is going to convince her family to stay in Medieval times (because we’ve all known since the first book that it was going to happen). But I probably won’t enjoy reading it as much as I would other books.