Lake of Skulls Lake of Skulls (A Knight’s Story #1) by Paul Stewart & Chris Riddell
Publication: Atheneum (August 31, 2004), Hardcover, 144 pages / ISBN 0689872399
Genre: Action, Paranormal, YA
Rating:
Find @ Amazon or IndieBound
First sentence: “Hey, you!” I looked up.

In one sentence: Action movie turned book with all the cliches of the genre.

Sometimes I like a good action-movie-turned-book, and sometimes I don’t. Lake of Skulls is, I think, a little bit too much action and a little bit too little actual plot.

Summary from Amazon:

Behind me, a loud, beastlike roar went up. I turned to see a great hulk of a man — all hairy jowls and heaving gut — lumbering from leg to leg in a slow battle-jig. I recognized him at once.

His fists were clenched. His bloodshot eyes were wild.

“Come on, if you think you’re hard enough!” he was bellowing.

Here we go again! I thought. Why do I always seem to end up in this type of a place? You’d think I’d have learned by now. All I’d wanted was a quiet drink. Was that too much to ask? Was it?

Given the day I’d had so far, maybe it was…

It’s a short book, and so it’s hard to cram a lot of plot in there. For what’s there, it’s pretty exciting and, yeah, action-filled. The bit near the end with the hags was especially thrilling. But then, short doesn’t mean one can just dump out all the meat of a story without anyone noticing, and I think Lake of Skulls has a little bit too much meat dumped out. The no-name knight who narrates Lake of Skulls seems to be a typical male lead of an action movie(/book): little feelings, too much ego, and no repercussions for their actions. And since he’s a free lance knight, maybe it’s more like those old Westerns, with a solitary figure running around for hire by anyone who’ll hire him. Eh?

Not that those kinds of stories can’t be fun. I particularly like the detective noir books(/movies) with gritty old detectives snarling out their lines, etc., but even then we get hints of what characters are feeling. Not so much here. Not that I want Free Lance the Knight to get all weepy or anything, but some hint as to what he’s feeling besides scared (as when he’s fighting the hags who are trying to eat him) would be appreciated. You know?

I also had a big problem with the many historical inaccuracies. I actually wrote this whole big thing about Free Lance’s horse and other sundry things but it got a bit rant-y and so I canned it. But rest assured: those historical inaccuracies ruined my enjoyment of Lake of Skulls. (On the other hand, I don’t think I would have even noticed if I hadn’t taken all those medieval classes and even wrote a paper about horses in Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales, so your experience might be different.)

The art, by the by, was nicely done. Full of big-boobied women, of course, but I wasn’t really surprised about that.

I can’t help but feel that maybe Lake of Skulls is better suited to tween boys who maybe don’t read a lot. I’m thinking maybe my brother, when he was younger, would have liked it. So maybe I’m just the wrong audience?

If you’re looking for a book with extreme historical accuracy, look somewhere else. If you want an action movie translated into a book, and aren’t bothered by nitpicky things like I am, then Lake of Skulls is your book.

Oh snap, giveaway!

I didn’t really like this book, but you might. Win a copy and prove me wrong (or right)! Win it, read it, review it: let me know what you think, even if it’s to disagree (or agree) with me.

Giveaway details:
The book is a discarded library copy, so it’s got all the library paraphernalia on it. It’s in good condition, though, like new except for the stickers and stamps.

To enter, leave a comment on this post stating you’d like to be entered. Don’t forget to leave your email address so I can contact you if you win! People that don’t leave me a way to contact them will be disqualified from the giveaway.

For
+1 entries, blog about this giveaway on your blog.
+1 entries, Twitter about this giveaway via your Twitter account.
Leave separate comments for each extra entry plus links to them!

It’s a pretty small book, so this giveaway is open worldwide. Yay!

I’ll use random.org to determine the winner. Contest ends June 9, 2009. Good luck!

Jun 022009
 

Gone #1Gone by Michael Grant
Publication: HarperTeen (June 24, 2008), Hardcover, 576 pages / ISBN 0061448761
Genre: Sci-Fi, YA/Teen
Rating:
Find @ Amazon or IndieBound
Challenges: Support Your Local Library Challenge (#20)
First sentence: One minute the teacher was talking about the Civil War. And the next minute he was gone.

In one sentence: A thrilling sci-fi YA novel that’s a little more thrilling than Uglies and just as weird as Triskellion.

I had no idea what Gone was about when I picked this book off of the shelf at my local library, but the first page made it seem really, really good. And it was! I love it when that happens.

Summary from Amazon:

In the blink of an eye. Everyone disappears. GONE.

Except for the young. Teens. Middle schoolers. Toddlers. But not one single adult. No teachers, no cops, no doctors, no parents. Just as suddenly, there are no phones, no internet, no television. No way to get help. And no way to figure out what’s happened.

Hunger threatens. Bullies rule. A sinister creature lurks. Animals are mutating. And the teens themselves are changing, developing new talents—unimaginable, dangerous, deadly powers—that grow stronger by the day.

It’s a terrifying new world. Sides are being chosen, a fight is shaping up. Townies against rich kids. Bullies against the weak. Powerful against powerless. And time is running out: On your birthday, you disappear just like everyone else…

I love the premise of Gone, especially since it features one of my favorite things in YA fiction: a group of kids fending for themselves without adult helping or guiding them. There’s so much potential in these kinds of stories, and luckily Gone seems to have more sense than maybe some other books do. The kids in Gone don’t start off self-sufficient and ready to make a new life for themselves; they have to be coaxed out of apathy and near-anarchy and even then it’s a strained relationship between the leaders and the lead. A lot of people compare the situation in Gone to the situation in Lord of the Flies, and I agree. There’s always some bully who wants to take over the group and run it with an iron fist, and that’s no exception here. But then, the bully in Gone has superpowers.

Oh yeah. Superpowers. Quite a few of the kids do, actually, which makes Gone even more interesting than maybe a straight post-apocalyptic tale would be. A lot of details Gone are weird like Triskellion was weird– I just had to go for it and suspend my disbelief for a while, even if plot developments didn’t entirely make sense. I don’t think I can even really talk about many more of those details because I’d be spoiling you, and I don’t think you’d have as much fun if you knew everything in advance. (Sorry.) And anyway, even though it was filled with weird stuff, Gone was also fun and exciting, and I ended up reading the whole thing in one day!

What I liked most about Gone was how Sam, one of the main characters, wasn’t a cut-and-dry hero type. He didn’t even want to be the hero. He wanted to let someone else do it, and it wasn’t even until right near the very end of the book that he finally took over the reins. It was a bit refreshing, since the perfect-leader-since-birth thing can be very overdone. Not that we didn’t all know Sam was going to be the leader eventually anyway– not only did practically ever other character in the book say so, but it was in Sam’s very nature to take over when things get rough, evidenced when he saved a busload of kids from falling over a cliff simply by thinking quickly and acting. Hero potential right there, baby.

Gone does have some problems. Several plot turns could be seen from miles away, for instance, and some other details were completely cliched (like, oh: dashing young hero gets previously supposedly unattainable beautiful young heroine? Dashing young hero destined to be great leader? Dashing young hero has evil arch-enemy and lots of family secrets? etc.), but, honestly, the rest of the book made up for those disappointments. The writing was engaging, the characters were easy to empathize with if a little bland sometimes, and the story never dragged. Quite an accomplishment for such a long book!

I highly recommend Gone for fans of YA sci-fi, post-apocalyptic fiction, and Stephen King. I can’t wait to read the next book and see if some seriously annoying questions left over in the first are answered!

Get your own copy from Amazon or your favorite indie bookstore!

Other reviews: Teen Book Review | My Favorite Books | YA New York

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