Nov 282011
 
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137. The Time Travelers (The Gideon Trilogy #1) by Linda Buckley-Archer
Publication: Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers (September 11, 2007), originally published 2006, Paperback, 416pp / ISBN 1416915265
Genre: YA Sci-fi, Historical Fiction

Read: October 31, 2011
Source: Bought

Summary from Amazon:

Gideon Seymour, thief and gentleman, hides from the villainous Tar Man. Suddenly the sky peels away like fabric and from the gaping hole fall two curious-looking children. Peter Schock and Kate Dyer have fallen straight from the twenty-first century, thanks to an experiment with an antigravity machine. Before Gideon and the children have a chance to gather their wits, the Tar Man takes off with the machine — and Peter and Kate’s only chance of getting home. Soon Gideon, Peter, and Kate are swept into a journey through eighteenth-century London and form a bond that, they hope, will stand strong in the face of unfathomable treachery.

Review

For some reason, whenever I think about this book I can only remember the abysmal beginning, which is slow and boring and nearly caused me to get rid of The Time Travelers before I gave it a proper chance. I don’t know what it is about that beginning, but it throws a cloud over the rest of the book, which is MUCH better than that beginning would make it seem.

So, okay. Bad beginning. But after that bad beginning there is much joy to be found, and most of that joy is found in the characters. Though they were occasionally annoying and impotent, I thought that Peter and Kate were excellent kid leads. They had real kid emotions! Including crying! They didn’t have all the answers and they couldn’t fix things all by themselves. They had to connect with people and ask for help, and that’s kind of unusual in a YA action book, don’t you think? Continue reading »

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Nov 062011
 
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The Sunday Salon.com I’ve been worrying about how I’m going to keep up with reviewing, what with my goal of reading one book a day and still having a buttload of reviews from last month to do. I don’t want to carry any reviews over from this year into the next! So I’ve decided to try this. I’ll do really short reviews of the books I read each week. If I feel the need to expand a tiny review into a properly-sized review, I can do that later.

Tiny reviews will be five sentences or less. Here goes!

138. The Hottest Dishes in the Tartar Cuisine – Alina Bronsky [rating: 3] | Contest win.
This is a funny book, but more in a horrifying, “omg is this really happening” sort of way. I love unreliable narrators, especially ones who are obviously unreliable, and Rosa is one of the most unreliable narrators I’ve ever read. The story gets way less enjoyable when the German pedophile shows up, however, and though the (happy?) ending sort of saves the book from being completely unbearable, the second half was still miserable reading. When Rosa goes insane (more insane?) and the writing turns dreamy and surreal– that’s the best part, I think.

139. The Eye of the Warlock – P.W. Catanese [rating: 2.5] | Library book sale.
This book desperately needs a new cover! The story is fun, though, it being a fairy tale retelling/extension/etc.– of Hansel and Gretel, to boot (I don’t think they get a lot of retellings, do they?). Loved the lesson about not letting your anger control you; very Jedi-like, actually. Marusch is the best character: she’s strong and kick-butt without being stereotypical. The writing reminds me a bit of R.L. Stine’s, only fantasy instead of horror and focused more on middle school than elementary school.

140. Bright Young Things – Anna Godbersen [rating: 4] e | Freebie.
I feel like this is a guilty pleasure sort of book, and I don’t know why. There’s nothing wrong with it! It’s got great characters, a fun/exciting story, a setting in one of my favorite eras, and decent-to-really-good writing. The repetition of “oh she was naïve and new and didn’t know how to live in NYC/the 1920s without getting screwed over” was somewhat annoying, and so was how Letty’s petiteness was associated with her naïveté/innocence/etc. (and how her small hands/mouth/stature/so on was mentioned every single time she was in the scene), but it wasn’t SO annoying that I wanted to put the book down. The ending was fantastic, too! I can’t wait to read the next book.

141. Ashes – Ilsa J. Bick [rating: 4] e | Library.
Like basically everyone else who’s read this book, I didn’t like the disconnect/discord between the first half (survival in the woods) and the second half (Rule). I also didn’t like how the writing switched sometimes between “sounds like an adult” and “sounds like a teenager” (“That was sucky,” etc.)– in the SAME paragraph. But what I DID like, I liked a lot: the characters, the story, the zombies (who are smart!), the survival stuff, the end of the world/apocalypse stuff. It ended on a cliffhanger, btw, which made me want to scream. I want to read the next book NOW!

142. Bird – Rita Murphy [rating: 3] e | Library.
This book has people who are carried about on the wind like dandelion fluff (or birds, hence the title), and so it’s got that magical realism/fairy tale quality to it that I adore. It’s a short book, with little action or thrills. The best part is the psychological horror of the house that may or may not be alive and that may or may not eat people when they try to leave. I think this would be a good book to read during a cold winter’s evening, preferably in front of a fire (or at least a space heater).

143. The Battle of the Sun – Jeanette Winterson [rating: 3] e | Library.
I don’t know why, but JW’s books always make me feel sleepy after I finish reading them. I think they have something to do with having to concentrate so much harder on the story in order to understand it than I do with other books. This one is connected to Tanglewreck, mainly through the characters, and though I don’t think you have to read that one first I would guess it’d help with the understanding part. This one’s got all my favorite JW’s bits in: excellent kid characters, some fairy tale/sci-fi/fantasy stuff that only makes sense if you squint at it sideways, and lots of excitement/adventure/etc. It ends on a kind of cliffhanger, though, so I wonder if there’s a third book now in the Tanglewreck universe.

144. A Monster Calls – Patrick Ness [rating: 3.5] e | Library.
I was NOT expecting this book to make me cry. I figured, you know, it’d be scary and horrifying and maybe I’d have trouble sleeping. I wasn’t expecting it to be scary in the way that real life is scary, that the horrifying part came from something that, really, happens every day to someone somewhere. Still, for all that I was temporarily traumatized, it’s a wonderful book and a great story.

Weekly Book Stats

Books read this week:
136. There’s Treasure Everywhere – Bill Watterson [rating: 4] *
137. The Time Travelers – Linda Buckley-Archer [rating: 3.5]
138. The Hottest Dishes in the Tartar Cuisine – Alina Bronsky [rating: 3]
139. The Eye of the Warlock – P.W. Catanese [rating: 2.5]
140. Bright Young Things – Anna Godbersen [rating: 4] e
141. Ashes – Ilsa J. Bick [rating: 4] e
142. Bird – Rita Murphy [rating: 3] e
143. The Battle of the Sun – Jeanette Winterson [rating: 3] e
144. A Monster Calls – Patrick Ness [rating: 3.5] e

Books reviewed this week:
127. The Boneshaker – Kate Milford [rating: 4.5]
128. The Girl Who Circumnavigated Fairyland in a Ship of Her Own Making – Catherynne M. Valente [rating: 5]
130. Murder at the Vicarage – Agatha Christie [rating: 4] e

Books acquired this week:
None. :(

Currently reading:
I’m currently in the early bits of Bone Rattler: A Mystery of Colonial America, and I hope to finish it today. So far it’s REALLY good; it’s the sort of historical fiction that works hard to be realistic about the downsides of living in non-modern times, so there’s lots of mention of beatings/violence/class differences (and rats and diseases and so on). There’s a lot of anti-Scottish stuff from the English characters as well (the protagonist is Scottish). Almost all of my knowledge about colonial America is centered on white American stuff, so being able to learn more about the British/Scottish/Native American (I think they show up later) things is great. Plus the mystery is very intriguing!

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Oct 192011
 
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Book cover of The Apothecary by Maile Meloy118. The Apothecary by Maile Meloy
Publication: Putnam Juvenile (October 4, 2011), ARC paperback, ?pp / ISBN 039925627X
Genre: MG/YA Sci-fi/Fantasy, Adventure

Read: October 4-5, 2011
Source: BEA 2011

Summary from the book’s website:

It’s 1952 and the Scott family has just moved from Los Angeles to London. There, fourteen-year-old Janie meets a mysterious apothecary and becomes fascinated by his son, Benjamin Burrows—a boy who isn’t afraid to stand up to authority and who dreams of becoming a spy. When Benjamin’s father disappears, Janie and Benjamin must uncover the secrets of the apothecary’s ancient book, the Pharmacopoeia, in order to find him, all while keeping those secrets out of the hands of Russian spies. Discovering transformative elixirs they never believed could exist, Janie and Benjamin embark on a dangerous race to save the apothecary and prevent impending nuclear disaster.

Review

I’ve become fond lately of YA books set during the Cold War, probably for the same reason that I’m so fond of YA book set during the Interwar period. Besides the fact that the books are excellently written, of course, the period between wars is always full of terrifying emotions and, if you’re lucky, some really great adventures. In The Apothecary we get all of that plus some wonderful characters and the “stranger in a strange land” thing I also adore.1 Continue reading »

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Book cover of Act of Will by AJ Hartley 105. Act of Will by A. J. Hartley
Publication: Tor Books; Reprint edition (April 1, 2010), ebook, 384pp / ISBN 0765360888
Genre: Fantasy/Adventure/Action

Read: August 26-30, 2011
Source: Bought

Mini-Review

I was pleasantly surprised by this book. At first I thought it was a comedy story, something like a Terry Pratchett book. Then it turned into something else, something more like…I don’t know. A Megan Whalen Turner book? (Only not YA.) And then I stopped trying to compare it to other books and just enjoyed the story.

It’s a great story, very entertaining and yet also kind of heartbreaking. Will’s an interesting protagonist. If this were a different kind of book, I’m pretty sure Will would be the sidekick character that dies a manly death somewhere in the second act which then spurs on everyone else to kick butt and save the day. He’s clever, but in the stupid way that unwordly people tend to be. He’s funny, but also kind of sleazy and gross. He’s more brains than brawn and should by all rights be a dead man walking in a swords-and-sorcery fantasy book, but he’s NOT dead. And best of all? He actually starts to use his brains in such a way that makes him a) less annoying and b) less likely to die a cowardly death. (Although he’s still a coward.)

Anyway. Act of Will: a great book with an unusual, near-unlikable protagonist and some fantastic secondary characters. I really enjoyed it.

Rating


I really like unusual protagonists, what can I say?

Book cover of Virus on Orbis 1 by PJ Haarsma111. The Softwire: Virus on Orbis 1 by PJ Haarsma
Publication: Candlewick (April 6, 2010), ebook, 262pp / ISBN 076363638X
Genre: MG/YA Sci-fi

Read: September 5, 2011
Source: Freebie

Mini-Review

This started off somewhat rocky, with a scenario that seriously reminded me of some other YA sci-fi books I’ve read before (hello). And yeah, it’s kind of unimaginative in that regard. But! The rest of it was pretty good. I like sci-fi novels with actual aliens in them, and I like YA novels with kids that save the world (or a world) against all odds. It makes for an entertaining book, you know?

And the last half of the book was really good. It was exciting, and scary, and there were computer-y things which were really fun. The alien world was scary and weird, but also pretty fascinating. I do wish there had been more secondary characters that weren’t humans, but I’m hoping there’s more aliens in the next book. I just really like aliens, you guys.

Rating


Starts off a bit boring, gets more interesting pretty quick.

Book cover of Someone Like You by Sarah Dessen114. Someone Like You by Sarah Dessen
Publication: Puffin (April 1, 2002), originally published 1998, ?pp / ISBN 0142301655
Genre: YA Fiction

Read: September 18, 2011
Source: Library Book Sale

Mini-Review

I feel like I’ve read quite a few books with pregnant teens in them this year. Anyway– this is the second Sarah Dessen book I’ve ever read, my first being Keeping the Moon. I like Keeping the Moon better than this one, but Someone Like You was still pretty good.

The characters were a bit cliched, yeah. I mean, can’t there ever be a redheaded person who ISN’T named Scarlett who is really popular and also a firecracker and so on? You know? But for all that Scarlett plays a big part in SLY, it’s really Halley who’s the protagonist and who does all the growing up.

I really like coming-of-age novels, even if they almost always happen because of sex/dating/etc. I kind of wish there were more where romance wasn’t involved, just for something different, but I can understand why romance plays such a big part. The romance in Someone Like You was pretty good, too– understated, but exciting/important, and a bit scary. And, even though I had to read about it on Wikipedia because I forgot about it, I really liked the ending. It’s happy, but not cliched happy, if you know what I mean.

Rating


I really liked it at the time, but now I can’t even remember the ending. So it’s 4 birds, but with a caveat: good, but forgettable.

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Sep 232011
 
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108. Down the Mysterly River by Bill Willingham
Publication: Starscape (September 13, 2011), ARC Paperback, ?pp / ISBN 0765327929
Genre: MG Fantasy

Read: September 3-4, 2011
Source: BEA 2011

Summary from Amazon:

Max “the Wolf” is a top notch Boy Scout, an expert at orienteering and a master of being prepared. So it is a little odd that he suddenly finds himself, with no recollection of his immediate past, lost in an unfamiliar wood. Even odder still, he encounters a badger named Banderbrock, a black bear named Walden, and McTavish the Monster (who might also be an old barn cat)—all of whom talk—and who are as clueless as Max.

Before long, Max and his friends are on the run from a relentless group of hunters and their deadly hounds. Armed with powerful blue swords and known as the Blue Cutters, these hunters capture and change the very essence of their prey. For what purpose, Max can’t guess. But unless he can solve the mystery of the strange forested world he’s landed in, Max may find himself and his friends changed beyond recognition, lost in a lost world…

Review

At this point, three-and-a-bit-more months after BEA, I’d pretty much forgotten what Down the Mysterly River was about. I knew it was an MG fantasy, and I knew what sort of fantasy things BW does with his Fables series1. For all that I’m familiar with the genre and with BW’s stuff, it’s a little bit silly how thrown I was by the first couple of chapters.

A boy detective with a cutsie nickname? A talking badger? A mad barn cat with a vaguely Scottish name? It was like a weird mix of Redwall and Encyclopedia Brown, and I wasn’t entirely sure I liked it.

Then the Cutters were introduced, and from then on I was hooked. I also started getting a little smarter re:what was actually being done, here: BW was writing metafiction about children’s fantasy stories! Awesome!

Also, everyone was totally dead, and that was both terrifying and thrilling. Continue reading »

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Sep 142011
 
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101. Bliss by Lauren Myracle
Publication: Amulet Books; Reprint edition (January 1, 2011), originally published 2008, Paperback, 480pp / ISBN 0810940728
Genre: YA Horror/Paranormal

Read: August 22-23, 2011
Source: Bought

Review

I grabbed this book from a Borders in California because a) I was desperate for a paper book for some reason and b) it looked potentially entertaining. It is, in fact, a really good book.

Basically, Bliss is a bit like The Craft but set in the late 1960s and with ghosts and blood magic instead of something vaguely Wicca-ish. It’s scary, it’s dark, and it’s SO FRICKIN’ AWESOME. I just. I really love this book, y’all. It’s creepy and spooky and really tense in that someone-may-die sort of way, and the writing is just so good– and if you need a book for RIP VI or if you just want a scary-awesome YA book for some reason, definitely get this book. DEFINITELY GET IT. I’ll stop yelling in capslock if you promise to read it!

I know the cover makes it look like it’s more Carrie than Craft, but listen to me and all will be well.

Rating


There’s also a red herring that you don’t really figure out until nearer to the end!

102. Feed by Mira Grant
Publication: Orbit; Original edition (May 1, 2010), ebook, 608pp / ISBN 0316081051
Genre: Sci-fi/Horror

Read: August 24-25, 2011
Source: Bought

Review

This is another book that makes me want to capslock with how AMAZING it is, although it’s not YA and it’s got zombies instead of ghosts and it’s more about the freedom of the press and the importance of blogs/family/friendship than it is about anything else. Also, it’s set in the future. It’s got action and drama and a conspiracy, and there’s fantastic characters, and even if there’s a little too much infodumping at times I still think the writing is really great.

If you’re a blogger who likes sci-fi and post-apocalyptic things and zombies and books about blogging, you’d like this book. If you like character-driven stories where people actually love each other and aren’t perfect and yet are still very likable, you’d like this book. I think even if you’re more of a political thriller sort of person, you might like this book! It’s just. so. good.

Rating


The ending was so sad, but I got through it okay.

103. Storm Glass by Maria V. Snyder
Publication: Mira; Original edition (May 1, 2009), ebook, 448pp / ISBN 0778325644
Genre: YA Fantasy

Read: August 25-26, 2011
Source: Bought

Review

So when I bought this I didn’t realize it was a sequel series to another trilogy. So that’s kind of a bummer. On the other hand, even though I felt like I’d missed a huge chunk of the backstory, it talks about what happened in the other books enough that I felt like I mostly understood what was going on re:the past, and the rest of it is set so much in the present anyway that it turned out not to be that big of a deal that I’d missed the first trilogy.

Got that? Good.

I really love this book. I know this post is full of LOVE and AWESOME and AMAZING already but just bear with me because this book is all those things and more. You like strong female characters that nevertheless make mistakes? This book’s got that! You like a bit of romance in your fantasy, but nothing too overwhelming? This book’s got that! You like adventure and action and yet, at the same time, character development? This book’s got that!

I read this in the car on the way back from California and I basically completely missed the middle bit of Arizona because I was so into it. ♥

Rating


I’m so happy the emphasis was on Opal’s character development rather than her romantic attachments!

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88. Peter Nimble and His Fantastic Eyes by Jonathan Auxier
Publication: Amulet Books (August 1, 2011), egalley, 436pp / ISBN 1419700251
Genre: Children’s/MG Fantasy

Read: July 29, 2011
Source: NetGalley

Summary from Amazon:

Peter Nimble and His Fantastic Eyes is the utterly beguiling tale of a ten-year-old blind orphan who has been schooled in a life of thievery. One fateful afternoon, he steals a box from a mysterious traveling haberdasher—a box that contains three pairs of magical eyes. When he tries the first pair, he is instantly transported to a hidden island where he is presented with a special quest: to travel to the dangerous Vanished Kingdom and rescue a people in need. Along with his loyal sidekick—a knight who has been turned into an unfortunate combination of horse and cat—and the magic eyes, he embarks on an unforgettable, swashbuckling adventure to discover his true destiny.

Review

When I requested this book for review, I was under the assumption that (based on the title and the cover) it was a lighthearted MG fantasy with whimsical whatevers stuck in. And, yeah, it’s an MG fantasy with whimsical whatevers, but it’s not exactly lighthearted.

Not that it’s dark, exactly. It’s just that it’s a lot less slap-happy than most MG fantasy books I’ve read. In fact, in certain places it’s even gory and horrible and depressing. Continue reading »

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