Friday 29 November 2019

Godsgrave


Book Title: Godsgrave
Author: Jay Kristoff
Series: The Nevernight Chronicles #2
Date Started: October 9th 2019
Date Completed: November 28th 2019
Genres: Fantasy, Adventure, Action
Quality Rating: Five Stars
Enjoyment Rating: Four Stars
Final Rating: Four Stars
Review:

Godsgrave continues on the story of Mia Corvere from the first book with just as much gore, sex and glory. I have to say I didn't enjoy it quite as much as the first book just because, with so much going on, it was so dense. It wasn't a bad thing for the story, and it wasn't a deal-breaker, but it was harder to read continuously.

Look, I need to take a moment to talk about how Jay Kristoff pulls off his twists because they're some of the few 'shocks' that I would actually give that name. There are some things that I can predict, and then there are some things I don't see coming at all, which is significant partially because a great deal of misdirection is used. He distracts you and makes it seem like something isn't important when it turns out to be the key to everything. But he also understands his readers. He is aware of their expectations both narratively, from genre to gratification, but also contextually. Kristoff knows the industry he works in and the other works it puts out, and he uses that to lead his reader down one path, implies they should be looking down another, and actually have the puzzle hidden behind a third direction altogether, letting all three converge at just the right time to be revealed. That's writing skill.

The tension works because violence and the threat of death are taken seriously in the story, so they have weight. Here's a little tip: don't get attached to anyone. Like anyone. Just because a character is named or instrumental to the story means nothing when this guy gets near them. And the tension also works because you know Kristoff is going to give you a conclusion by the last page. I can't tell you how satisfying it is to have a whole story arc and its goals achieved in a single book, even if it is part of a series. Kristoff knows how to add more questions rather than leaving things unanswered. He makes you want to come back for more rather than bribing with answers he's denied you.

Mia is interesting. Mostly because she's hard to predict. Not where it makes me question her consistency, but in a very human way that makes a unique spin on the very bloody, brutal world she lives in and the part she plays in it. She's hard and she's soft, and that's what's going to decide how this story ends more than her ability and luck. You don't often get characters like that. (I'd also like to thank Kristoff for some bisexual representation where a bi character actually has relationships with both genders).

With each instalment fulfilling its own narrative goals, I can't imagine what the last book in the series is going to be after it's done wrapping up its own story as well as the overarching epic that's been brewing for something like 1000 pages now. I hope it's just as jam-packed of everything, but I also hope I can't put it down.

Thursday 24 October 2019

The Master Magician


Book Title: The Master Magician
Author: Charlie N. Holmberg
Series: The Paper Magician #3
Date Started: October 23rd 2019
Date Completed: October 21st 2019
Genres: Romance, Fantasy, Adventure, Mystery
Quality Rating: Three Stars
Enjoyment Rating: Three Stars
Final Rating: Three Stars
Review:


The Master Magician is the final instalment in an easy, enjoyable series of books. Magical, adventurous and cute (but kinda sickly sweet, you know), it's the kind of thing you pick up when you just aren't feeling up to a 600-page epic that's going to try and trick you and have you on the edge of your seat. I just wanted some magic, some mystery, and pretty metaphors.

Holmberg's triumph with this series is its magic system, and she absolutely dives into it. From the things you can do with each discipline of magic (paper, smelter (metal), polymaker (plastic), gaffer (glass), excisioner (blood), more that I'm sure I've forgotten), to the ways in which magic affects 18th Century London and the authorities governing it. I'll admit, sometimes things don't make sense; a trick with paper that was conveniently used earlier now doesn't occur to the characters, or something that could've completely solved a problem earlier is introduced without comment later on. But for the pure creativity of the magic system and how exciting it is to see everything develop, it doesn't really matter. Holmberg pulls something new out of the bag for practically every page you turn.

Let's be honest, each one of these books is basically the same formula when you think about it, but it's done in a way that you don't really notice unless you do sit down and think about it. Ultimately, that's what all stories are anyway. I will say that what annoyed me slightly was the collection of side stories that were very easily solved, to the point it made me wonder why they were there at all. But, oh well. What I'm basically saying is that The Paper Magician series isn't going to be winning any awards for its writing, but we need to remember that books and stories are just as important as entertainment as they are pieces of literature.

I do wonder how Ceony is still alive at this point when her instincts and ability to stay out of trouble are practically non-existent - and knowingly so - for the plot's sake. Yes, you need a way to get her into the middle of the danger for tension but this girl has the best luck at not dying when she really should be dead I have ever come across. The other characters are also incredibly irresponsible when they tell her anything to do with the plot considering her track record, but where would the fun in that be.

The Paper Magician trilogy has been a nice, pretty series wrapped up in a nice, pretty bow. It's not always my thing, but it's been fun, I've had a good time. I fully support easy, enjoyable reads, especially since we all need those simple stories to pull us away from the real world every now and then.

Tuesday 8 October 2019

The Scorpio Races


Book Title: The Scorpio Races
Author: Maggie Stiefvater
Date Started: September 27th 2019
Date Completed: October 7th 2019
Genres: Fantasy, Adventure, Romance
Quality Rating: Five Stars
Enjoyment Rating: Five Stars
Final Rating: Five Stars
Review:

To say this book wasn't what I expected means a couple of things, but mostly it means I didn't expect to be so knocked off my feet. The Scorpio Races is very different from a lot of things out there, and it's fearlessly confident of its worth; there's no feeling that things are being pushed in or hurried up to keep the reader entertained. It is a gentle, fierce book, and is proud of it.

I love that the writing is so understated. This story is slow-burning, and all the more satisfying for it. The stakes are sky-high for these characters in very personal ways, but the narrative ebbs and flows with the natural timing of things like waves. It seems to instinctively know when to introduce the little threads of feminism or class politics, when to give you a small thrill, when to fill you with dread. It almost feels like there isn't a writer at all, which is all the more impressive on Stiefvater's part.

The main crux of the plot is the annual race with people-eating horses - and yes, I've simplified that because I think the story is really about the people. Stiefvater basically gives a masterclass on how to unite character motivations with a narrative so that the audience both understands the person and fully backs in the story. On top of that perfectly structured groundwork, she starts laying worldbuilding and lore and vibrancy: a world that is grounded in its realism, set on an offshore island sometime in the late 20th/early 21st century presumably, but magical enough that we can fall head over heels into the dreamlike atmosphere.

Both protagonists, Sean and Puck alike, are equals in this story. The ending perhaps felt like it wrapped up Sean's story a little neater than Puck's, but I didn't feel like any part of the plot was favoured at all until then. Because we were watching two very different but still comparable stories at once, entirely balanced, their arcs (and the romance) was so much more interesting. I didn't know who I wanted to win the race, I just knew that I wanted them both to get what they needed in the end. And that's a stronger driving force than any material goal.

Stiefvater's The Raven Cycle was enjoyable, but I honestly believe that The Scorpio Races is a mini-masterpiece that deserves just as much recognition. Maybe it should even be added to the lines of classics that favour like Black Beauty and Flambards, not because it happens to have horses in it, but because it understands the thoughtful stories they seem to tell with those around them, and the fierce inspiration they seem to give to writers.

Monday 23 September 2019

Deathless


Book Title: Deathless
Author: Catherynne M. Valente
Date Started: September 5th 2019
Date Completed: September 23rd 2019
Genres: Fantasy, Historical, Romance
Quality Rating: Three Stars
Enjoyment Rating: Three Stars
Final Rating: Three Stars
Review:

Well, this was a massive disappointment after all the hype. There are some moments that feel perfectly out of a fairytale but, like a short story collection, they're few and far between and after looking forward to this for a couple of years at this point, I wanted a lot more.

Okay, I get that Deathless is supposed to be dark - awesome! Dark fairy tales are the best, they delve into the morality of the world, they shed light on the context in which it's written, they exaggerate the heights of bravery their heroes eventually achieve. But dark in this book is abusive and sexist, but it's written to be alluring and seductive. The idea of triumphing over it is there, but its thrown aside again and again. I get that the whole thing is a metaphor for Stalinist Russia, the revolution, and various historical events in the country's history (I'm sure if you're very familiar with the history, names and events will match up more obviously), and that's really cool. But Deathless is too on the fence about how it wants to explore that. You can have magical realism, exploring the history with fantastical symbols and landscapes where you aren't quite sure what's real and what isn't, or you can have pure fantasy set in a historical context and influenced by its events and politics - but this book tries to create a middle ground that doesn't work. It makes things confusing and frustrating and still isn't an excuse to make the abusive darkness appropriate to present as enticing in the way that it does.

Past the historical influences, Deathless is like the traditional epic fairy- and folk tales that combine lots of little stories into one. These weave together and supply characters with solutions or tools that will help them later on. Which kind of happens. But it didn't feel like things paid off that satisfyingly. Again, there's a strong thread of doom running through the book because of its inspiration, but even so things didn't feel like they really slotted into place - they felt separate like individual stories.

Last, but not least, is the fact that it's hard to get on with a story when you don't like the main character or feel connected to anyone else. Even more so with a story that is so intrinsically about the main character's change of heart over and over again. I understand that Marya isn't supposed to be likeable, and that's totally fine, but I wasn't rooting for her either and that's a problem.

I kept pushing through with Deathless because I wanted it to impress me, I wanted to be proven wrong, I wanted to love it. But when I reached the end, I thought... what was the point? It pretty much just ends, no climax, no twist, no tragic end even. Disappointed isn't even the right word, but it's the closest I've got.

Thursday 5 September 2019

Kingdom of Souls


Book Title: Kingdom of Souls
Author: Rena Barron
Date Started: August 27th 2019
Date Completed: September 5th 2019
Genres: Fantasy, Adventure
Quality Rating: Three Stars
Enjoyment Rating: Three Stars
Final Rating: Three Stars
Review:

◆ Thanks to NetGalley for this eBook copy for review ◆

In all honesty, I was bored throughout most of what I read, but when 25% rolled around (which is usually my cut-off point) I thought maybe it just needed a boost to get going. But suddenly at 30% it was Part Two and I didn't understand the point of Part One, so I gave myself a break and gave up on the book. Ultimately, while the world was awesome and there were the foundations for a good story, it refused to get on with it. Far too much unnecessary exposition and information dumping in the middle of scenes, making the plotline itself disjointed. The worldbuilding is great, but I don't need to be told in great detail because you want to delay until some action happens. Please, tell me a story, not anecdotes. In all fairness, this usually wouldn't be enough for me to wholly give up on a book but I found Arrah, our heroine, so passive as a protagonist that I was more rooting for something to go wrong to have some drama than for her to triumph. Not only does she not shut up about not having magic (even though she says she doesn't need it), she proceeds to refuse to attack her problem from a different angle. I'm pretty sure she will later develop magic in the book (or prove she doesn't need it) but she wasn't anywhere near that point a third into the book. I hope other people enjoy Kingdom of Souls more than I did, but in the end it wasn't enough to persuade me to invest more time in it.

Monday 26 August 2019

The Fountains of Silence


Book Title: The Fountains of Silence
Author: Ruta Sepetys
Date Started: August 23rd 2019
Date Completed: August 26th 2019
Genres: Historical, Romance, Mystery
Quality Rating: Four Stars
Enjoyment Rating: Four Stars
Final Rating: Four Stars
Review:

◆ Thanks to NetGalley for this eBook copy for review ◆

Since I read Salt to the Sea three years ago I've been dying to pick up another one of Sepetys' books. The Fountains of Silence dives into a very different era in a very different place with very different people but is no less thorough and engaging. And hey, you gotta love a cute romance.

Sepetys is very good at representing history without feeling like you're in a lecture. She cares about her story, and so enriches it with the context, furled by the extensive research she's done - rather than distracting you with unnecessary tangents for the sake of it. The one blip for me were the contextual quotes; they were fascinating and helpful for my understanding of what was happening, but they took me out of the story with how irregularly they were placed throughout the book. It was a big sign pointing at the important plot twists that I would've preferred to have felt out myself. But at the same time, those quotes really hit their mark.

The protagonist of Fountains of Silence is a photographer, something which I didn't think much of until I started reading. For one thing, the way Sepetys writes about photographs without actually showing them is so engaging. But it's also a very clever device to put in a story about Francoist Spain, and she takes full advantage of that. (Ironically, the egalley I have doesn't include the photos at the back of the book that I imagine are either supposed to be Daniel's or are what inspired them. It'd be so interesting to cross-reference them with what's mentioned in the story.)

The Fountains of Silence has a time jump in it that I wasn't convinced about to begin with but actually, having finished, it really works well. I think it could've been more towards the middle of the book because I really wanted it to go on a little longer. I can see why it didn't or we would've had an entirely new story inside the same book, but things ended very abruptly. I finished the last page and was confused that the author's note was suddenly there.

Once again Ruta Sepetys is proven to be the queen of young adult historical fiction both in her diligence of research and mastery of stories inside that. The Fountains of Silence is a reasonably easy read for one so dark in many ways, and definitely an enjoyable way to educate yourself about important topics.

Sunday 25 August 2019

The Zeppelin Deception


Book Title: The Zeppelin Deception
Author: Colleen Gleason
Series: Stoker & Holmes #5
Date Started: August 24th 2019
Date Completed: August 24th 2019
Genres: Historical, Romance, Mystery, Adventure
Quality Rating: Three Stars
Enjoyment Rating: Four Stars
Final Rating: Four Stars
Review:


Stoker & Holmes has been a guilty pleasure of mine for about three years, and I'm a little sad to see it end. The Zeppelin Deception does a good job of satisfying wrapping up the series to the point where I enjoyed it a little more than the others, actually. It didn't have loads of filler crammed in to make it longer; it just focused on finishing the story.

So pacing was a real strength in the final instalment, but it still didn't stop the completely unnecessary descriptions. I really don't need to have two pages reporting on every piece of food eaten or every outfit worn. I really don't care. Yes, the designs (particularly of clothes) are pretty cool with the Steampunk element prevalent in this series, but I'm not here for a catwalk or a buffet. Take a paragraph (if that) and then move on, please.

But, regardless, The Zeppelin Deception was very disciplined in wrapping up the series as a whole. The temptation in a final instalment is to throw in loads of last-minute twists for the sake of it, but this ultimately ends up either confusing the resolution or just completely changing the game you're supposed to be wrapping up. What this book did was give enough of a new plot to get momentum up, but then allowed the characters to naturally follow their own lines of suspicion that have been building up over five books to finally end the series. (And that's not to say that there weren't any final twists - oh, there definitely are - but they aren't at the expense of the final resolution.)

A book where the characters are allowed to be themselves with (mostly) no consequences - while unrealistic, especially in Victorian London - is really nice to read. I'm not here to gather material for an in-depth essay, I'm here for an enjoyable, easy read. And, whether deliberate or not, Gleason takes full advantage of that in her creative license; our imagination is already stretched so use it to give the reader things they will genuinely get joy from. For example, these books are 60% fluffy romance - totally valid anyway. But it's not my thing, yet a couple like Mina and Grayling are cute enough for me to forget about that for a while. Why not?

It's quite a sappy ending, but sometimes that's enjoyable. Stoker & Holmes are definitely a guilty pleasure and aren't works of Shakespeare, but they've been a lot of fun to read.

Saturday 24 August 2019

Blood for Blood


Book Title: Blood for Blood
Author: Ryan Graudin
Series: Wolf by Wolf #2
Date Started: August 22nd 2019
Date Completed: August 22nd 2019
Genres: Historical, Thriller, Romance
Quality Rating: Four Stars
Enjoyment Rating: Three Stars
Final Rating: Four Stars
Review:

What would've happened if the Nazis had won WWII? What would've happened if the resistance sent a little Jewish girl, forced into the powers of shapeshifting, to kill Hitler? And what if she failed? The Wolf by Wolf concept is still a really good idea, three years after I read the first book. Blood for Blood didn't take long to remind me of that, and I read the whole thing in a day - so I clearly enjoyed it. But it has faded in my memory very quickly after finishing it and I come back to the same conclusion I had about book one: it's just missing something.

Blood for Blood is quite a bit darker than I remember the first book being. Wolf by Wolf was essentially a road trip story, with Yael taking part in the Axis Tour (motorcycle race) under the guise of Adele Wolfe. Of course, it touched on a lot of the horrors of the Nazis but it was mostly in the peripheral vision of the competition and its dramas. This time, with Yael on the run and rekindling her rebel mission, we dive headfirst into it in a lot of cases. The history is great, it feels well-researched and respected (if a little dramatised), but it's not going to shy away from the shadows and the smoke.

The plotline of this book didn't go in the direction I expected; not so much in massive twists, but just in the natural stream of events flowing a different way. It was nice to feel like I was along for the ride rather than just reading the book but, as I said, there was just something missing. Was it the depth of character relationships (I got them, but I didn't feel them)? Was it tiring to have things so high-tension all the time? Was it something else entirely? I really don't know, because there's nothing straight out wrong about this book - I read all 496 pages IN A DAY - but I wanted more.

The series has an interesting bunch of characters, very varied. My first instinct was to want to spend more time with them to just see what happened; they're the kind of people that you put in a room together and they will undoubtedly form rivalries and friendships (but also kudos for keeping to a self-contained story because that is hard). What worked nicely in Blood for Blood is that you finally get to see these characters be themselves for the first time, free of the disguises of their mission or self-defensive pride. Yael gets to be Yael (which is significant in so many ways), but you get to see Felix with his actual sister, you get to see the Luka underneath the pretty boy champion. Some aspects of reclaiming their identities felt rushed (Felix was hollow and Adele was a bit too stuck up), and, in general, there were character reactions missed for the sake of the plot. Maybe things would've dragged on if we got to let the people play out their own personalities, but I think I would've liked reading it.

I enjoyed Blood for Blood while reading, and it definitely satisfying concluded the duology, but like its predecessor it just didn't hit that one thing (that still eludes me) that could've taken my breath away.

Friday 23 August 2019

Before the Devil Breaks You


Book Title: Before the Devil Breaks You
Author: Libba Bray
Series: The Diviners #3
Date Started: August 19th 2019
Date Completed: August 21st 2019
Genres: Fantasy, Historical, Mystery, Horror, Adventure, Romance
Quality Rating: Four Stars
Enjoyment Rating: Five Stars
Final Rating: Five Stars
Review:

Book three down in less than a week and it's only getting better. I devoured this book, loved every minute, and cannot wait for the last instalment in this series (I mean that literally, please help me).

As I've seen other people say, Bray's narratives are so good because they make the personal political. These books are about the Diviners as much as the ghost stories they solve. And that's empowering from so many angles; yes to girls saying goodbye to manipulators, yes to people of colour being proud of their backgrounds, yes to people recognising their own worth. It's of course very timely for the world we're currently in, and you can't help but feel the comparisons hovering very obviously behind some of the prejudice and violence. If anything, that makes it all the more effective.

Before the Devil Breaks You is essentially two stories in one, and that actually worked well. The first half is very much like the previous books and their ghost hunting arcs. But going into the second half of the book, a bigger world is opened up and things get serious. It's like we went from a 1920s Scooby-Doo to a full-blown blockbuster in the best way. And it suddenly exposed that Bray has had everything planned for a long time - or at least it feels that way. It doesn't feel like Bray is trying to sneakily make it seem like she's going somewhere just to make sequels, I trust that things are just being revealed now.

The Diviners is like a television drama. It's taken me three reviews to get to a point of saying that confidently because Before the Devil Breaks You really brings it home: every single one of the massive cast have their own story arc which is intrinsically fed into the main plotline. Everyone has their ambitions, weaknesses, and moments in the sun, even if they're not included in every single climax or battle (because, frankly, there's so many of them I don't know how you could). And it's glued together with their relationships, held up by proper platonic love as well as romantic (though I must admit, I'm a sucker for Evie and Sam more than ever).

Like ghost stories, secret conspiracies, and mystery? Like the roaring 20s in New York? The backstreet underground of it too? Complex girls who won't take nonsense, and boys with developed personalities? Diversity and representation? Then Libba Bray's Diviners series should be on your list. I picked up the first book on a whim, and six days later I'd read all three available books. They're fun, they're engaging and they touch on some really important topics in an accessible way.

Wednesday 21 August 2019

Sword and Pen


Book Title: Sword and Pen
Author: Rachel Caine
Series: The Great Library #5
Date Started: August 17th 2019
Date Completed: August 19th 2019
Genres: Adventure, Fantasy
Quality Rating: Four Stars
Enjoyment Rating: Five Stars
Final Rating: Four Stars
Review:

◆ Thank you NetGalley & Allison and Busby for this eBook copy for review ◆

Man, have I loved this series. Before I get into it, I want to thank Berkley Random House who gave me an ARC of the early first book last year (it's only been a year since I've been reading these?!), and of course Allison and Busby for this last installment - thank you for making sure this story came to the conclusion it deserved. Because I don't know what I would've done without this final action-packed, adventurous and indulgently sentimental story. The Great Library series comes from a devout adoration of books and is a wonderful addition to the infinite modern collection of fiction we have today - and it can't be burnt down anymore.

The aesthetics of The Great Library series are really something to commend. As a childhood lover of Ancient Egypt and an adult admirer of Ancient Greece, really the Library of Alexandria was going to be a winner full stop. But Caine creates a world so different to everything else out there at the moment, replicated in a way that feels authentic but also creatively exaggerated for our own excitement. The people she places into that world hold it up, but the foundations are pretty solid for them to perform on.

The Great Library series has taken us on pretty much a world tour during its four earlier books, but Sword and Pen is the first time we've been confined to just Alexandria. I don't think it suffers from that at all. Alexandria is like home at this point, and it's really the only place things could come to a close. And everyone gets to a hero in their own subplots but, as I was desperately hoping and as this series deserves, everyone gets pulled together for the last finale. No spoilers people, but it's worth it.

I may complain about the plot lines sometimes, but these books have such a cool mix of side stories, world-building, and character dynamics. Yes, some things don't pay off as you'd expect (why was Morgan so powerful all along? What's the deal with Eskander? Is the war really the main enemy here?), but the pure glee I got while seeing all these different people interact in so many different circumstances, under so many varied threats and pressures. The stakes remain high because Caine is so creative in the obstacles she sets - many, many obstacles - and the characters are so solid it's a game getting to watch them figure out her puzzles.

Because really, when you come down to it, it's the characters who win or lose a story's success. And the Great Library makes me want to keep coming back because of the people placed inside it. Each with their own personality, their own motivations, their own backgrounds, their own subplots that are (mostly) all allowed to come to fruition. The romance is great, the rivalries are great, but what's really impressive are the non-romantic relationships. The pairings that are platonic, familial; the physical affection between friends as well as lovers; the unconditional love for arses that are still friends.

I'm sad to see this series come to a close, but it was a good ending. There's potential room for more stories in this world, I guess, but I think The Great Library was done justice enough - though that isn't to say I wouldn't read a sequel series. I'd probably devour it immediately, honestly. But for now, this is the end.

Monday 19 August 2019

Lair of Dreams


Book Title: Lair of Dreams
Author: Libba Bray
Series: The Diviners #2
Date Started: August 15th 2019
Date Completed: August 17th 2019
Genres: Fantasy, Historical, Mystery, Romance, Horror
Quality Rating: Four Stars
Enjoyment Rating: Five Stars
Final Rating: Four Stars
Review:

◆ Thank you NetGalley for this eBook copy for review ◆

Book two of the Diviners series down, and I'm still rolling ahead to devour the next one. With her television-size cast of characters, places and plot lines, Bray is shaping up to be quite the storyteller as she keeps expanding her world with remarkable control. Slightly pretentious analysis aside, Lair of Dreams was just as enjoyable as the first installment in the series, even if it depended more on the friction between characters than to their plight.

You gotta love some light-hearted romance where the girls have just as much self-respect as they deserve; you gotta love some creepy ghosts making things go bump in the night; you gotta love the roaring twenties and its dreamers trying to make their way in it. Add a flair of fantasy and you have the Diviners, a group of gifted young people converging closer and closer as something wicked this way comes. It was really exciting that we got to expand into Chinatown in Lair of Dreams, and I'm still impressed by how well balanced the narrative is between so many characters and cultures and their individual subplots. It's why I keep referencing television writing because each character's personal arc often seems more at the forefront of their chapters than the overall plot does - which has its pros and cons.

The Diviners, the first book, relied a lot on the Naughty John plotline to glue everything together; Lair of Dreams is far less concerned with its ghost story. Instead, it drops hints upon hints of what's to come: foreboding FBI agents, missing mothers, traitors in family homes, suspicious premonitions, surprising connections weaving everyone together since before they were born. The 'dreaming killer' plotline is still there, and ultimately resolved, but it felt like it was on a backburner. Honestly, this was mostly fine - it meant less momentum but we have enough investment in the characters are this point for it to work - but my one hesitation lies in if whatever's coming is coming fast enough? I want to sink my teeth into this big conspiracy hiding behind them instead of popping back and forth between a ghost story, a melodrama as well as the 'ultimate test' that's approaching.

But until then, I am still totally occupied with the Diviners themselves. Evie (who seems to be the protagonist, in my mind, just from the structure of the series) continues to be fascinating selfish and irrational but complex and heroic. But it's also really nice that each character gets to take the limelight for a bit because you do feel affection for them all. It's interesting that quite a few people are in different power positions than they used to be, and constantly evolving. Evie has a radio show, Sam's living well off the museum, Theta's rising in the ranks on stage, Henry's changing his dreams, Mabel's standing up for herself, Jericho's starting to reach out of his comfort zone. It keeps things moving even when the main story isn't so much in focus, and mostly importantly it makes us root for these developing characters because they feel so much more real.

Guess who's already bought the next book and is devastated she has to wait until February for the last book? This girl. I've raced through these novels pretty fast, but I don't feel like I've exhausted them of their entertainment just yet. They're reasonably long books but they're so easy to topple into that it feels like the blink of an eye, and that's really what books are supposed to do. Small flaws aside, Bray has reached the heights of escapism and that's all we readers can ask for.

Saturday 17 August 2019

The Diviners


Book Title: The Diviners
Author: Libba Bray
Series: The Diviners #1
Date Started: July 21st 2019
Date Completed: August 14th 2019
Genres: Historical, Mystery, Romance, Horror
Quality Rating: Four Stars
Enjoyment Rating: Five Stars
Final Rating: Four Stars
Review:

This book has been on my kindle for years, I have the second novel as a digital ARC, and I'm so glad. I devoured this book, everything from the mystery to the politics to the romance. It's historically rich, enjoyably written and teeming with varied characters with their own vast backstories. As I was reading it, it almost felt like a well-made television show, spanning several side plots but with a strong focus on its main storyline pulling it through.

The writing was well researched, with a nice blend of real-world things and creative license in what was presented. But the real politics and representation - and the experiences of different communities during the 1920s - was what really elevated this book. It felt very real, and therefore even the fantastical elements were more believable. My issue is that there were some really obvious jumps in logic and a couple of mistakes in the order of events in a scene. Whether they were overlooked in editing or just weird choices, they staggered me and totally pulled me out for a moment. It's still worth it, they're little annoyances more than anything else, but it did strike me as weird for a finished book to have what were very obvious and easy-to-fix flaws.

What this book absolutely succeeds in is mixing the supernatural genre with 1920s New York. In some ways not too hard, in others near impossible. But the supernatural mystery was chilling and engaging rather than just there for the scare factor. The whole book is very atmospheric, in its creepy scenes but also on the booming New York streets and the back alleys. It's Bray's ability to contrast these that makes everything work in the end.

The way Bray explores all these different atmospheres and environments is through her cast of characters - and it's a big cast. At the heart of it is Evie O'Neill who is utterly fascinating. She's spoilt, selfish and annoying at the best of times. Yet there wasn't a moment I didn't root for her. Even more, she's clever and brave and can be exceedingly kind. Maybe it says more about our society than the book that I'm so surprised Bray managed to pull that off, but to have a female character who is at times dislikable and still see her as a complex person worthy of being the heroic protagonist was a breath of fresh air and a high merit for the novel.

Unfortunately, I do have to admit that the final climax felt like a bit of a let down since, having spent the book learning about all these different characters, only two of them (and eventually one) were at the finale. I'm sure that at the end of the series there's going to be an explosive finish with everyone coming together for one massive standoff for good and evil, but even having the majority of the primary cast absent at the end of this first installment felt disappointing. I wanted more of everyone; I didn't want any of their stories to end.

I'm already reading the second book and loving it, so if that isn't a recommendation I don't know what is. There are some frustrating blips in this series, but overall it is a highly entertaining and worthwhile read that you can race through or take your time with.

Wednesday 31 July 2019

Homegoing


Book Title: Homegoing
Author: Yaa Gyasi
Date Started: May 1st 2019
Date Completed: July 31st 2019
Genres: Historical
Quality Rating: Four Stars
Enjoyment Rating: Three Stars
Final Rating: Four Stars
Review:

◆ Thank you NetGalley for this eBook copy for review ◆

I hold my hands up and say I got to 25% in this book and, while I think it was great and important and I was enjoying it, the story was just so slow. There's so much information, and so many connections and relationships and context that my brain got overwhelmed when it was mixed with a very dense but gradual plotline. If you like in-depth bloodlines, African history, deep prose then I would recommend picking this up - the overwhelming flood of praise of this book backs me up. It's just too slow and full to the brim of information for me at the moment.