Sunday, 28 November 2021

Blog Tour & Review: The Arcane by Andrew S French (The Arcane # 1) ★★★★☆

The Arcane by Andrew S French | Book Review | Superior Young Adult Fiction

They say you shouldn't judge a book by it's cover; 'they' being the type of people who clearly don't read books because I always judge books by their covers. Case in point, I knew I was going to read Andrew S. French's The Arcane the minute I saw that cover, James Helps's design is exquisite and perfect for this book. The good news? I really enjoyed the story too.

Sixteen-year-old child prodigy Alice is studying biology, physics and mathematics at Teesside University when her logical, carefully-curated world of science is turned upside-down. In the course of one particularly life-threatening evening, she learns that the twin-sister-she-never-knew-she-had kills monsters. Cue record scratch.

Part one of the Arcane duology, The Arcane is a young adult, urban fantasy set in the UK. If you're a fan of Supernatural, Buffy, Lucifer or Doctor Who, you'll feel very comfortable with an all-star cast that includes vampires, werewolves, angels, demons and an unexpected encounter with Medusa. There's even some timey-wimey, space travel stuff to add to the madness. I'm definitely not going to spoil more of the story because it was enjoyable letting it unfold. Suffice to say, discovering you have an identical twins raises questions.

The Arcane is a lot of fun. I really appreciated that each twin had a unique voice and personality. It was amusing seeing Alice desperately trying to frame everything she was seeing within logic and science, despite the increasing evidence that physics had left the building. I also loved the pop culture references and the song titles for chapter names.

The only problem I have with The Arcane was that unforgivable cliffhanger. I haven't scrambled that quickly for a sequel in years! The good news, dear reader, is that both The Arcane and sequel The Arcane Identity are out now to buy. I suggest you buy them together. For a wild rollercoaster ride of a book, paranormal shenanigans and making me crave more, I give The Arcane an excellent four out of five stars.

★★★★☆

 

The Arcane Blog Tour

I'm taking part in The Arcane blog tour. Definitely visit the other blogs on the tour for more reviews and other snippets.

I received an electronic copy of this novel for the purposes of this review. I will always provide an honest review, whether books are provided to me or purchased by me.

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Saturday, 27 June 2020

Tahereh Mafi's Dystopian Thriller 'Shatter Me' - Review ★★★★☆

I only picked up Tahereh Mafi's Shatter Me because I love, love, loved her novel A Very Large Expanse of Sea. I had a feeling that I wouldn't enjoy the Shatter Me series, reviews that I read described it as tropey dystopian, but I wanted to see how her writing had developed from the first Shatter Me novel to the masterpiece of young adult fiction that is A Very Large Expanse of Sea.

Shatter Me by Tahereh Mafi | Superior Young Adult Fiction | Book Review

The world of Shatter Me is very strange. Radioactive and crumbling, diseased and destroyed, birds no longer fly and the clouds are all wrong. Juliette has been locked up in isolation for almost a year, her mind fragmenting, when suddenly Adam appears and everything changes. Juliette can kill people with a single touch, what do people want to use her for?

Shatter Me by Tahereh Mafi | Superior Young Adult Fiction | Book ReviewExchanging one prison for another, Juliette encounters Warner, a privileged young man who basks in all the power of his father. Warner is one of the best-written antagonists I have ever read, his level of evil on par with Nazis and his moral vacancy chilling at times.

There are three main settings in Shatter Me and it's hard to divulge more without spoiling the plot. Nevertheless, despite my doubts on beginning this novel, there were glimpses of brilliance and I'll be reading the rest of the books in the Shatter Me series.

For an epic love story and unforgivable villain, I give Shatter Me an excellent four out of five stars and recommend to fans of Hunger Games and Divergent.

★★★★☆

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Saturday, 30 November 2019

Monstrous Fun: Victoria Schwab's This Savage Song on Audiobook ★★★★★

This Savage Song by Victoria Schwab | Superior Young Adult Fiction | Audiobook Review

It all started off with Sarah Rees Brennan's Seasons of the Witch. One minute I'd gone lukewarm on YA paranormal fiction and the next I couldn't get enough of it. I discovered Victoria Schwab next and tore through the Cassidy Blake novels, City of Ghosts and Tunnel of Bones. I wanted more. I decided on Schwab's Monsters of Verity series next, fully expecting to be slightly disappointed with it when compared to the aforementioned books.

I love it when I'm wrong.

I loved This Savage Song in the obsessive fan-girl-kind of way that had me impatiently searching for news of a rumoured film option and nervously considering when was too soon to pick up the sequel. Sarah Rees Brennan's second Chilling Adventures of Sabrina book is out in December, as is the long-awaited sequel to Tomi Adeyemi's Children of Blood and Bone. There are so many good books to read and only one overworked me.

This Savage Song by Victoria Schwab | Superior Young Adult Fiction | Audiobook ReviewThis Savage Song is set in a world of monsters; grotesque, larger-than-life, walking nightmares roam the streets and the citizens of Verity swear fealty to one of two warring factions in a vain attempt at self-preservation. Kate Harker is the daughter of Callum Harker, a ruthless warlord who has somehow managed to bend monsters to his will. She wants nothing more than to be like him.

August Flynn is a monster by name, loyal to Harker's enemy Henry Flynn and on a mission to get close to Kate Harker. It doesn't take Kate long to discover August's secret but she soon learns that there are two kinds of monsters in this world.

This Savage Song is a lot of fun, set in a fascinating future world and featuring one hell of a flight for survival. The future is bleak and it's all down to human nature. The best part of the novel is undoubtedly the chemistry between Kate and August, their curiosity, friendship and trust. Kate is tough, kickass and often violent and is perfectly balanced by careful and conflicted August. I can't wait to pick up Our Dark Duet and I'm as delighted as I am devastated that the series is a duology. I definitely want more of Kate and August but I'm a big fan of series finishing before my interest runs out.

I listened to This Savage Song on Audible, narrated by Thérése Plummer. Thérése is such a fantastic narrator, perfectly capturing Kate and August's voices as well as the numerous monsters and other characters in the book. I see that she narrated Amanda Hocking's Trylle trilogy. I might just revisit that in the new year!

I give This Savage Song a superb five out of five stars. Despite my overflowing bedside table pile, I suspect it won't be long before I start listening to Our Dark Duet after all.

★★★★★

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Sunday, 1 January 2017

Amanda Hocking's Freeks: Review and Excerpt

Freeks by Amanda Hocking

It’s all happening at Gideon Davorin’s Traveling Sideshow. The audience thinks they are seeing slight of hand and optical illusions but there are no illusions here. Gideon’s sideshow is the real thing, a magical place where you’ll encounter levitation, pyrokinesis, necromancy and all manner of dark arts.

The sideshow has set up camp in Caudry, Louisiana, against the better judgement of those who experience premonitions and forewarnings. The performers have little choice, living from gig to gig, they are all broke and simply need to last it out for seven days.

Mara is the daughter of Lyanka, a famed fortune-teller with a direct link to the dead. On their first night in Caudry, Mara takes a walk across town and happens upon a house party. There she meets Gabe, intense and witty with just the hint of a deep secret about him.

Despite the mystery, Mara and Gabe become inseparable within days. But what of Caudry? There is a sinister presence lurking at the edges of the campsite and worse than that, there are attacks occurring with ever-increasing frequency. Who or what is it that is attacking the performers and how can it be stopped?

Freeks is the latest book from Amanda Hocking, a veteran young adult writer and author of the Trylle and Kanin series.

There is so much to say about Freeks and it is difficult to know where to begin. Perhaps it would make most sense to start with the gorgeous cover. I realise that it is the first day of the year but I’m willing to place a wager that this will be my favourite cover of 2017. It is colourful, mysterious and alluring and embodies everything that this book is.

 Freeks cover

I loved the concept of the travelling sideshow and the Supernatural feel of the book. Whereas Supernatural has us singing along to the classic rock hits of the 1970s, Freeks is set in the middle of the 1980s and I loved spotting all the pop culture references and songs that came out in my teenage years.

Mara is one of my favourite protagonists in a long while. Confident and self-assured, she was no Mary Sue waiting for a boy to come along and save her and in fact at one point, she muses about how she is going to break Gabriel’s heart when the sideshow leaves town.

In addition to Mara and Gabe, Freeks is full of intriguing characters, each with their own history and reasons for joining the sideshow. It is such a rarity when authors pen diverse, interesting characters and it was greatly appreciated and enjoyed. With such a diverse cast, I would love to see this book hit television or the big screen. Amanda Hocking has thought about it too and says she envisaged Cassie Steel and Ryan Guzman as possible actors who could play Mara and Gabe.

At its core, Freeks is a fascinating paranormal fantasy where the tension builds up and the threads slowly come together to unearth the peril that is facing Gideon Davorin’s Traveling Sideshow. I’ll be honest and say that I guessed part of the final reveal but that detracted in no way from my enjoyment of the story. In fact, I felt rather smug for picking up on the clues Hocking left throughout the book.

There is no news yet on whether there will be a sequel to Freeks and indeed, it is being marketed as a standalone novel, but can I just say that I really hope there is one?

I give Amanda Hocking's Freeks a superb five out of five stars and recommend it to all lovers of the paranormal and unexplained and fans of young adult fiction.

★★★★★


Freeks Blog Tour

Freeks Blog Tour Banner

I’m taking part in the Freeks blog tour that is taking place across the book blogosphere until 10 January 2017. If you’re in the US, definitely follow @amanda_hocking on Twitter as she is tweeting out several chances to win a copy of Freeks on the blogs in the tour. My gift to you, dear readers, is an exclusive excerpt from Chapter 5 of Freeks.


Freeks - Exclusive Excerpt

Unlike many of the other members of the sideshow, I didn’t have a specific job. My mom was a fortune- teller, Gideon did a magic show, Zeke had his tigers, Brendon and his family did acrobatics, Seth was a strongman. My best friend Roxie Smith was in two acts— she helped out Zeke, and did a peepshow revue with two other girls.

I had no talent. No special ability, making me essentially a roadie. I did what was needed of me, which usually involved helping set up and take down, and various menial tasks. I cleaned the tiger cages and emptied out latrines when I had to. It wasn’t a glamorous job, but it was crucial to our way of life.

Since Roxie worked with the tigers, Mahilā actually tolerated her. Roxie was helping me clean out the tiger cage they traveled in. The cage was open to a fenced-in enclosure Seth had built, so the tigers could roam as they pleased.

Safēda lounged in the grass, the sun shining brightly on her white fur. Whenever we stopped, Safēda seemed content to just lay in the sun, sleeping the entire time, but as the older tiger, it made sense.

Mahilā paced along the fence, occasionally emitting an irritated guttural noise in between casting furtive glances back toward Roxie and me. Her golden fur was mottled with scars from her past life in the abusive circus, including a nasty one that ran across her nose.

“So where did you go last night?” Roxie asked, her voice lilting in a sing song playful way. She was out in the run, using a hose to fill up a blue plastic kiddie pool so the tigers could play in it, while I was on my hands and knees scrubbing dung off the cage floor.

Her bleached blond hair was pulled back in a ponytail, and the sleeves of her white T- shirt were rolled up, revealing her well-toned arms. The cut- off jean shorts she wore barely covered her bum, and her old cowboy boots went up to her knees— her chosen footwear anytime she was at risk of stepping in tiger poop.

With fair skin, full lips, large blue eyes, and a dainty nose, Roxie was pretty and deceptively tough. Being a beautiful carnie was not an easy job, and dancing in the revue under the stage name “Foxy Roxie” didn’t help that. But she made decent money doing it, and Roxie never put up with anybody’s crap. I’d seen her deck guys much bigger than her and lay them out flat on their backs.

“I was just at a party,” I said as I rinsed the brush off in a bucket of bleach and warm water.

“A party?” Roxie looked over at me with a hand on her hip.

“How’d you get invited to a party so fast?”

I shrugged. “I was just exploring town, and I saw some people hanging outside of this big house party, and they invited me in.”

“So what are the people like here? Are they nice?”

Safēda had gotten up and climbed into the pool, and then she flopped down in it, splashing Roxie as she did. Roxie took a step back, but kept looking at me.

“I don’t know. The people I met last night seemed nice, and they were superrich, so that bodes well for the town, I guess.”

“Like how rich?” Roxie asked.

“Like their house is practically a mansion.” I dropped the brush in the water and sat back on my knees, taking a break to talk to her. “It was the nicest house I’ve ever been in, hands down.”

“Is that why you spent the night there?”

Roxie understood my fascination with houses. Well, “understood” wasn’t the right word. It was more like she knew of it, but didn’t understand it all. She’d grown up in an upper- middleclass family, in nice houses with basements, and thought they were about as boring and lame as she could imagine.

“Partly.” I nodded. “It was a really amazing house. There were pillars out front, and the front hall was bigger than my trailer.”

“It’s just a house, Mara.” Roxie shook her head.

“I know but . . .” I trailed off, trying to think of how to explain it to her. “You know how you felt when you first joined the sideshow two years ago? How everything seemed so exciting and fun, and I was like, ‘We live in cramped trailers. It kinda sucks.’”

Roxie nodded. “Yeah. But I still think this life is a million times better than my old life. I get to see everything. I get to decide things for myself. I can leave whenever I want. There’s nothing to hold me back or tie me down.”

She’d finished filling up the pool, so she twisted the nozzle on the hose to shut it off. Stepping carefully over an old tire and a large branch that the tigers used as toys, she went to the edge of the run and tossed the hose over the fence, before Mahilā

decided to play with it and tore it up.

She walked over to the cage and scraped her boots on the edge, to be sure she didn’t track any poop inside, before climbing up inside it.

“So what was the other reason?” Roxie asked.

I kept scrubbing for a moment and didn’t look up at her when I said, “Gabe.”

Gabe?” Roxie asked. “That sounds like a boy’s name.”

“That’s because it is.”

“Did you have sex with him?”

“No.” I shot her a look. “We just made out a little.”

“What what what?” Luka Zajiček happened to be walking by just in time to hear that, and he changed his course to walk over to the tiger cage. “Is that what you were up to last night?”

“That’s what sucks about living in a community so small. Whenever anything happens, everybody knows about it right away,” I muttered.

Copyright © 2017 by Amanda Hocking and reprinted by permission of St. Martin’s Griffin.

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Saturday, 20 February 2016

Review: Jack Croxall's Excellent Dystopian Thriller Wye

Wye by Jack Croxall

There are certain things you just shouldn't do. During a quiet moment at work, you shouldn't open up a book on the Kindle app on your iPhone and begin reading it and if you do, you most certainly shouldn't get hopelessly addicted to said book, to the extent that you simply cannot put it down. If you're going to do all that, might I suggest that there is no better book than Jack Croxall's standalone dystopian thriller Wye.

Wye is a young girl, sixteen-years-old to be precise and she is making her way across the Wasteland of what is now Dead England. Pursued by zombies, Wye and her band of fellow survivors are making their way to the east, to a cabin that may or may not exist on the coast of England. Realising that they are perhaps the last people left alive on earth, Wye keeps a diary to document their journey as well as The Sickness and The Spread of the disease.

If you think this sounds remotely familiar to anything you've read before, think again. Author Jack Croxall leads you down an overgrown path in the English countryside and then twists the story again and again... and again. Everything you thought you knew about zombie thrillers is here with allusions to Warm Bodies, The Walking Dead and everything inbetween but nothing, nothing is as it seems.

Jack Croxall Wye coverI loved Jack Croxall's style of writing with a fervour I usually reserve for Lauren Oliver. And like Lauren Oliver, Jack has written a novel where nothing else matters in life except the moments where you are reading this story. Work? It'll take second place, as will any study or family commitments you might have. Valentine's Day? Fine, but only if there is a long afternoon reading session scheduled in there among all the chocolates, flowers and fancy dinners.

There were entire paragraphs which I wanted to highlight, save or tweet but alas, I was too busy reading to stop for any length of time. Suffice to say, I loved Jack's lyrical style of writing and the voice that he gave to Wye.

As a narrator, Wye is wonderfully flawed. You soon become aware that you can't trust a word she says and that is okay. More than okay, in fact, Wye is the perfect narrator to give a human touch to a most unusual catastrophe.

It might only be February but I'm already claiming Wye to be my book of the year for 2016. It is so good that I considered downgrading all my previous star-ratings in order to adequately reflect the act of giving this book five stars.

I give Wye by Jack Croxall a superb five out of five stars and would highly recommend it to any reader who is in the mood for a book that really moves them.

5 Stars

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Sunday, 23 August 2015

Book Review: Gidion's Hunt by Bill Blume

Gidion's Hunt by Bill Blume review

Gidion Keep is a teenage vampire hunter upholding a long Keep family tradition of hunting. When Gidion’s mother died at the hands of a vampire, Gidion’s father quit the business and it fell to Gidion’s grandfather to train Gidion in secret and pass on the legacy.

When Gidion saves a woman from a vicious vampire attack, he is stunned when she recognises him. It turns out the secrecy of his craft is the least of his worries for as Gidion closes in on the local vampire coven, he uncovers a deadly plot to kill off a student and a teacher. Worse yet, the vampires know they are being hunted but it may just be that Gidion’s biggest threat lies within his own group of friends at high school.

Gidion’s Hunt is the first novel by Bill Blume and the first in the Gidion Keep, Vampire Hunter series. Originally titled Tales of a 10th Grade Vampire Hunter, Gidion’s Hunt is not just another vampire novel. Blume has written as realistic a novel as possible, focusing not on the vampires themselves but on the type of person that would put themselves in danger in order to hunt and destroy monsters.

The novel is gritty, fast-paced and entertaining. Gidion is a likeable hero and just the right shade of bad boy. Blume pulls no punches and the vampires are pretty nasty at times, reducing their victims to mindless slaves or worse, draining them of blood and killing them.

I really enjoyed the high school dynamics and was reminded of Joss Whedon and the high-school-as-Hell metaphor that we saw in Buffy the Vampire Slayer.  Just like in high school, loyalties are fickle, only valid for as long as they provide social capital, and Gidion is left wondering who he can trust right until the very last page.

Gidion's HuntGidion’s unconventional relationship with intended vampire victim Tamara is another highlight of the plot. Rather than endless pages of angst and insecurity, they really just get on with it despite their age difference.

Without giving the plot away, the best aspect of the story is the reveal of the Big Bad and the motives driving their actions. In an ultimate display of scorn, insecurity and revenge, the actions and decisions of the Big Bad were realistic and chilling.

Ultimately, Gidion’s Hunt would be a four star book but for one thing: the rampant misogyny of the male characters. You’d expect that a book featuring a male vampire hunter as a protagonist might only be read by boys but you’d be wrong – the primarily readers of young adult fiction are females, of all ages, and we don’t like being referred to as whores and bitches.

I’m glad that Blume has released Gidion’s Blood, the second book in the series, and I’m definitely going to read it but I do hope he tones down the misogyny before he alienates a good part of his readership.

With that in mind, I give Gidion’s Hunt a qualified three out of five stars. I would definitely recommend it to fans of Buffy the Vampire Slayer or Teen Wolf and I will be reading the next books in the series.

3 Stars

You can buy Gidion's Hunt at Amazon.co.uk for £1.99 on Kindle or Amazon.com.

 

 

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Saturday, 18 July 2015

Book Review: The Stars Never Rise by Rachel Vincent

The Stars Never Rise Rachel Vincent

Stop me if you've heard this one before. In a not-so-distant future, the human race is under threat and a massive church-like structure has emerged to control the populace and protect them against the threat.

In Rachel Vincent’s The Stars Never Rise, that threat is a shortage of souls and the emergence of soul-devouring demons, and the church-like structure is The Church.

While I'll give credence to the author for the originality of the souls idea, its manifestation as still births and the subsequent attempts of those in authority to control reproduction sound like something straight out of Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale.

Perhaps at this point I should stop to point out that Rachel Vincent is one of my favourite authors and if this book has come out ten years ago, I would probably have loved it. Not only is it fast-paced and entertaining, set in a dystopian nightmare, but it provides a searing critique of right-wing tendencies and the dangers inherent when church and state are too closely aligned.

The problem is that at this point, it is just another dystopian book and as much as I want to love anything that Rachel Vincent pens, I'm overcome with the glaring similarities to other works.

Take Finn for example, a human soul without a body but one that is able to possess other bodies (in a good way, of course). The body-snatchers idea feels like Stephenie Meyer's The Host which in itself was taken from a whole genre of B movies dating back to the dawn of Hollywood. The bodiless soul idea reminded me a a little too much of Gena Showalter's Intertwined and the idea of walled cities and badlands reminded me both of Lauren Oliver's Delirium and Julie Kagawa's Blood of Eden series.

There was also another snag. As much as I love Rachael Vincent, I just couldn't reconcile the notion of finite souls. To me there are both new souls and reincarnation and for some reason I couldn't suspend disbelief enough to consider a finite number of souls (if you can use that term when dealing with the purely esoteric).

I guess the ultimate measure of young adult book is whether it makes you snort with derision and The Stars Never Rise made me snort. Out loud. It was towards the end and Nina had only just admitted she couldn't make out the colour of a car in the dark when she mentions Finn's bright green eyes. Again. For the 1,000th time. I'm fairly new to this notion of the Young Adult fiction stereotype of green eyes (having green eyes myself and never noticing they were rare or overused) but I can see why readers are becoming so irritated by this particular stereotype.

So how would I rate this book and would I recommend it? I would definitely recommend The Stars Never Rise if you are new to the realm of dystopian fiction or if you're going through that phase where you simply can't get enough of it. You'll love it, it's good and you'll likely finish it in one sitting. But if you're about to pick it up and you're wondering if you have the energy for yet another dystopian young adult adventure? Maybe give it a miss.

With a heavy heart, I give The Stars Never Rise a disappointing 2 out of 5 stars. It feels strange to do so because really, what was I expecting? I doubt I'll read the next in the series and quite frankly, I'd prefer it if Vincent returned to more unusual urban fantasy like we saw in Soul Screamers and the Unbound series.

2 Stars

You can buy The Stars Never Rise at Amazon.co.uk or Amazon.com.

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Sunday, 15 June 2014

Book Review: 'Blood Bound' by Rachel Vincent

Blood Bound UK cover banner

It's been thirty years since the world found out about the Skilled, those people with abilities that set them apart from the rest of the population. Some are Trackers with a preternatural ability to track anyone by name or on a drop of blood, others can mortally bind a contract, detect lies or teleport between shadows.

Of course, governments around the world refuse to acknowledge the existence of the Skilled and their abilities and what they won't acknowledge, they can't police. The syndicates were quick to step up to fill the vacuum left open by a lack of regulation and are only too happy to use those with abilities to their own ends.

Blood Bound Rachel Vincent UK coverIn Blood Bound, the first in Rachel Vincent's Unbound series, Tracker Olivia Warren and her former lover Cam are thrown together to solve the murder of the husband of an old friend. The matter quickly turns into a missing child case; can Liv and Cam resolve the matter without falling foul of the syndicates?

Having read Rachel Vincent's Soul Screamers series, it is safe to say that I am a fan of her writing and I always admired the natural way she would bring scenes alive by effortlessly interspersing dialogue with descriptions of characters preparing food or pouring drinks.

The problem with Blood Bound is that there are so many pages (chapters even) where nothing happens that the addition of rich contextual descriptions made for painful reading. I don't like skimming, you always land up missing something important and having to flip back, but I'm happy to report that I pretty much skimmed the third quarter of the book and felt none-the-poorer for it.

This was made even more apparent by the fact that I guessed the whole plot by the middle of the book. That's not that the book was predictable or that the writing was poor, but I got this whole world the author was describing and guessed where the story was going.

Nothing happening described in minute detail when you know where the story is heading? Not so much fun.

Despite that, I really enjoyed this world, the supernatural abilities and the main characters Liv and Cam. I believe that the next books in the trilogy won't focus directly on Liv and Cam but on other characters in the universe and this quite appeals to me. I just hope that Rachel Vincent realises that was once such a good aspect of her writing is weighing it down now and I'd like to see more action and less context even if it means shorter books.

I give Blood Bound three out of five stars. I'll definitely read the rest of the books in the trilogy but this was a little too wordy for a higher rating.

3 Stars

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Tuesday, 30 April 2013

Book Review: Hounded by Kevin Hearne

Atticus O'Sullivan

It has been a really long time since I've loved a protagonist in a book. There are books that I've loved, certainly, but whatever I loved about them had more to do with the stories themselves or the other characters in the book.

All of this occurred to me today when I finished Kevin Hearne's Hounded and loved it. Most importantly, I loved the lead character Atticus O'Sullivan. And that wasn't only down to his Irish accent and dashing Celtic good looks.

Cover - Hounded by Kevin HearneHounded is the first book in the Iron Druid Chronicles and Atticus is the Iron Druid in question. The only living Druid remaining on earth, Atticus is over 2,000 years old and hiding out in Arizona, far away from the watchful eyes of the gods and demons that would hunt him down. He would especially like to avoid running into Aenghus Óg, the Celtic god of love who holds a remarkable amount of hatred and vengeance in his heart for one so seemingly loved up.

When Aenghus Óg tracks him down, Atticus expects him to unleash the powers of hell in his quest for vengeance but he is not about to go down without one hell of a fight. With his faithful Irish wolfhound Oberon at his side (not to mention assorted vampires, werewolves and witches wo may or may not want to kill him), Atticus is about to teach Aenghus a very valuable lesson in picking a fight with a two-thousand-year-old Druid.

In many ways, Hounded reminded me of Richelle Mead's Succubus series and Jim Butcher's The Dresden Files, without the gratuitous sex scenes or overly smug protagonist. Of course, I didn’t mind either when I read those series but Atticus O’Sullivan is just so damn likeable. Hounded is fun and irreverent and the writing is extremely witty.  You get the idea that the author doesn’t take himself all that seriously and then he blows you away with ridiculously long and archaic words or his impressive knowledge of every pantheon under the sun.

Needless to say, I couldn’t put Hounded down and if you must know, I’ve torn through most of the sequel Hexed in the time it’s taken me to draft this review. An easy 5 out of 5 stars and Kevin Hearne is very possibly my New Favourite Author.

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Monday, 8 October 2012

Book Review: Alice in Zombieland by Gena Showalter

Alice in Zombieland Gena ShowalterAlice Bell has never experienced what you’d call a normal life. Her whole life her family was held captive by her father’s paranoid ramblings about monsters, never allowed to go out at night and living in a highly secure but permanent state of fear. Except that he wasn’t delusional and monsters are real. It is bad enough that Alice loses her entire family in a car accident on her sixteenth birthday but on that evening she finally sees the monsters with her own eyes and she realises once and for all that her father was anything but crazy.

Alice in Zombieland is Gena Showalter’s latest foray into young adult fiction, following on from her as-yet-unfinished Intertwined series. Despite the play on the title of the Lewis Carroll classic, the book has little to do with Alice in Wonderland and it is not a reimagining of that story. In a sense, this might be misleading to readers as the front cover proclaims “Off with their heads” and the series is called The White Rabbit Chronicles but apart from Alice’s sightings of a white cloud in the shape of a rabbit, further references to Alice in Wonderland are extremely tenuous.

This suited me perfectly as there is a time and place for parody mashups but I think Gena Showalter is a better writer than that.  However, therein lies the problem with Alice in Zombieland.  It is probably worth mentioning that I am a great fan of Showalter’s Intertwined series to the extent that it is the first series in years that I have read several times.  The supernatural world that Showalter created in those books along with her characters’ natures and abilities was incredibly entertaining, unique and interesting. It is safe to say that I had high expectations of her with this book.

Ultimately, Alice in Zombieland is just an average high school melodrama with stereotyped characters and a zombie threat. Except that the zombies aren’t zombies, they are ghosts, despite the fact that the author insists on more than one occasion that ghosts don’t exist.  And, of course, the zombie ghosts can bite you and infect you which actually makes them zombies. I think I’ve conveyed how silly the distinction is.

There were so many scenes that reminded me of other books, films and television programs that little seemed original in this book.  The scene where Alice first sees Cole seemed almost identical to the scene where Bella first sees the Cullens in Twilight; the organisation of the hunters in relation to their parents seemed like a cross between Teen Wolf and Secret Circle; and the characterisation of Cole and his friends (and the subsequent reversal of that impression) felt like it came straight out of Fallen

My honest impression (and I might be entirely mistaken in this) was that Harlequin Teen had far too much editorial input into the novel and encouraged Showalter to write a book that they could sell. This was supported by Alice reading another Harlequin Teen novel in the book (product placement anybody?) and the fact that Showalter’s characters are now shiny and squeaky clean with no cursing or carnal bodily relations. 

So if you were expecting a Lewis Carroll / zombie mashup or a paranormal thriller of the same calibre as Showalter’s Intertwined series, then Alice in Zombieland is probably not the book for you.  However, if teen romances with a touch of the supernatural are what you are looking for, then his book performs fairly on that level.  I give it a fair 2.5 out of 5 stars.

Alice in Zombieland is published by Mira Ink and is available to purchase on Amazon.co.uk or Amazon.com.

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Wednesday, 5 September 2012

Audiobook Review: Girl of Nightmares by Kendare Blake

Anna Dressed in Blood was a darkly atmospheric horror story by Kendare Blake.  Terrifying in parts, it told the story of ghost hunter Cas Lowood and the ghost who changed his life.  It was beautifully written, almost lyrical and poetic in parts, and was ultimately devastating.

While I knew that a sequel for Anna Dressed in Blood had already been penned, I nevertheless felt at the time of reading that it would have been perfect as a stand alone novel.  Having listened to the audiobook sequel Girl of Nightmares, I still feel that way.

Girl of Nightmares picks up six months after the events of Anna Dressed in Blood.  As Cas and his friends Thomas and Carmel struggle to pick up the pieces and carry on with their normal lives, it becomes increasingly clear that whatever happened to Anna isn’t good and it certainly isn’t over.  The problem is that Thomas and Carmel have their own problems and when Anna begins to appear to Cas both in dreams and in waking nightmares, he doesn’t have their support.

Girl of Nightmares sees the trio travel to England and Scotland to track down the mysterious Order of the Biodag Dubh as Cas becomes increasingly determined to embark on a solution that might just cost him his life.

It is unfortunate, but I really did not enjoy this audiobook reading of Girl of Nightmares.  Initially, I was surprised because none of the characters sounded like I expected them to.  Cas is a powerful ghost hunter and Thomas an equally powerful witch but narrator August Ross’s breathy, mild tones seemed to do them no justice at all.  This is to be expected with audiobooks though and is usually something you grow used to.

The problem occurred when Cas and Thomas went to London.  Seriously, no one here speaks like that.  Londoners no longer sound like Eliza Doolittle and possibly never did.  It was not just August Ross’s accents that jarred but Blake’s writing too. We don't actually call sausages ‘bangers’, the ‘north country’ refers to the north of England not Scotland, and heads were not displayed on pikes on Tower Bridge (mainly because beheadings stopped in 1747 and Tower Bridge was only built between 1886 and 1894).

I became quite nervous when I heard that the trio were travelling to Scotland, and sure enough, Ross’s accent was simply diabolical. 

It has to be said, accents are extremely hard to do.  One has only to listen to the way they butchered the American accents in BBC’s Spooks to know that it can happen to anyone.  But it was both the narrator and the writing that went wrong with this one. Perhaps the accents wouldn't have been so obvious without the audio narration but I have been unable to read the novel since without imagingin the accents.

Beyond the accents, I missed the Thunder Bay, Ontario setting.  Everything about the journey to Britain felt clichéd from the mannerisms and accents, to their host’s library of ancient tomes, to the stuffy, sinister and Masonic-like secret Order of the Biodag Dubh.  Coupled with the trek through the forest, it simply felt like too much had been lifted from other novels.  I also felt that the gratuitous swearing detracted from rather than added to the story.

I would absolutely recommend Anna Dressed in Blood to anybody but unfortunately cannot say the same of Girl of Nightmares.  Not surprisingly, it seems that I am in the minority in my opinion so if you would like to do so, you can purchase the unabridged audiobook version of Girl on Nightmares narrated by August Ross from Audiogo.com.

Two stars out of five.


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Thursday, 12 July 2012

Book Review: Spellbound by Cara Lynn Shultz

Spellbound UK Cover Cara Lynn ShultzWhen I first read about Cara Lynn Shultz’s debut novel, I immediately wanted to read it.  Spellbound is a paranormal romance set in Manhattan’s Upper East Side and is somewhat of a mix between Gossip Girl and Secret Circle

Sixteen-year-old Emma Conner arrives in New York to make a fresh start in life after suffering the tragic loss of both her mother and brother, and then abuse at the hands of her drunken step-father.  She enrols at Vincent Academy, a typically posh prep school in Manhattan and vows to keep her head down and remain invisible.

The last thing she expects to find is love, but Emma soon finds herself irresistibly drawn to Brendan Salinger, one of the richest and best-looking boys in school.  Emma soon discovers that this love brings with it a terrible curse and she learns that danger lurks in every corridor of Vincent Academy.

Spellbound ticks a lot of boxes but not always in a good way.  Fans of young adult fiction and several primetime shows will recognise many of the clichés in the story including the damaged heroine, the unbelievably good-looking and wealthy love interest, the gay best friend, and the weird gothic girl who turns out to be the coolest character of all.

Despite all of this, I thoroughly enjoyed Spellbound, far more than I expected as the story began to build in the opening chapters.  I liked the combination of prep school snobbery, burgeoning magic and supernatural hauntings and I especially liked the story-within-a-story as we learned about the curse.  Even excepting the curse and the paranormal elements of the story, the threats that Emma faces are absolutely plausible and there are some truly terrifying scenes in the book. 

Cara Lynn Shultz - SpellboundGiven the title of the book, I initially expected Spellbound to be entirely focused on magic and imagined something along the lines of The Craft or Secret Circle, or even the Harry Potter franchise.  I was pleasantly surprised to discover that magic occupied a far more subtle place in the book in both its discovery and execution.  I found this quite refreshing and look forward to learning more in the next book.

There have been many occasions recently where I have found books to be gratuitously drawn out, with storylines inadequately resolved as the stage is so obviously set for a sequel.  I am happy to say that this is not the case with Spellbound.  There is indeed a sequel, Spellcaster, but the story in Spellbound was certainly resolved in a thrilling climax with just enough of a teaser to keep readers coming back for more.

I give Spellbound four out of five stars and I would recommend it to all fans of paranormal romance and young adult fiction.

Spellbound is published by Mira Ink and is available to buy on Amazon.co.uk or Amazon.com.

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Tuesday, 26 June 2012

Book Review: Before I Wake by Rachel Vincent

Before I Wake by Rachel Vincent (UK)Kaylee Cavanaugh has had one hell of a year, if you’ll excuse the pun.  It has been less than a year since she discovered she was a bean sidhe (banshee), cursed by the compulsion to scream blue murder whenever confronted with death.  In just one year she has battled the hellions of greed, envy and vanity while coping with her ex-boyfriend’s addiction to Demon’s Breath and the occasional nerve-wracking journey to the Netherworld. 

She has encountered reapers, deranged incubi and a walking nightmare, retrieved stolen souls from the hellions that collect them, and resurrected her best friend from the dead.  If life was a never-ending rollercoaster for Kaylee, it surely isn’t going to slow down in death.

Kaylee is the star of Rachel Vincent’s Soul Screamers series, a young adult series that stands out above all of the other paranormal series.  Well written and dramatic, Vincent has created a strong, powerful and noble protagonist and consistently kept readers hooked on her books. Before I Wake is the sixth Soul Screamers book in the series and is the penultimate book in the series.

Before I Wake begins less than a month after the devastating events in If I Die.  There is no easy way to say this but readers who have not read the previous book might want to stop reading now because the sheer fact that there was another book is a spoiler in itself.

Kaylee has barely had time to deal with her own death when she must return to school and maintain an appearance of life and normality.  Well, as normal as it gets in the Cavanaugh household.  She discovers that it is not exactly easy to pretend she is alive when her humanity is draining from her and she has to fight to remain visible.  The only thing that keeps Kaylee grounded is her relationship with her equally dead reaper boyfriend, Tod.

Kaylee has agreed to work reclaiming stolen souls in exchange for her reprieve from true death.  But as the Reclamations Department begins to lose its agents, Kaylee comes face to face with an old enemy and realises that more is at stake than ever before.

Before I Wake is absolutely thrilling and impossible to put down.  It is impressive that Vincent is able to maintain such momentum this far into the series but what I admired the most was the focus that she placed on character development and relationships.

The relationships, not only between Kaylee and her boyfriend Tod but also with Sabine (the nightmare) were very well portrayed and captured the tentative truce and rebuilding of trust stemming from any massive teen fall out.  Following her Netherworld escapades in novella Never to Sleep, Kaylee’s cousin Sophie is far more developed than before and I appreciated that she was no longer a two dimensional nemesis.

The greatest development was in Kaylee, with her struggle to maintain her humanity.  In the process, she becomes a better friend, leader and heroine which is just as well because the fight is far from over.

Before I Wake by Rachel VincentVincent captured the contrasts between the adult bean sidhes in the novel and Kaylee and her friends.  This highlighted the flaws in the teen's thinking as the adults were often the voice of reason, but what they lack in maturity, they more than make up for in bravery.

What is not as easy to understand is why Avari pursues Kaylee relentlessly. After five books and three novellas, I was expecting some depth to his motives and plots.  Ultimately I realise that he needs no reasons, there are no deep-seated motivations behind his plans.  He is simply the hellion of greed and, just like the other hellions, that is all he needs to keep coming back time and time again.

I thoroughly enjoyed Before I Wake and would recommend the entire series to all fans of paranormal fiction and fantasy.  I would like to see a slightly more inventive plot in the final novel as I have no doubt that the hellions will be back to finish their work. 

I would give Before I Wake 4.5 stars out of 5. 

Before I Wake will be released on June 26, 2012 and is available from Amazon.com. Readers in the UK will be able to purchase the Kindle version of the book from June 26, 2012 but the paperback will be released on Amazon.co.uk on July 6, 2012.

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Thursday, 17 May 2012

Book review: Anna Dressed in Blood by Kendare Blake

Anna Dressed in Blood - Kendare BlakeI knew exactly what I wanted when I went in search of my last book to read.  I wanted something dark and atmospheric, preferably with a paranormal or supernatural element, that would leave me breathless and swept off my feet.  I’ve read a lot of good books this year but it has been months since I was absolutely devastated by a book.  When I picked up Kendare Blake’s Anna Dressed in Blood, it certainly seemed to meet the requirements with its gorgeous cover and a title that just rolls off the tongue.

Cas Lowood is a ghost hunter who inherited his skills from his late father. He kills the dead using his father’s athame, relieving the world of vengeful, restless and violent ghosts.  When Cas and his mother travel to Thunder Bay, Ontario, neither of them expect that this will be anything other than a normal assignment.  But “Anna Dressed in Blood” is no normal ghost.  She is more violent and furious than any ghost Cas has ever encountered and far more powerful than he could ever have imagined. 

As Cas unravels the horrific story surrounding Anna’s death, he finds himself confronted with the circumstances surrounding another murder: that of his father.  With the help of his mother, a powerful witch, and his friends Thomas and Carmel, Cas must complete his task and come to terms with his growing feelings for Anna.

Anna Dressed in Blood is absolutely terrifying in parts and has all the elements of a truly disturbing ghost story.  There are scenes that are absolutely shocking and Kendare Blake certainly resisted the temptation to sugar-coat any part of this book.  Her description of Anna is spectacular with the electrified, inky tendrils of her hair, her brute strength and her white dress dripping in blood.  

The book is written in the first person from Cas’s point of view and it is easy to relate to this likeable, witty and intensely self-aware character.  It is a long time since I have liked a protagonist this much.

Most importantly, Anna Dressed in Blood is beautifully written with many of the passages as lyrical and poetic as the title. 

“I like it more to come to a place like this, where the scent of death is carried to you on every seventh breath”.

I was hooked from the first and enjoyed every single page of this book.  It is the type of book that I can imagine reading time and time again and has me wondering if I don’t just prefer books with male protagonists.  It was everything I had wanted: dark, atmospheric, dramatic and utterly devastating. 

I would certainly recommend this book to fans of paranormal, young adult fiction or, indeed, fans of Supernatural or The Secret Circle.  In fact, Anna Dressed in Blood was recently voted one of the YALSA 2012 Quick Picks for reluctant Young Readers making it an inherently readable book that readers would pick up and read for their own pleasure.

It has been announced that Anna Dressed in Blood will be followed up with a sequel, Girl of Nightmares but for once I can honestly say that it doesn’t need it.  The story was perfectly wrapped up in this instalment and Anna Dressed in Blood works well as a stand alone novel or as part of a series.  This might be of interest to readers suffering from young adult series fatigue!

I happily give Anna Dressed in Blood five out of five stars and will certainly be both reading it again and seeking out the sequel when it is released. 

Anna Dressed in Blood will be released in paperback in the US on July 3, 2012 and can be pre-ordered at Amazon.com. Readers in the UK can pre-order from Amazon.co.uk where it will be available from July 5, 2012.

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Thursday, 12 April 2012

Book Review: Crave by Melissa Darnell

Crave by Melissa Darnell UK Book Cover There is no doubt about it; I am a fan of young adult fiction, preferably of the fantasy romance variety.  I can't get enough of vampires, witches, ghosts and demons, and if I like a book, I am usually thrilled to discover that it is part of a series. When you fall in love with characters, like I did with Gena Showalter's Intertwined or Rachel Vincent's My Soul to Take, there is nothing better than to discover that there are more books on the way.

What I’m not so keen on is the experience of rushing towards the end of a book, heart beating against my ribcage as the tension reaches boiling point and then… and then nothing. I understand the use of cliffhangers in books and films but for goodness sake, at least wrap up the storylines in the current installment! It seems to me that young adult authors are increasingly using this technique to end books in arbitrary places (I’m specifically thinking of the House of Night series), without ever really wrapping up the plot in any one book.

It is safe to say that I felt more than a little bit frustrated when I reached the end of Melissa Darnell’s Crave. I even flipped back and forwards through the pages to make sure that I wasn’t mistaken but it does seem that the book just ended, right in the middle of the action. So will I be coming back for more? The answer is yes; despite my frustration, I will certainly be picking up the next book in the series Covet when it is released later this year.

Crave is a paranormal romance told from the point of view of Jacksonville High School students Savannah Colbert and Tristan Coleman. Tristan is a Descendant, a member of the Clann family who hold much of the power in their East Texas town. Once friends with Tristan and other descendants, Savannah was ostracised when they shared a kiss in the fourth grade and banned from being friends with them. As rumours abound about the magical sources of the Clann’s power, Savannah discovers that she is descended from a far deadlier, more ancient family altogether – vampires.

When Savannah is struck by a mysterious illness, she recovers only to find that she is changing. As Savannah comes to terms with her vampire heritage, she and Tristan feel inexplicably drawn to one another. They embark on a forbidden relationship of secret dates, magic and shared dreams, but does Tristan truly care for Savannah or is he only compelled by her? And what will happen to Tristan and Savannah if the Clann or the sinister vampire council discover their relationship?

Crave by Melissa Darnell Australian Book Cover

I thoroughly enjoyed Crave and raced through it in a matter of days. I felt that it was a bit weak in parts with respect to vampire and witch mythology but this certainly picked up in the latter part of the book. In any event, there was sufficient drama between Savannah and the other characters in the book to maintain the pace. All told, my only real complaint was that the book simply ended without any of the main storylines really being wrapped up.

Despite the frustrating ending, I would certainly recommend Crave to fans of paranormal series such as the Vampire Academy, House of Night, Twilight, Intertwined or Soul Screamers series.

Crave is another great book from Harlequin’s MIRA Ink imprint.  It is the first book in The Clann series which is currently planned to be a trilogy.  You can purchase it at Amazon.co.uk or Amazon.com.


An advance, electronic copy of this book was provided to me for the purposes of this review and all opinions contain herein are my own. This review contains affiliate links.

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Wednesday, 29 February 2012

Book Review: The Iron Knight by Julie Kagawa

I always reach the end of a series with a mix of sadness and excitement.  On the one hand I’ve finally finished the story and hopefully all of the various questions and threads have been resolved; on the other hand, I’m often saying goodbye to characters that I’ve grown to love over time.  This was exactly how I felt at the end of Julie Kagawa’s The Iron Queen as we reached the end of Meghan Chase’s story after the Iron Fey trilogy.  I was really thrilled then when Meghan’s love interest and knight, the Winter Prince Ash, pursues one final quest so that he can return to Meghan in the Iron Realm.

The Iron Fey series is set in the fantastical world of the Nevernever.  This is not the friendly and safe realm of children’s fairy tales but the dark and twisted world of trickery, favours and the eternal war between the Winter and Summer Courts.  The only thing that the summer and winter fey have in common is that iron is toxic to them and so it is that when Meghan rises to the throne of the Iron Realm, the Winter Prince Ash cannot stay by her side for fear that he will be poisoned.

The Iron Knight follows the story of Ash and the Summer prankster Puck as they scour the Nevernever for a way for Ash to become mortal and withstand life in the Iron Realm.  The story begins at the home of the Bone Witch in the most dangerous part of the Wyldwood where they are joined in their quest by the cait sith Grimalkin, the bad Wolf of lore and Ash’s dead former love, Ariella.

They travel down the River of Dreams to the very ends of the Nevernever, stopping briefly in the land of Phaed where faeries go when they lose their name and no one remembers them anymore. This desperate place can only be found by those Fey who are dying, so what omens does that predict for this fearless band of Fey?

The descriptions of the River of Dreams, with its monsters, nightmares, hopes, dreams and treasures is quite incredible and Julie Kagawa really does have an remarkable imagination.  The group must run a series of gauntlets involving Fu dogs and golden orbs, keys, traps and fire breathing dragons, a sphinx riddle and a hall of mirrors before finally reaching the End of the World and entering the Testing Grounds where Ash must perform his final quests.

"Hey, I've run a few gauntlets in my time," Puck shot back. "They're basically all the same - you have your physical challenges, a pointless riddle or two, and there's always a few nasty traps”.

There seem to be no bounds to Julie Kagawa’s inventiveness as she creates a universe that stretches beyond the limits of time and space.  Her descriptions of the end of the Nevernever, the Briars, creatures, gauntlets and guardians of the Testing Grounds are fascinating.

The problem is that The Iron Knight moved really slowly in parts.  The journey to the End of the World takes over two-thirds of the book and for much of that we have nothing else but the witty banter of Ash and Puck to keep us going.  And just as you imagine might occur if you were stuck on a real journey with two men engaged in a constant battle of egos, the constant taunts and jostling tend to get really tiresome after a while. 

Perhaps this slow pace was partially due to the first person narrative of Ash.  It might have seemed like a good idea to give the dark, brooding protagonist a voice but in the end, men of little words tend to give away very little and it doesn’t make for gripping reading.

In fact, if I wasn’t so invested in the story after reading The Iron Queen, there is every chance I would have given up half way through this book.

Then there is the notion of mortality and what it means to be human.  Ultimately, Kagawa reduced the human condition to three things: weakness of the flesh; conscience, guilt and morality; and finally, mortality.  Basically, it appears that it was a bit ambitious to tackle the meaning of life in a young adult novel and what of creativity, hopes, desires and the unconquerable nature of the human mind and spirit?

Despite my reservations and the way the story dragged, I am glad that I read it and The Iron Knight is a fitting end to the Iron Fey series.  I will definitely read Julie Kagawa’s next series when it comes out.

And so, for the first time, I feel I must qualify my rating.  Out of 5, I give The Iron Knight 5 stars for inventiveness, ingenuity and the overall story, 2 stars for pace and interest and 3 stars for the shaky summation of the human condition.  All told, I give it 3 out of 5 stars.

You can buy The Iron Knight at Amazon.com or Amazon.co.uk.


A copy of this book was provided to me for the purposes of this review and all opinions contain herein are my own. This review contains affiliate links.

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Wednesday, 15 February 2012

Book Review: If I Die by Rachel Vincent

If I Die UK cover Rachel VincentFans of Rachel Vincent’s fantastic young adult Soul Screamers series always knew that bean sidhe Kaylee Cavanaugh was living on borrowed time.  When she was three years old, Kaylee died in a car accident but her distraught father pleaded with the reaper to save the life of his daughter and take him instead.  Of course, everyone knows that reapers have a rather warped sense of humour so the reaper spared Kaylee’s life but took her mother in exchange.

Since then, the young bean sidhe (banshee) has been living her mother’s timeline while she wrestled souls from demons, supported her Demon’s Breath-addicted bean sidhe boyfriend Nash, and came to terms with her need to scream blue murder every time someone in her vicinity dies.  Such is the life of a bean sidhe (or banshee as you probably know them).

Now her time is up.  Nash’s dead reaper brother Tod breaks the news that Kaylee’s name has appeared on his list and reaper rules are pretty clear about second extensions – there are none.

With just days to live, Kaylee tries everything in her power to get her father and Nash to accept her fate and not interfere or mess with the reaper.  Meanwhile, she realises that something is not quite right with the new math teacher, Mr Beck.  With the help of Nash’s mara girlfriend, Kaylee soon figures out that that Beck is an incubus, an energy-sucking lust-demon.  Can she save the school from this deadly Netherworld creature before time truly runs out?

If I Die is the fifth novel in Rachel Vincent’s Soul Screamers series featuring bean sidhes Kaylee and Nash and a host of supernatural creatures including hellions, maras, reapers, incubi and even the occasional human being.  What will thrill fans most about this instalment is not the fact that Kaylee is dying or that she is once again fighting evil, but the massive twist in the love relationship between her and Nash.  I am not going to spoil it by saying what the twist was, I’m not even going to hint, but let’s just say that I spent most of the book thrilled, a short portion devastated and then I was absolutely happy in the end.

In fact, I liked almost everything in this book.  I love that Tod got a much bigger part in this story and I have to say that I knew all along, ever since his eyes started churning two books ago.  Cryptic, I know, but it is hard to wax lyrical about something so integral to the plot without spoiling and ruining it for other readers and it certainly would have spoiled it for me if I’d had even a clue of what was in store.

There were a couple of things I did not like about this book but that had more to do with character development than any fault of the author, Rachel Vincent.  Nash has always been clueless and self-centred and this book was no exception, his ex-girlfriend Sabine (the mara or living nightmare) is pointlessly irritating and nasty, and Kaylee’s cousin Sophie is still as jealous, insecure and immature as ever.

On the other hand, Kaylee is a fantastic heroine and is miles ahead of the frightened, confused girl we met in My Soul to Take.  She is determined and displays integrity, maturity and skill in controlling her bean sidhe abilities.  Once again, Rachel Vincent exceeds herself in the description of the Netherworld and of the supernatural creatures that bleed into our reality. 

She builds on the Soul Screamers novellas and winds up the story of Kaylee’s stay in the secure psychiatric unit in My Soul to Lose and that of Tod’s death and the sacrifice he made in Reaper.  I would absolutely recommend that you read the novellas before reading this book as they add to the story and complete the experience.

I have no hesitation in giving If I Die five out of five stars and no matter how different circumstances now are, I look forward to the next book in the Soul Screamers series, Before I Wake.

Buy If I Die from Amazon.co.uk or Amazon.com.


A copy of this book was provided to me for the purposes of this review and all opinions contain herein are my own. This review contains affiliate links.

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