What Happened to Tasha Blue?


What Happened to Tasha Blue?

I received a free copy of this book in exchange for an honest (non-reciprocal) review.
(Spoilers Within)

I enjoyed this book. It had a good mystery that left me wondering.

PROS:
– I was very interested in what happened. I really wanted to find out what happened to Tasha.

– I enjoyed the characters. They were done very well and believable. From Floyd and Deena’s close comradery to Cheryl and what was happening in her head.

– The author was very good at making you invested in someone.

– Although there is a lot of telling in this book it actually didn’t bother me. I liked hearing about a lot of the characters.

– Towards the end I thought the explanation of why Maria didn’t want to work for Cheryl was great. Of all the characters I think Cheryl’s had the most interesting wrap-up, even though it was a fairly short mention.

CONS:
– A minor one but sometimes similar phrases would be repeated relatively close to each other.
For example:
“She had always moved well.”
Next paragraph, “Cheryl still moved well…”

Or there was occasionally an odd break, like here:
“Preston?” she said. Like she hardly remembered who Preston might be.

This didn’t happen enough to bother me a lot though.

– I wasn’t completely satisfied with the conclusion. To be more specific, I wanted to understand Tasha’s motivations better. At the end I felt like she made a really huge move for someone her age and I didn’t quite understand what prevented her from waiting a few more months, or even why she completely cut off ties with her mother. We know she lied about her reasons, which leaves us wondering about the truth, so all we had was a character deciding that maybe she was impatient to get on with her life. If that was the only reason it seemed very extreme considering what she put everyone through.
I could get some sense that her mother might have been blind to things, but what we were shown as most definitely being true didn’t seem to add up as being enough of a motivator to do what she did.
At the same time I’m left with an eerie feeling because I’ve known someone quite like Tasha’s mother – the type who practically worships their child, thinks they can do no wrong, and wears blinders when it comes to her kid. So even though I didn’t leave the story with a clear motive for Tasha, I’m left with a kind of dread, wondering what her mother may have blatantly ignored.

– There were a few parts that dragged on a little bit.

Despite that, I truly enjoyed this read. I liked the way the author fleshed out the characters. I’m glad the book spent a lot of time with Floyd, because I enjoyed his approach. It was easy to keep reading. I wish there had been a bit more about Preston and Tasha and the exact circumstances there. It was mostly the bits that dragged on and the ending that I wanted a little more from that took this from ten to eight for me.
8/10

Beasthood (The Hidden Blood Series)


Beasthood (The Hidden Blood Series)

I received a free copy of this book in exchange for an honest review. There will be spoilers.

I’m not a big fan of romance, although I don’t have anything against it. I can still get into a story if it’s built up well.
And I don’t have any intention of discouraging the author from writing more. Even though I personally didn’t like the book I do hope she finishes this for the people who do like the book. The story ended on a cliff hanger and I’ll admit I’m mildly curious about the answer.

The story also had a strong start. In the first few chapters we’re introduced to Jaz and her recent problems. She had a traumatic experience a year ago that she’s still attempting to recover from and people are skeptical about what she believes is the truth. It sets up a good conflict where people on both sides can be understandable.

There were some parts, particularly at the end, that were exciting.

I should explain why I’m giving this book the score that I am, though. I’ll try to be thorough.

There were some small issues the book had. There were a lot of parts with telling rather than showing.
Two examples I can think of off the top of my head:
When Jaz suddenly starts talking to Maria we’re informed that they’d gotten to know each other over the course of the last few days. We don’t see it. One day they’re strangers, and the next time we read about them Jaz has developed a connection with her.
Another example is when Jaz is given the nickname “Skin”. I’m not even sure why she was given that nickname. She just has it one day and everyone starts calling her by it (this is towards the last half of the book, too, so the sudden switch was jarring).

This could have been fixed easily in some parts.
Example: Nik was itching with impatience but he was very good at self-control. He reined it in and told himself over and over again that it would take time. Just wait, he chanted inwardly.

This is a lighter example where we’re told that he has a lot of self-control.

Compare it with a simple revision like this:
“Nik was itching with impatience but held it in. Just wait, he chanted inwardly.”

It’s more succinct and instead of being told he’s good and self-control it shows it more.

Another example:
“…and Saga -a dark-haired, curvy woman with long black hair who was the Spokesperson for Weaponry and Training Facilities. All her family had been killed years ago in the civil Pack wars; her only relation she knew of was her distant cousin Fraya, who was standing behind her.”
This is the first time I think we’re even hearing of Saga and all of this is dumped on us.

There was also a habit of using “-“s a lot. I believe it was only said twice, but it also says Jaz’s eyes are kyanite colored. I wouldn’t say this was a major issue the book had because I don’t recall anything else where a bizarre word was used instead of a simple word, but saying something like “blue” or “deep blue” would have worked better in those two instances.

Some parts didn’t make sense to me.

“The night sky was clear: he’d seen when he’d gone out for a smoke not long ago. He didn’t smoke; that just proved how stressted out he was.”

If he doesn’t smoke then why does he have something to smoke in the first place? As a non-smoker, I don’t find the thought of smoking relaxing at all. There’s no addiction so there’s no drive to do it. Taking a deep breath would be far more suitable.
There was also a part where someone was wearing three inch heels during construction work.

Those were the minor issues I had.

The issue that I had with this book that I couldn’t get over was the characters actions and how the actions were treated.

I was frustrated by chapter 12 because no one had even attempted to talk to Jaz despite numerous opportunities for them to do things in a far less traumatic way. Even after finishing the book there was never a good explanation.

They expect Jaz to like them and eventually come to trust them, but they didn’t talk to her, comfort her, or even attempt to bring her into their group in a civil manner.

To explain it better: Jaz has recently been introduced to a relative of hers named Erica. Erica invites her to vacation with her somewhere. Jaz ends up in a car with her, her husband and a driver.
On the way there they drug her orange juice and she ends up getting very sick. She doesn’t know they drugged her. She just thinks she’s sick.
She has to throw up, so before they arrive at their destination she makes them pull over so she can throw up in the woods. While she’s throwing up she notices two people in the woods.

And because she sees people in the woods? She gets grabbed and restrained by the driver, operated on while she’s unconscious to remove her toenails, as well as prodded in more intimate areas to check if she’s fertile, then thrown into a cell and held captive for days.
Not taking into account the fact that they drugged her and made her sick to begin with, the way they handled her seeing people in the woods made zero sense.

Much later in the book we see that the two people are incredibly severely punished for having been spotted, because it “forced them to bring her in the way they did”. Why? I have no idea. She barely knew any of the people she was with and she saw people in the woods. She had no reason to believe they were connected to each other, or even that there was some sort of problem with people being in the woods.
The group she was with could have easily shrugged and said, “Must be hunters”, or hikers, or something. Why they chose to assault her, kidnap her, mutilate her, violate her and hold her hostage in a cell instead bewilders me. They kept her in a cell for days without ever trying to explain anything to her.
Even if they didn’t think she would believe their explanation – which was reasonable – that doesn’t mean not explaining anything. Even if she didn’t believe them, talking to her would have given her an understanding of what they believed and why they were doing what they were doing.
They could have told her their beliefs, dealt with the fact that she wouldn’t believe them right away, and as she changed they could have explained that the things she was experiencing were part of the change.

Almost anyone could have brought her in better than they did.
On top of that they dump sensitive information on her while she’s going through all of this, like telling her she’s adopted and fertile.

To start with, it was unnecessary for them to do an invasive test to see if she was fertile without her permission.
Imagine if instead the broke the subject of her being adopted while on the way their, opening up communication and giving her a chance to ask questions. They could have later brought up that it was possible she really was fertile, and let her decide if she wanted to be tested or not.

That wasn’t the end of it.

There’s a huge problem in this book with the characters showing no respect for Jaz. At 25% through, for her that she should take a shower. They don’t ask her if she wants to take a shower or tell her, “There’s a shower over there if you want it”. At this point in the book they’ve gone out of their way to make me dislike them and every part that shows Driver being sad that Jaz is hurt rings as hollow, because they’re making no attempt to do anything but hurt her.

This book suffers from a huge problem of the characters acting horrifically, but it doesn’t treat it as if they’re acting horrifically. We’re supposed to brush aside what they do and accept them as good guys.

For example, here’s a passage:
“I want you to tell me,” he pushed, gazing at her, unblinking.
She exhaled. “I don’t want to talk about it.”

She then nearly recoils from him when he approaches.

“He eyeballed her. “Is that why you’ve never asked what you are?” he questioned. “You’re afraid?”
She shook her head -more to tell him to shut up than to say no.
“You can’t run away from it.”
“Stop. Okay, just stop,” she snapped.
He blinked and closed his mouth.
She huffed. “I’m just trying to deal with one thing at a time, so will you just back off.””

Then he sits down by the wall and stares at her (though a bit later it says he’s looking at the ground), as if it’s only going to be a few seconds for her to deal with being kidnapped, mutilated and held hostage among other things. This guy is a jerk even when he’s supposed to be being nice. He’s pushy, invasive, and he’s sitting in ‘her’ room staring at her. By all rights that should be absolutely terrifying for anyone in her position. He just asked her if she was scared because he got visual clues that she was probably frightened, and he’s doing this anyway.
This isn’t even mentioning that she was clearly uncomfortable around him and everyone had left her alone with him multiple times already. And continued doing so.
She gets manhandled by him several times in the book, too, all the way through.

They complain that she doesn’t ask questions, but when she does they don’t give her answers. Like, “Who is Lora to you?”
A huge portion of the drama of this story could have been resolved if anyone tried to communicate with Jaz.

When she’s helping with construction another member of the group continuously harasses her and no one does anything about it. We don’t see much of it, but we are told that it happens for days, and Jaz is in a whole group of people.
This cultimates in Fraya challenging her to a duel. We’re eventually given an explanation for why people didn’t try to interfere with a duel, but we’re never given an explanation for why everyone allowed the harassment to continue for all of that time.
Before Jaz was there, Lora is constantly harassed and doesn’t tell anyone because she’s “not one to complain”. Based on how openly she’s harasses and abuses Jaz, I can only assume pretty much everyone knew Lora was being attacked this way regardless of whether she said anything or not.

Somehow Jaz ends up being pinpointed as being guilty of being harsh or cruel, and she’s constantly apologizing when she’s the one owed an apology.

There are so many issues getting attached to characters in this book. Jaz trying boxing for the first time with Carr could be nice – if it wasn’t for the fact that he was allowing her to be harassed and threatened for days prior without doing anything to protect her or even complaining about it.

“She’d been warned. Driver had tried to tell her. She’d been too much of a coward to ask about it. To get his or Maria’s advice. She’d shunned any that was given to her. She’d made anyone stop if they spoke about it, changing the subject or bluntly telling them to move on. Now she regretted it wholeheartedly.”
She was drugged with something that will make her body changed without explanation, operated on without explanation, held in a cell for days without explanation, been harassed without anyone trying to stop it, had knowledge purposefully held from her over and over again for weak reasons, and it’s her fault that she doesn’t trust these people enough to ask them about something?

Both Lora and Jaz can be petty, too. They discover that Nik slept with Fraya once years before he met either of them, and this is a big deal for some reason. Jaz’s virginity is also brought up a few times as if it’s something to be ashamed of.

After getting in a fight with Fraya, Jaz says this:
“”I don’t know what came over me.” she met his eyes. “Will I be punished?””
When I read the fight scene, based on everything else in the book, I was afraid something like this would happen. Fraya was threatening her family. This is something that she should be reporting to people. Instead Jaz says what I wrote above.

“That would be cruelty, and there’s very little a despise more.” [sic]
Nik says this at one point. He brutally punished two people because Jaz saw them in the woods. He’s manhandled and terrified Jaz several times. His words don’t ring true, and I didn’t know how Jaz could believe that statement when she’s witnessed the opposite.

“He stepped forward in irritation. “Stop telling me what I will and won’t understand, what you can and can’t explain and just tell me. Right. Now.””
Nik yells this at Jaz. This is what Jaz should be saying to all of them.
Moments later he’s yelling at her about breaking curfew. Which is, again, something she wouldn’t have done if anyone had bothered to explain to her that she could be murdered if she went out at night.

During the whole book these things were blaring at me. The book wanted to sweep it under the rug and move on, but I couldn’t ignore the questions pecking at my mind. Things like, “Why in the world did they have to treat her so inhumanely?”, “Why isn’t anyone doing anything about this blatant harassment?”, or “Why is the book making out Jaz to be the one who is out of line all the time?”. I needed much better explanations for their actions than what I got.

It’s clear other people have enjoyed the book but I just couldn’t get into it for those reasons. Still, I wish the author luck, and perhaps I will enjoy a different book from her in the future.

I give this book a 2/10.

Path To Success : The Failure Factor


Path To Success : The Failure Factor (Eagle Success Series)

I received a free copy of this book in exchange for an honest (non-reciprocal) review.

PROS:
– This book has a positive message to keep trying despite failure.

– It has some nice examples of people who failed many times before they succeeded.

– It was a quick read.

CONS:
– This book needed some serious editing.
“Show me someone who would come out to say he is a failure or that he loves failure and I would show you a man that does only exist in planet Mercury!”
“But is mistake really a bad thing?”
“To answers this question”
The book is full of errors like these. It’s difficult to take a book about success seriously when it seems like every paragraph has an error in it.

– There are parts where it repeats or rambles.

I think the entire message could have been written as a more concise essay. I appreciate the message it’s trying to give people to inspire them to keep trying, but unfortunately it was riddled with mistakes. It might be good if you need a little pep talk.

I’d say something like a 4.5/10 or 5/10.

Grace


Grace

I received a free copy of this book in exchange for an honest (non-reciprocal) review.
(Spoilers within)

PROS:
– I liked the two main characters, Luke and Anya, and they had some good lines. I particularly liked Anya’s thought:
“Maybe she could throw the couch at him, all she’d need would be a forklift.”

At the end I was genuinely interested in what would happen with Luke and Anya.

– The plot was quite good and I was interested in what was going on with the reaper and the graces.

– The world was constructed well enough to paint a pretty good picture.

– I really enjoyed the parts where they were attempting to solve the crime, as well as the confrontation near the end.

CONS:
– Sometimes the hatred made no sense to me. For example, in this part:

“What am I allowed to do?” He asked finally.
“Nothing we haven’t allowed.” Immogy said quickly.
Luke frowned at him, which always seemed to irritate Immogy more for some reason. As if to illustrate that, Immogy scowled at him. “Don’t look at me like that, boy. If it were up to me, you wouldn’t be allowed to look at me at all.”
Luke nodded silently and tried to change whatever expression was on his face to a more neutral one. “I just want to understand what’s expected of me.”
“Really? Is that what you want?” Immogy asked, narrowing his gaze on him. “Does it matter what you want?”

To explain, Luke is discovering that he’s going to be sent after a serial killer. He hasn’t been out in the world for probably over a decade. He asks what he’s allowed to do, and for some reason the question is treated as an offense. It just makes no sense. He’s not defying orders, he’s asking what permissions he has in order to complete the given task. It would make sense for them to want him to have a clear set of rules he must follow.

– Repetitiveness. This was a pretty big issue with the book. Here’s an example:
Chapter 15
“She could probably argue temporary insanity. Yes, that was it, Anya thought, she was insane. Or maybe it was the bump on her head, or maybe she was still passed out on the floor of her apartment, hallucinating all this. No, probably not that last one, her feet were complaining too much.
She could blame it on the pills the doctors had given her, or on the bump on her head, or even the pain.”

Or a smaller one:
“His muscles complained at the movement when he ordered himself to move…”

It wasn’t just the same words or phrases being used close to each other, but many of the same descriptions or actions would be used again and again. If you start reading this book, try to count how many times there’s darkness in Luke’s eyes.
Another was having characters roll their eyes, which I thought was even a larger problem when characters of high status did it. For the average person, such as Anya, eye rolling might be expected. But when it comes to someone who is meant to be the leader of a country, eye rolling comes off as childish and seems like something they would avoid doing.

– It took me a long time to get into this book. I was probably about 35% in before the story picked up. Maybe around 65% in it started dragging again for another long while, and picked up at the end. Part of this was because of what I pointed out above; different points were constantly being pounded on over and over in the story.
There were also parts that I think could have been eliminated altogether. Chapter 1 could have been deleted entirely. The story starts off with Luke, then in chapter 1 it switches off to a bunch of different people, only to switch back again and stay with Luke almost the entire story. It was disorienting, and when the story finally got to Anya I don’t think I’d learned anything in chapter 1 that I needed to know.

I liked the story, but how much it lagged at parts really brought it down for me. If I hadn’t been reading it to do a review I probably would have stopped reading it early on; which is too bad because there are good parts in there.

I’d give it about 6/10.

Remembered (The Vistira Trilogy)


Remembered (The Vistira Trilogy: Book 1)

I received a free copy of this book in exchange for an honest (non-reciprocal) review.
(Spoilers within)

CONS:
– There were a lot of errors in the book. The biggest one I found repeatedly was missing quotation marks or quotations that didn’t need to be there.

Much less of a problem, but there were also times like this:

“The scream of a police car, blazing down Queens Boulevard, ripped Emily from sleep.”

This is the opening line and I thought the awkward pauses in the middle kept it from having the intended impact. It’s full of strong words (scream, blazing, ripped) that seem to have their oomf punched out of them. (Compare it to “The scream of a police car ripped Emily from sleep.”).

Or awkward phrasing.

“”Never leave me,” he breathed into her mouth.”

“This was not a house she’d been in as a child. She grew up in this little house with her mother and father, as well as her brother and sister.”

– “”That means very little,” the doctor countered. “Most young girls have their first sexual fantasy about their own father, or at least Freud thought so.””

Genetic sexual attraction is actually a known phenomenon where family members who meet as adults are drawn to each other. Most people probably won’t think much of this, it just happened to be something I’ve looked into before so I was waiting for the psychiatrist to mention it.

– I enjoyed some of the buildup between Annella and Kellus, like the part where he walked backwards to look back at her, but I think it’s important to keep in mind that there is a line where looking at someone goes from cute to creepy. The next time when he was watching her shop and staring at her, unflinching, came off as creepy and obsessive. If he had a more natural reaction, like looking away when she spotted him, it would have come off better to me than staring. There was too much staring. Having someone stare at you all the time is uncomfortable and creepy.

There was something bugging me for a portion of the story. Kellus was an apprentice, and he wasn’t supposed to be in a relationship, but once he graduated (five years from start to finish, and it didn’t say what year he was) he could have a lover. The story constantly states how useless it was to fall for him, but the fact was that they could be together if they waited awhile and it wouldn’t have been breaking any rules.
When the story finally acknowledges that point he makes a big deal about how he wouldn’t be home often enough. I know it sucks if you want to be home more and you can’t be, but a lot of people live in this situation. It’s not the end of the world. (I forgive this a bit since they’re teenagers).

PROS:
– “Danus is in charge of making sure the hospital is clean and orderly,” Nordorum explained. “It seems that Cora has been amusing him with funny stories all week.”
I wish we saw more of this. I liked Cora and I liked Danus, and when this was said I was almost hoping they’d end up together.

– The last about 15% of the story picks up a lot and I was happy to read that section.

I think I need to explain in more detail how I felt about the overall story.
I’m not big on romances, but I’m fine with them when they’re done well. The story starts off with Annie living in New York under a different name, not remembering any of her past. She keeps having a dream about a guy. It was a little slow but I went with it.
The first thing that bugged me was that she was being treated like a bizarre woman and an “Ice Queen” because she was a virgin at 22. I suppose there are some people who would believe something like that, but for me you’d have to be way older for me to think, “That’s a really long time”. I’ve known so many people who were still engrossed in other things in their twenties to think it’s weird that a 22 year old hasn’t dated yet. There’s other things to do in the world!

When she traverses to the other dimension and regains her memories we go back in time to see how she met Kellus. At first I thought it started off strong. As I mentioned before, when they first meet she goes to glance back at him, only to find he’s walking backwards and looking back at her. It was fine. He was with a group of guys who were having a good time. That he would do something silly like that wasn’t odd.
Then he starts the staring. So much staring.
Another thing that bothered me was the “she’s pretty”, “he’s pretty”. Attraction is great and all, but if I’m to be convinced these two have a special sort of love I need a lot more than that. About 95% of their love was them swooning over how the other looked.

It reminds me of a story about a blind shamisen player. The man who helped her fell for her, but another man wanted her. When she rejected him he threw acid in her face, and she didn’t want anyone to see her anymore. So the man who loved her poked out his own eyes, and they lived happily ever after.
It wasn’t about the way she looked. He didn’t care that she was burned and scarred.

I didn’t get the same feeling from these two, so when the book was trying to convince me that they had a special love than transcended others I didn’t buy it. Almost the entire first half of the book was about how much she was attracted to him. I wish it had been cut down to a few cute scenes.

At about 50% in the story it picked up and we finally got to the part where she ended up in New York. I was happy because now it could move onto the plot with how she ended up in New York.

But then we see Kellus’ side of the story. A lot of parts are shown over again from Kellus’ point of view. I didn’t mind some, but I think too much got repeated. My view of him actually lowered because of the insane amount of jealousy he seemed to have. He was jealous of any male who talked to Annie, even his own dad. It was too much. His thought process rarely strayed far from the groin area, too.

Then there were a couple, “Oh, by the way…” moments. Two of these really stick out in my mind:
– The first time they’re discussing the plot and Kellus’ parents bring up out of nowhere, “Oh yeah, and there’s this whole prophecy about Kellus and how he’ll give birth to a super baby.” It’s brushed off as something they didn’t believe in so they never told anyone.

– The second one, and the one that really left me going, “Huh?”, was someone attempting to seduce Kellus. Remember, there’s a whole section devoted to the story from Kellus’ point of view. We see how he felt about Annie, we see what happened when she was kidnapped, and we see him start drinking and end up back at the Citadom. More angst than I like, but okay.
Then, after his section the plot gets moving again. When he’s back home and everyone is discussing what’s going on he suddenly brings up that a woman was entering his bedroom at the Citadom and attempting to seduce him.
My immediate thought was, “What? I don’t remember that part.”
I even went back and read his chapters again but I don’t see anything about someone in the Citadom trying to seduce him. It was brought up later out of nowhere. I’d think that would be something important to mention when he’s the main character for a few chapters.

Several of the characters spent time training with swords, including Annie. When it finally got around to them going after the bad guy I was looking forward to seeing her and Cora taking part in the action. Unfortunately, when he was confronted Cora wasn’t even there and Annie had her wrist broken in about a sentence. I was left wondering why I read so much about them training with swords; it made no difference at all. Then she got shoved around until the men saved her. I wanted to see her and Cora take part in the fight (although Danus, the cool guy who doesn’t let things get him down, was nearby, so that counts for something).

I think a huge problem with much of the story was the lack of real conflict. Most of the story spends time on the dilemma that Kellus and Annie had because he’s not supposed to have a lover as an apprentice. However, everyone around them seemed to be understanding, and even their leader nudged Kellus towards being with her.
There was some conflict when she first got back from New York to Kellus’ family and his brother was mad at Annie, but that was resolved with him apologizing. There were two bad guys, one who we never really see and the other we only see at the end of the book.

One other note I was disappointed on was that Annie lived an entire second life in New York, but after she got all her memories of her old life it was all but forgotten. I think she mentioned her friend of ten years about once after that, and none of her other life seemed to seep into her new life. She was never upset by anything, like how men and women were treated differently, and never had a different way of thinking through problems. Even when the women decided to learn to use swords she wasn’t the one who brought it up; Cora did. I’d have loved to see more of how living an entirely separate life in another dimension changed her view of the world.

It wasn’t all bad. I was fine with Annie for the most part. I felt like Kellus had a lot of worrisome traits (especially with the horrid jealousy). A lot of the side characters I was fine with. I liked Danus because he was an awesome guy who took care of his friends, and I liked Cora because she was assertive and confident.
The plot itself was also all right. It just got shoved to the side for so much of the book. If the flashback of Annie and Kellus’ romance was limited to some cute moments, and possibly some things they have in common rather than how much they want to have sex, and it got on with the plot sooner I think it would be a lot better.
I was confused why they didn’t do certain things (Annie was back and she knew who kidnapped her. Even if he was in a position of power, no other characters were shown as bad. Why not build up support and around town with her story then confront him?)
HOWEVER, I am interested in the story with the krogs and where that is going. I’m also curious about Dinora, who escaped, and why she’s with them. Despite all my criticisms, there is a plot going on here that has a lot of potential, and I’m actually curious where it’s going and what is happening behind the scenes. I wish this book had an editor to cut out a lot of the filler, but I’d be willing to give it another chance. Hopefully book 2 will have more Danus and Cora.

I’d give it about 5/10.

The Crumb Snatchers


The Crumb Snatchers

I requested a copy of this book because it sounded cute. (Spoilers within).
I’ll admit, this wasn’t what I expected it to be when I got it. I thought the story was going to be about a little girl and her various attempts to get to the cookie jar. She does try to get to the cookie jar, but that part takes up a small part of the story.

PROS:
– I think the pictures worked well and were cute.

– The overall lessons were fine. I like that Penny intended to pay for the pantry she broke. I also like that she thought of working all over the place and her mother restricted her to doing some stuff at the home.

– The formatting and placement of the text, especially around pictures, is done very well. The background also matches with the story, and the page numbers are placed on little cookies.

CONS:
– Characters say each other’s names constantly. It felt a little strange.

– I think their were too many characters for such a short story, and not much that warranted having them all there. I think this story could be chopped down to four characters and have the same effect (Penny, the mom, a cat and a sister).

– Sometimes the narrative went all over the place. Here’s an example:
“Mama was scrambling eggs when the girls walked into the kitchen. How’s everyone this morning? The wall clock chimed ten times. One at a time the girls gave their mom a kiss on the cheek and said good morning. Penny turned to go and answer the door.”

– Some parts felt unnatural. Example:
“Click, click, wow, got you,” said Terrie as she mastered the game control device.

I would say something more like:
“Got you!” Terrie yelled, having mastered the controls.

– “Penny ripped the sheet of paper from the tablet…”
I’m just picturing someone using an iPad like a sticky pad.

– The text seemed small to me since it’s a children’s story. It was also very verbose, too. I think the story could have started on page ten without losing anything. The text could be made bigger for kids, too, and many of the paragraphs and sentences can be made more concise. There’s a lot of time spent on random niceties and day to day chores that has nothing to do with the plot of the book and doesn’t seem to go anywhere.

– There were also a lot of errors considering the short length of the book.

– At the end characters brought up the fact that Penny didn’t think through her actions and the consequences quite a bit. I wish a character had also brought up that you can’t feed chocolate to a cat (luckily Penny didn’t get to do this, but she had planned to).

I think if the fluff was cut out and it got down to the basic story it would be better. There’s some good points in the story for kids, but I’m not sure what age group this would be good for. I deal with a 9 year old and a 5 year old – it’s too short and simplistic for the nine year old, and far too verbose for the five year old to be able to handle. It seems like a story that should be made for someone who is around 6, but I don’t think they would be able to handle the vocabulary. (“Deliberately”, “vomeronasal organ”, “construction”, “tetanus medicine”…) Add to that how long the paragraphs and sentences are and it would probably be too difficult for young children to read.
My suggestion would be to simplify the story so that kids could keep up with it.

I’d give this story about a 4/10.

The Adventures of Jimbo, the Homeless Cat


The Adventures of Jimbo, the Homeless Cat

I received a free copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.
This review contains some spoilers.

I deal with a 5 and 9 year old, and my guess would be that the reading level of this book would be for around age 8, maybe 7.

I think what I liked most about this book was the gravity of the struggles Jimbo had. Many children’s books seem to be afraid to tackle difficult issues. I appreciated the way Jimbo lost his home, and then his owner, and had to deal with homelessness and the loss of a friend.
I also liked how Jimbo had a mentality that followed him throughout the book. Even though he was a simple character, he remained consistent and had his own quirks. His owner told him being clean was good, and when he runs into a wild animal one of the first things he brings up is that they smell dirty. He continues to be concerned about how clean he is throughout the book. Even when he meets the little girl, she never comments on how clean or dirty Jimbo is, but he is self-conscious about it and cleans himself up. I like that this thought process can be something that he worries about more than anyone else.

This could be a good book to teach kids why we should empathize with animals. Especially in these times we’ve had many cats who have been abandoned and left roaming the neighborhood, and it’s good to show kids that there’s nothing wrong with these animals; they’ve just fallen on hard times, too. It would probably be a good idea for parents to read this with the kids and discuss some of the problems Jimbo goes through.

I’d give this about a 8.5/10.

Fargoer


Fargoer

I received a free copy on this book in exchange for an honest review.
(Spoilers ahead)

PROS:
– There’s a lot of strong parts to this story. There were many strong and different characters and their actions fit with their cultures.

– The way Vierra (as well as several others) grew and changed in the story was believable. The way Vierra acts in the beginning in the tribe contrasts greatly with the way she acts when she comes back, and there’s a definite feeling that she’s more worldly and less likely to blindly believe anything.

– A lot of the events were believable, and even though there were certainly mystical elements that crept into the story sometimes they didn’t pervade every aspect.

– The main character had both times of weakness and strength. As a whole I think people would understand what she was going through. I never got a sense that she was acting illogically according to her situations.

– Not only did Vierra have times of weakness and strength, but she also had times of good and bad. She killed many people during the course of the story

– I thought Aure’s eventual downfall was handled well. She had good reasons for what she did, even if what she was doing was evil.

– The world was well-built. I never had to stop and wonder, “Wait, how does that make any sense?”

CONS:
– Sometimes it seemed like the author was trying too hard to point out that the women were in charge in the Kainu tribe and some things came off awkwardly because of it.
Example:
Man: “Seita will have her revenge and so will I. Whose belt have you around you? My belt. Give it to me and bow before me for mercy, and I might forgive you.”
Vierra: “The belt is not mine but my husband’s, so I cannot give it to you. And I am not responsible to you for my doings. My chieftain is a woman like was my mother and my mother’s mother. Go away and leave me alone.”

I didn’t see why she would bring up that the chieftain was a woman in that conversation. The response could have easily ended with an annoyed “And I am not responsible to you for my doings.” and sounded more natural.

There was also a part earlier where Vaaja said, “Chieftain-man”, and Vierra mentioned how weird it would be for a chieftain to be a man. Vaaja clearly didn’t know much of their language at that point. I think it could have been better if, considering how strange it would be for her, she thought he was trying to say “woman” but didn’t know the word for it. Maybe even laughed inwardly at his blunder.

– I didn’t understand why Alf and Oder insisted on leaving that instant in the cold of the night instead of waiting for morning. The master was dead so why not eat the food there or something? I could understand being fidgety, but it just seemed reckless to leave the warm shelter and food and run off when the master, who seemed to be the only threat to them, was already dead.

– There were a few parts where the wording seemed awkward to me. (“Extending her hearing,” “asked Ambjorn from Vierra.”)

– In the beginning, Rika and Vierra didn’t have quite enough time together to really show the connection.

– There were a couple of parts that confused me. For example, there’s a part where it seems Rika gives her necklace to Vierra, but I was confused exactly how it happened. I know she was talking to Eera, and I know she presented the necklace and then was upset Eera wanted to leave, but how exactly the necklace got into Vierra’s hands I wasn’t sure. I thought perhaps she’d tossed it aside at first, but she clearly knew later that Vierra had it and said she’d given it to her.

– Sometimes I felt descriptions dragged on a bit long. Not that things were poorly described, but I didn’t feel like I needed as many details as I got.

I think this book will appeal to people who are looking for a strong woman in their novels. Vierra doesn’t come off as a shallow placeholder – she acts on her own, fights on her own and make many decisions on her own and her strength in hunting feels real. Which doesn’t mean she’s always right or never loses. It’s a pretty strong basis for a series, so if the premise seems promising to someone I’d definitely recommend they give it a try.

I’d give it about 8/10.

The Sword of Hope: Destiny Awaits


The Sword of Hope: Destiny Awaits

I received a free copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.

CONS:
– The use of exclamation points in the narrative was too much. For example, here’s a few (but not all) that appeared on just two of the pages near the beginning:
“Christian started screaming and shaking violently!”
“She gave him a sarcastic look, grabbed a pillow, and hit him in the head!”
“It was a beautiful day!”
“Christian got up, smiled, and tackled him!”

This happens throughout the whole book.

– The start could have been stronger. It’s starts off with an introduction that spends a page talking about a peaceful town and why it was chosen by the gods and such. The last paragraph brings up a forest outside the town where people keep disappearing and never coming back. If I lived there that would be the first thing I wanted to bring up – that the town seemed peaceful but there was something lurking out there.
Then the first chapter begins with a fight between two brothers. I found myself asking questions like, “Where are they?” “What is he trying to hit his brother with?” “What is his mother doing while they’re fighting and why isn’t she intervening even though she’s yelling at them?” “Is it night time?”
This action scene could have been put together better by removing repetitive information (“Their mother screamed as Barkley attacked his little brother.” We already know he’s being attacked, so it can just say she screamed or add more information, like what if he picked up a rock at that point?) and having the descriptions effect the characters somehow. One brother just pushed the other down – instead of saying puddles are forming on the ground why not mention how water soaked Christian’s clothing when he falls over?
Since it turns out to be a dream it could also mention things that commonly happen in dreams. Maybe his mother could be completely oblivious to what’s happening even though she’s right there and he’s trying to call for her help. Maybe she’s trying to get to them but never seems to make it to them.

– There’s a LOT of telling.
“Christian, who came from a family with a much higher status and calling in life, was destined from birth to become what his family expected him to be. Tiberius, on the other hand, was born into a family who worked for Christian’s parents, doing anything and everything required of them. They were recognized for who they were and nothing more. Never once were they recognized for what they did or could do. This stuck with Tiberius and became a large part of his personality. Recognition was what Tiberius wanted for himself and his family. One day, he always said, one day, the world would see what his family, his bloodline, were capable of.”

This is an interesting story I’d like to see, but we’re told it instead. I’d prefer not to be told this at all, and instead see Tiberius and Christian being treated differently and them reacting accordingly. (What does Christian’s family expect him to be, anyway? It didn’t say.)

I should note here that none of the interactions here show what we’ve just been told.

– Information could be combined.
“Most, if not all, of the houses in Bachwood were the same.” … “Only one residence differed from the rest.”

This has all of the information those two sentences provided but is more concise:
“All of the houses in Bachwood were the same except for one.”
Of course, there’s better ways to say one lone house stood out among the rest, too.

– The narration isn’t being told by one of the characters, so it shouldn’t tell us things like something looks perfect.
“The look of perfection and similarity was apparent in everything.”

A lot of people probably wouldn’t like living in a place where all the houses looked exactly alike. If you ever go somewhere where houses have been built the same and a good amount of time has passed, you’ll probably see that people have changed them. Added rooms, different paint jobs, re-designed gardens… So the narration is telling us this place is perfect and yet it sounded like a place I wouldn’t really want to live in because I like variety.
If one of the characters, like Christian, was giving his opinion that Bachwood was perfect that would be different. Instead of being told objectively that “this is perfection”, it would be Christian’s opinion that “this is perfection” and we would see how he feels about the place.

– Some things didn’t make sense.
In chapter 2, Christian and Tiberius are at Shino’s house. After awhile they hear a scream and run to find Shino in a clearing. Half of a house has been eradicated and a little girl has been abducted. So if they could hear him scream, why didn’t they hear a building being destroyed or a little girl screaming?

Speaking of which – a house has just been destroyed by monstrous creatures and a little girl has been kidnapped. Why is Shino laughing about stuff when he wakes up an hour later? Why is there no sense of urgency about this little girl? Hasn’t anyone done anything in the hour that Shino was unconscious?

Many times in the story I was wondering why the bad guy didn’t do things like kill them in their sleep as well.

– There’s some odd choice of speaking verbs.
“At first, Shino looked at him, chuckled sarcastically, then retorted, “Your Mom wanted to show you something as well? About time if you ask me. Legacies should never be hidden.”
That doesn’t sound like a retort to me. A retort is usually snappish, maybe angry, like this:
“You’re a butt,” Christian told Tiberius.
“I am not a butt!” Tiberius retorted.

– No emotion. Because of some of the things above, sometimes it feels like there’s a massive lack of emotions. Christian sees his father, who has been missing for a long time, and he doesn’t even say anything. We don’t get any insight to how he feels about seeing his father suddenly appear to him. He simply nods and answers a question his father asked, then moves on.
When just a short time later he’s yelling, “FOR YOU DAD!” it feels empty because of this.

– Chapter 8 tells us it has been a week since the attack. By that point I was starting to feel like the characters weren’t very good people because no one seemed concerned about doing anything at all about the little girl who had been kidnapped. Why did they wait a week? Why is no one concerned? Where is her family?
This is also the first time we’re told that his brother left. He dreamed about his brother, and he fought his brother’s spirit or whatever in the dungeon, but we were never actually told anything about his brother. Up to this point I didn’t know if his brother had died, if he was still living at home and Christian was having prophetic dreams about him going bad later, or something else.

– His sword glowing blue when there’s danger reminded me too much of another sword.

– Chapter 11: They tell Gmonkis that they came for the girl but before this it sounded like they were out on some other holy mission.

– Cars didn’t seem like they fit with the rest of the world. It was magic, swords, axes, forests, evil spider things, evil goo monsters, then suddenly a city of rusted cars.

– Mithril is actually a registered trademark.

– Cryo tells a story about another boy accidentally shooting his teacher, “Everything around him slowed to a near halt as he stared at the neon green feathers of his arrow sticking out of our teacher’s chest.”
How would Cryo know the inner thoughts of the other boy?
In Cryo’s story he also talks about a new teacher taking over who does things like breaking both a boy’s arms and giving him a black eye, or how another boy got an arrow in his arm. Why did the people of the city let this guy teach their kids?
He also didn’t meet Christian and Tiberius until they showed up in Rusty City, so how could he comment on how much they’d grown up? Cryo does a lot of things like this where he seems to know things he shouldn’t.

– When I started the story it seemed to be built up like a typical medieval fantasy world, which is fine. Then things like monster cars and cell-phones were tossed in. That’s fine, too, but I should have had an idea that those things existed in the world and that the characters were familiar with them long before I did. Despite the amount of time spent describing Bachwood as perfect and being full of nature, nothing like this was shown or mentioned there. In reality, even though the characters don’t head out until about 30% of the way through the book, I couldn’t say much about Bachwood except the houses all look alike and all have a single window. Did the characters have phones? I have no idea. Did they have cars or trucks? No clue. If they didn’t, and they’re in this secluded area, why do they know about phones and cars?

– None of the characters seem to have defined personalities. Christian, Tiberius and Cryo were all alike, and sometimes they would start talking like adults instead of like 12 year old boys. This shouldn’t be so. Each boy has a good reason to have a different personality: Christian was practically born with a silver spoon in his mouth; Tiberius was supposedly treated as if his bloodline didn’t matter beyond serving Christian’s family, and Cryo was living alone in a city were everyone was dead.

PROS:
– “Christian walked up, opened the chest, and took out a small key. “Yes!” he yelled as he held the key in the air.”
I thought of this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=69AyYUJUBTg
And I’ll admit, it brought a smile to my lips.

Remember how I said this was a story I’d like to see, not be told? That’s pretty much what I’ll say here. This is more like the skeleton of a story; the ideas are all down on the paper, but they need a lot of editing and re-writing. We’re told that Tiberius has a different lot in life than Christian, but never once do we see this in action. It’s as if the author wants him to have been treated different but isn’t willing to make any of the other characters actually treat him different, because doing so would make them look bad.
As a matter of fact, Tiberius seemed to do most of the stuff in the story and he’s practically handed a magic soul-stealing axe that does almost everything.
(I forgot to mention, but “Hope Fighting” is never explained.)

I think the book still needs a lot of work.

I’d give it a 3/10.

High Treason


High Treason

I received a free copy of this book in exchange for an honest (non-reciprocal) review.

The summary of this novel includes the line “This passionate novel mixes the recent history of Venezuela with powerful fiction”, and after reading it I can say I definitely felt the passion. The authors of this book clearly knew their subject well, and if the ultimate point of this book is to spread the message of what has happened in Venezuela then I think it does a very good job of evoking compassion for the people there.

PROS:
– I didn’t find many mistakes while reading this novel, and it’s apparently a translation. Had I not read that it was a translation I wouldn’t have known that, so it’s a very good translation.

– The authors seem to have a great grasp on the subject. There were many spots in the book that had footnotes to explain the details of what they were talking about.

– The characters varied in their personalities and beliefs. As the novel goes on it’s easy to understand their motivations and mindsets.

– The overall feel of the book, and the way it presents how an oppressive government effects its people, is done very well. I could see why some of the characters felt trapped in their situations, or why they felt so angry.

CONS:
– Many times the book wandered off subject. The chapter might begin with one character doing something, then it would mention another character; and at the mention of the second character it would go on for paragraphs about something that happened in the past with that character. After that anecdote the story might snap back to the first subject and continue on, or it might wander off on a third subject.
This could get really confusing because I might start off reading about Rodrigo doing something at his friend’s house, and then suddenly be reading all about the friend’s maid. It seemed almost like it couldn’t mention a new name without including some sort of anecdote about them.
With all of the side narratives, even if they were interesting, it was easy to get lost on what the characters were originally doing.

This isn’t the type of book I would normally read but I don’t regret reading it. I think it provides a very interesting view of Venezuela, and anyone interested in the subject should definitely give it a read. I’d give it around a 9/10.