Tuesday, December 30, 2014

Dead Until Dark - Charlaine Harris


Dead Until Dark
Dead Until Dark by Charlaine Harris

My rating: 3 of 5 stars



Dead Until Dark is a quick read if you want something quirky and full of the mundane alongside the paranormal. It's also most definitely in the Paranormal Romance category - I would not call this Urban Fantasy at all. It's really like chick-lit with vampires and a serial killer. Even though it's called a mystery, no one is really figuring anything out about the murders. They just keep piling up (which at least kept things a bit interesting). Otherwise, the plot consists mainly of Sookie working at the bar, Sookie getting dressed and putting on make-up, and Sookie getting to know her new vampire boyfriend. It is a humorous Southern small-town vignette with some zany paranormal thrown in, and I thought it was fun (well, except for the clothes and make-up, which I just kind of skipped over).

BTW, I can't believe Stephenie Meyer really never read this before writing Twilight. Almost immediately after meeting Bill (the vampire), I was having déjà vu. Twilight is way sappier and has even less plot, and is absorbed with YA concerns like high school, but totally feels like fan fiction for this. There are so many echoes of one in the other, down to the fact that vampires have a glow and old-fashioned manners and are trying to live peacefully among humans. Sookie even has mind-reading abilities!

This book has humor, though, and the romance is more mature. Sookie has qualms about her boyfriend's methods of survival and his ethics, and she is not obsessed with him. The romance is OK - there's not a whole lot of tension there. I actually found myself more interested in Sam as a love interest and I don't normally go for the 3rd string guy in a love triangle.

Now all this isn't to say I didn't enjoy the book. I actually really did. There was enough other stuff in there for me not to feel like it was 'just a romance.' I was in the mood for something romantic and silly and quick, and the combination of Southern humor, vampires, gruesome murder, and romance was fun. But I might have gotten impatient if I were in a different mood. The chick-lit feel is not something I can go for very often. I do think I'll read the sequel when I know I'm in the mood for this kind of humor again. I'd put it in the same category as a Meg Cabot book - it had the same light-hearted appeal.




Monday, December 29, 2014

Hood - Stephen R. Lawhead


Hood
Hood by Stephen R. Lawhead

My rating: 0 of 5 stars



This just did not interest me at all. I kept skimming and skimming, waiting to get sucked in and it just wasn't happening. Then I thought I'd try something else for a while and come back to it, but I don't have any interest in returning to it at all. It could completely just be me and my mood at the moment, but I feel no regret leaving it. Glad I only borrowed it from the library!


Saturday, December 27, 2014

Cinder - Marissa Meyer


Cinder
Cinder by Marissa Meyer

My rating: 4 of 5 stars



Wow, Cinder might just be the most original fairytale retelling I’ve ever read. Translated into a dystopic future, with Cinder a cyborg mechanic, I am amazed at how well the tale was weaved into the story of a future world riddled with plague, prejudice against cyborgs, and earth-wide threat from a Lunar power. Getting all that to work with a Cinderella theme that includes all of the important bits - hats off to Meyer’s imagination. I’m impressed.

I do have to temper my ravings due to the bleakness that pervades the book. It’s something that often comes with a Dystopia, and it’s appropriate, but I still can’t ever bring myself to completely ‘enjoy’ something dark and hopeless feeling. So the rating is for my level of enjoyment while experiencing the book - and doesn’t match up to my brain’s appreciation of the cleverness and interest in the story that I still have in spite of the bleakness. That’s saying a lot. So is the fact that I want to move onto the sequel right away… I’m so glad I waited a while to pick this one up because of the cliffhanger ending. I only hope the sequel is as good.


Sunday, December 21, 2014

The Way of Kings - Brandon Sanderson


The Way of Kings
The Way of Kings by Brandon Sanderson

My rating: 5 of 5 stars



Days after finishing The Way of Kings, I still wasn't sure how to rate it or review it, but now I finally have a few thoughts put together. So here goes.

The fact that I didn't put the book down and instantly proclaim my awe gave me pause. Usually I rate a book 5 stars when it grabs me and doesn't let go, when I lose sleep over it, or when it moves into the realm of irrational emotion that overshadows all flaws. I didn't have this feeling about The Way of Kings. However, it lingered with me for several days afterwards, and I had trouble finding something else to hold my interest. That only happens with 5 star books. So for now I'm settling on 5 stars, although it's a bit of a wishy-washy rating.

This may be one of the most epic-feeling epics I've ever read. There is the overwhelming sense that this book is only a long beginning to a hugely epic tale, one that is going to span 10 novels and be extremely vast and sprawling. The first book has only barely scratched the surface with its 1000 pages! And after 1000 pages of introduction, I do feel that I am ready for more.

The world feels very vast and old, and the magic system is very well developed (of course - this is Sanderson we're talking about!), but it is still very limited in scope for such a long book. The story so far takes place in mainly three locations with three main characters. So the world feels vast and detailed, but we don't actually get to see a clear picture of all of it yet.

Let me talk about the characters, since building them is the main focus of this book. First the most minor (in this installment), Shallan. I really struggled to like her, since her motives were less than pure, and I didn't want her to succeed at all. Thankfully, this changed by the end of the book, and now I'm looking forward to seeing what happens with her story. But there were times when I was impatient to get back to the other two main characters because I liked them much better, and they were closer to the action.

Dalinar, I really liked. He is a high prince commanding an army in a pointless war, and he's also uncle / advisor to the young king whose power is shaky a few years after his father was assassinated. Dalinar is having embarrassing visions, and - also incredibly embarrassing for his sons - he is finding purpose in honorable ideals that go beyond blood lust in battle and the petty squabbling of the other high princes. His parts are full of internal conflict and philosophical ideals that pit him against his contemporaries, who think he's going crazy and/or soft (they are seen as kind of the same thing).

I loved the scenes where Dalinar proved them all wrong. He had a couple of the really great action scenes, and I loved where his story ended up.

I do have to say, his visions were kind of confusing at times, adding to the 'where is this going?' feeling. They showed a lot of history, which was good for world-building, but I feel as if a second reading would make things a lot more clear now that I know where it's headed.

But by far, the best character is Kaladin. He is a slave, formerly a soldier and a surgeon (we get to see his former life through flashbacks). At the beginning it's really difficult to read about him because of his treatment and the despair and hopelessness of his situation. Every time you think he's at the bottom, he goes lower. Normally I don't enjoy reading things full of despair and bleakness, so for a while I didn't like his story. But thankfully it doesn't continue that way for the whole book. Kaladin finds a way to drag himself out of the seemingly bottomless pit of hell. Bit by bit, his story gains hope, and his were some of the most awesome action scenes in the entire book. This is a character who is transformed and who he becomes is amazing.

So I enjoyed two out of three main characters, and was mesmerized by the world - but not to the point of losing sleep. I never had a problem putting it down. At times I wondered what it was all getting at when there was just lots of character building and only spurts of action. But the feeling of it still pervaded me. I enjoyed being in the world and missed it when I finished.

This reminds me of my feelings when reading Tad Williams’ Dragonbone Chair. That's another one with a very slow building world with lots of character development and not a lot of action at first. That series became one of my favorite epic fantasies because of the feeling of just being in it, savoring it. That's how I feel about The Way of Kings. It is subtle, but it has me.

I am very much looking forward to the next book, now that I understand the world and am ready to learn more about it. I'm glad I started the series instead of waiting for more books to be released. The first one ends in a place that I'm happy with for now, and with such huge books, I actually don't mind taking a break between them. I think this is a series I can savor over years instead of gorging them down all at once.