Showing posts with label YA fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label YA fiction. Show all posts

Saturday, August 24, 2013

One of My Book Pet Peeves

One of my biggest book pet peeves is when the cover model differs in a major way from the character description given in the book. I had this issue with a lot of the Vampire Academy books (I loved that series, by the way). 

This time, my issue is with the first book of Kady Cross's Steampunk Chronicles, The Girl in the Steel Corset. Okay, here's the cover image. 


This cover model's hair is obviously dark--a dark brown. The character that this is supposed to be--Finley--is described as having "honey-colored hair". So for quite a while I've been picturing this lovely girl on the cover, and dark brown hair. Then later on, I'm told she has honey-colored hair. "Honey-colored" suggests a dark blonde color. This throws me off because it totally messes up the original looks of the character I pictured with my mind's eye. I'm a very visual person so these instances bother me! By the way, this post is not meant to hate on this book. I'm enjoying it so far. I just wanted to share a rant I often have. 

Friday, August 23, 2013

My Reaction After Finishing The Infernal Devices Trilogy

*Originally posted on Goodreads on March 25 2013*

You know that feeling when you finish a book/series and you're left with a profound feeling of awe because the ending was so perfect in a way that you could never have predicted? That's how I feel after completing this series. Amazing, spectacular, terrific, wonderful; these are a few adjectives that come to mind when I think about describing the series and its perfect completion. Cassandra Clare is a genius. It's been a long time since I've truly loved a book/series this much. It's a rare feeling that I've only wholly found in a few series. There are not enough great things I can say about this series, or about Cassandra Clare and her writing.

The Infernal Devices is a prequel trilogy to The Mortal Instruments. The trilogy includes 1. Clockwork Angel 2. Clockwork Prince 3. Clockwork Princess

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Overview: The Chemical Garden Trilogy by Lauren DeStefano

If you've enjoyed books of the recently popular genre, dystopian, The Chemical Garden trilogy (Wither, Fever, Sever) is a good reading option for you. Be wary of younger readers, however. While these books may not be technically graphic, there is a lot of insinuated mature content, as well as elements and situations that some might find disturbing. The Chemical Garden trilogy introduces us to a world in which genetic experiments have gone too far and the youth generation is now infected with a condition that causes all males to die at age 25 and females to die at age 20. There are many who have set out to find a cure and in order to do that, they feel there need to be as many children born as possible to try and find any genetic details or coding that may help find a cure. Since there is an abundant want for babies and children, rich males participate in polygamy (sometimes the women...well, girls...are willing, sometimes they are not). Hence, the disturbing and mature content. In case you're wondering, rape does not take place these stories, unless you count the statutory kind, i.e., a sexual encounter involving an under-aged girl (though in this case she is extremely willing). The thing about the content of these stories is that many people were appalled by the forced polygamy and sex between an adult male and an under-aged girl. I think what's important when reading though, is to try to understand what it's like to live in the world presented in the story. It is also important to understand that the author is not condoning forced polygamy or sex with a minor. Instead she's showing us a fictional world that has become very, very dark and especially difficult for young women to live in. The narrator of the story is Rhine, a young woman who has been kidnapped and forced into a polygamous marriage involving a young man and two other young women. As she is trapped in a mansion with the other wives, she forms close bonds with them as well as one with a particular handsome house worker. Perhaps most surprisingly of all, she becomes quite close with her new husband, Lindon. Her father-in-law however, is a different story. Though he appears to be pleasant, Rhine suspects that he is hiding something very dark in the mansion's basement, as well as in his heart and mind. Will a cure be found? How will Rhine fit into it? How can there be hope in such a dark, frightening world? Read The Chemical Garden Trilogy to find out. (: