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Rampant

Killer unicorns anyone?

Killer unicorns anyone?

Title: Rampant
Written by Diana Peterfreund
Hardcover: 416 Pages
Pub. Date: HarperCollins Publishers, August 2009
Reading Level: Young Adult

The last thing Astrid expects to see, as she walks in the woods with her boyfriend Brandt, is a unicorn.  Particularly a blood-thirsty, man-hating unicorn.  So when the unicorn charges and stabs Brandt in the leg, she is just as shocked as anyone else would be.  Her mother Lillian on the other hand, is delighted.

Astrid is the descendant of Alexander the Great and the latest in a long line of women unicorn hunters.  Lillian is obsessed with unicorns and has been for most of her own life.  So when she is contacted and offered a chance for Astrid to go to Italy to learn to be a unicorn hunter, she promptly sends Astrid along to live out her own life-long dream.  Astrid is prepared to be miserable, until her cousin Phillipa appears.  They study swordplay and archery.  They study the hot guys.

But then, the killer unicorns start arriving.

This was a co-read with Kailana from The Written Word. We tried a different format this time, more of a chat style, which was tons of fun.  I really enjoyed this book.  You’ll find out more in our conversation.   Read the first half of it at her blog here.  Go ahead.  I’ll wait for you.

Done? Okay….here’s part two!

Heather: Did you have any problems with the book?

Kelly: Is there a book two for sure? I want to hope that there is, but most of the major stuff was resolved in book one. Anyway, as to problems with the book. Well, the Seth storyline bothered me. Even though it is explained why he did it and it all seems to work out in the end, I didn’t like that it had to happen. A lot of my problems, though, were pacing. While I really liked the story and the characters, sometimes I felt like the story was dragging along. It did a lot of the setting up characters that is usually accomplished in the second book in a trilogy. I hope that means that if there is a book two there will be a lot of action. The characters in this book were all coming into their own, so this book was a lot about exploration of who they were. I just wish sometimes it had been rushed again.

We talked about killer unicorns in general, but what did you think about the two unicorns that could be considered secondary characters in this book?

Heather: Well, I’m not totally 100% sure there is a book two, but how could there not be?  She left so much unresolved!

At first, I found the involvement of the kirin unicorn confusing.  But once I realized he was helping Astrid become immune to his poison, my respect for him grew.  I still didn’t know what he was doing of course, I mean, Astrid’s whole purpose was to kill him and he’s helping her??  Once it was all made clear though, I understood and liked the plot turn.  I’m curious how she develops that relationship, provided there is a book two, since they are enemies who joined together for a brief period of time.

Now, Bonegrinder, I adored.  She reminded me of a cat I once had, who only liked me, and woe to anyone else who tried to touch her.  She was the closest thing to what we typically think of unicorns in the book, just don’t come near her if you aren’t a virgin!

What did you think of them?

Kelly: I really liked Bonegrinder. He was one of my favourite characters in the book! I was horrified in the very first scene with her when she appears on Cory’s bed. That was very unexpected because we still didn’t really know a lot yet. It was hard sometimes to remember he was the enemy because he added to the book so much. I found a lot of the scenes funny more than anything. Also, Bonegrinder’s addition made me feel that much worse about everything that happened to Phil. It was so sad! Though it worked out in the end, I really felt bad for her. The scenes when Phil just meets Bonegrinder are some of my favourite in the book, though.

As to the other unicorn, I thought about what you thought. Wasn’t sure about him at first, but as we got to understand his purpose better his addition made sense.

Heather: So, what did you think of the book from a critical standpoint?  Well written? Good plotting?  Any criticisms or loves?

Kelly: Well, like I said, I found that the book dragged a bit. There were a few scenes that I thought that the book could do without. In the beginning, also, I found that I had a bit of a time getting into the book. Once I did, though, I really enjoyed the story because it was fresh. In a world dominated by vampires, witches, werewolves, and most recently zombies, it was time for killer unicorns. I hope that it doesn’t become the new thing and get overdone, but for the moment Rampant will always be the killer unicorn book for me. I think she wrote a really good story for the most part. Is it the best writing ever? Nope, but she has a lot of potential and I cannot wait for something else from her. (Hopefully about killer unicorns!) What about you? What are your thoughts on the writing?

Heather: Did you notice I spelled favourite YOUR way up there?  You’re having an effect on me!  lol

I found that the beginning especially dragged a little bit.  I mean, we had this big-bang kinda of opening and then… blah.  But it picked back up pretty well.  I did think there might have been a few too many characters.  I think it was fine to have all those extra girls, but I wanted to know more about Cory, Astrid and Phil; those other girls didn’t really interest me at all.  All the same, those scenes with Astrid, Phil and Cory were fantastic.  I thought all those girls were really nicely drawn out. And I totally agree about having a new supernatural character. I’m getting tired of vampires (almost) and while zombies are way cool, they are going to get old fast.  No one is doing unicorns!  She’s cornered the market!!!

Kelly: Yay for having an effect on you. The British have an effect on Canadian spelling, so it is only fitting!

I agree. There were too many characters. Maybe if there is a sequel she will be able to concentrate on certain characters. I just hope that Phil is still a central character. I think she was my favourite!

I love our buddy reviews. This one was really fun! We need to start thinking about another book to talk about very soon!

Heather: This one was fantastic!  We definitely need another book…maybe Leviathan by Scott Westerfeld?

Oh, that sounds good!

Find out more in the first half over at The Written World.

Also by Diana Peterfreund:

Under the Rose: An Ivy League Novel | Secret Society Girl: An Ivy League Novel | Rites of Spring (Break) | Tap & Gown: An Ivy League Novel |

Also Reviewed By:

Presenting Lenore | The Book Lush | Read This Book! | Darque Reviews | Shooting Stars Mag| Frenetic Reader | and more…

Obligatory disclaimer.  I bought this book myself. Blah, blah, blah. I’m using Indie bound to make about $0.03 if I’m lucky. Ptttthpt.

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Impossible

 

Title: Impossible
Author: Nancy Werlin
Reading level: Young Adult
Paperback: 384 pages
Publisher: Speak; Reprint edition (August 11, 2009)
Bought at Target
Author website: http://www.nancywerlin.com

Impossible is sort of cutting the line, to get reviewed today, but I’m just so excited about it, I couldn’t wait to share.  I read this over the Labor Day weekend, almost in one sitting.  This book is just SO GOOD.  

By the way, isn’t that a great cover?  It’s the whole reason I picked it up!

I have long enjoyed books that take an old folk story, fairy tale or such things and used them to create a new story.  Impossible does this with a classic folk ballad called “Scarborough Fair.”  Older readers may recognize the title because Simon and Garfunkle recorded a version of the song.  I had never heard of it.  I’m not going to go into the substantial history of the song, even though it is fascinating.  If you would like to know more, Wikipedia has an article dedicated to the song which includes links to different recordings of the many different versions of the song.  

With “Scarborough Fair” laying the groundwork, Nancy Werlin has written an original and absolutely absorbing story about love, belief in yourself, belief in others, and finding the power to change your life.  Lucy Scarborough is just like any other 17-year-old girl.  She’s a good student.  She’s making plans for her future.  She has loving foster parents that she adores.  She’s going to the prom with her first real boyfriend.   The only problem she has is her insane mother and never knowing when she is going to turn up.  Until something possesses her boyfriend at the prom and leads him to rape her and then drive himself into the first tree he comes to afterwards.

Now Lucy learns there is a curse on her family. All the women are doomed to live 18 years of a normal, sane life.  Then each girl becomes pregnant (i.e. raped) and looses their hold on their minds once their daughter is born.  It is always at the age of 18, always a daughter, and always insanity afterwards.  Obviously there is a villain here worthy of the utmost hate. He sets three impossible tasks for these women to complete, the tasks in “Scarborough Fair,” if they hope to break the curse.  For hundreds of years, no Scarborough woman has been able to do it.  Until now.

This is an exceptional story.  The characters are well-drawn and nuanced.  Lucy is a great, strong, female character.  Werlin deals with rape, teen pregnancy and family madness with a strong, firm hand that is to be admired.  This is a very enjoyable, breath-taking read that will be impossible to put down.  Pun intended.

I definitely can’t wait to get my hands on more by Ms. Werlin.

Also by Nancy Werlin

Are You Alone on Purpose? | The Killer’s Cousin | Locked Inside  
Black Mirror | Double Helix | The Rules of Survival

Also reviewed by

 Reading Rants | The Compulsive Reader | The Book…Spot | And Another Book Read | Angieville Confessions of a Bibliovore | Flight into Fantasy | And many more….

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Graceling by Kristin Cashore

Graceling by Kristin Cashore

Graceling by Kristin Cashore

Title: Graceling
Written byKristin Cashore
Reading Level: Young Adult
Published byHoughton Mifflin Harcourt (October 2008)
Hardcover: 488 pages
Rated 4.75/5
Author Blog 

You know how when you read The Hunger Games, (WHAT? You haven’t read The Hunger Games? Go, right now and buy it.  Then sit down and read it. For goodness sakes, what am I going to do with you?) how you thought Katniss was the youknowwhat, so tough and strong and superior to any man around?  

Well, let me tell you, she ain’t got nuffin’ on Katsa.  She is the new youknowwhat.  For you see, Katsa is a Graceling, one of the unusual people born in her land with an extreme talent and identified by their unusual different colored eyes.  Since the age of eight, Katsa has been able to kill a man grown with her bare hands.  All Gracelings by law belong to the king, so Katsa lives with her uncle King Randa and becomes his thug – delivering his messages and carrying out all his punishments.  Katsa hates this and to help balance the bad, she creates a Council, who help people behind the king’s back.  It is during one of these missions for the Council that she meets Prince Po.

Prince Po is from a neighboring country – and is also Graced.  As they come to know each other, to fight, to confide and to become friends, Katsa’s life begins to change in ways she never expected, or dreamed.  She learns new truths about herself and finds the courage to break out of her bondage and become the woman she was meant to be.  Along the way she makes new friends, discovers friends she didn’t know she had and helps uncover a sinister secret.  

And wow, Prince Po is something else.  Can you say HOT?

Aside – Have you noticed how the male roll in YA books seems to be changing?  I’m pondering a separate post on this, but he typifies this new male character I’ve been seeing emerge in the last few YA books I’ve read.  I like it.

Anyway.

Awhile back, Kailana at The Written World and my reading twin, dared me to read this book.  This was back before this “I Dare You” challenge thing that’s going around, but anyway.  I take her opinion pretty seriously so I got it from the library.  I was still somewhat dubious, I have no idea why, but last Friday night I thought “what the heck!” and picked it up.  I am usually a fixture on Twitter on Friday nights, but you may have noticed I was suspiciously absent.  I was lost in this book!  I barely put it down until I finished it Sunday (I had to put it down a few times, I had birthday parties to begrudgingly attend).  

This is a thoroughly well-crafted first novel. If I hadn’t known better, I would have thought Ms. Cashore had written many more novels.  The characters are all well-rounded and well-thought out.  Katsa is a excellent adolescent heroine, confident in her strengths but still unsure of her weaknesses.  Her growth as a character through the story is pronounced and feels accurate.  No action goes without consequences and it has such a satisfying ending.  Well, satisfying except for leaving you wanting more!  Which, incidentally, the next part in this trilogy, FIRE, will be coming out soon!  I can’t wait to get my hands on it.

Also by Kristin Cashore

The soon to be released companion to Graceling – Fire

Also reviewed by:

Bookshelves of doom | Kailana | Becky’s Book Reviews | Melissa’s Book Shelf | Teen Book Review | Book Nut | Karin Librarian | YA Fabulous | Reading the Leaves | YA Book Nerd | and lots more …

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Jellicoe Road

Jellicoe Road by Melina Marchetta

Jellicoe Road by Melina Marchetta

Title: Jellicoe Road
Written by: Melinda Marchetta
Publisher: Harper Teen
Released: August 26, 2008
Previously released: 2006, in Australia
Pages: 419
Genre: Young Adult
Rating: 4.5 out of 5

Here I am with another co-read/review with Kailana at The Written World.

From the prologue:

My father took one hundred and thirty-two minutes to die.

I counted.

It happened on the Jellicoe Road. The prettiest road I’d ever seen, where trees made breezy canopies like a tunnel to Shangri-La. We were going to the ocean, hundreds of miles away, because I wanted to see the ocean and my father said that it was about time the four of us made that journey. I remember asking, “What’s the difference between a trip and a journey?” and my father said, “Narnie, my love, when we get there, you’ll understand,” and that was the last thing he ever said.

With a beginning like that, how could you put it down?  Well, I did, two times, but the third time…well…wow.  Every once in awhile, a book comes along that just hits you in the gut.  It hits too close to home, it tears your heart out, it grabs you by the roots of your hair and spins and doesn’t turn loose until well after the last page has been turned.  Jellicoe Road did all these things to me and so much more.

Taylor Markham has been living at the Jellicoe Road boarding school since her mother abandoned her at the nearby 7-Eleven six years earlier.  She doesn’t really know what happened to her father; only that he has been gone for most of her life. Now she’s seventeen has been newly elected to the post of student leader of her dorm and to lead the Underground Community as one of the three boarding schools who battle for territory (among other things) in her small Australian community.  The two other gangs are called the Cadets and the Townies.  For years these three camps have fought in the “Territory Wars;” wars fought over land, trees, water, and more.  Everything is going swimmingly, until Hannah, the closest adult Taylor has to family disappears without a word. Jonah Griggs, the boy Taylor ran away with three years ago and the leader of the Cadets has popped back into her life with smoldering looks and mystifying behavior.   And all the young kids of Taylor’s house are now looking to her for everything.   Things start falling apart.

Understandably Taylor wants to know what’s going on with Hannah.  We are given glimpses of a novel that Hannah has been working on, which at first Taylor takes to be fictional but quickly realizes that it might not be so fictional.  It provides an all important glimpse of Hannah’s, and Taylor’s, life.  As she gets closer and closer to the truth the pieces of the puzzle start to fit together and, well, good luck putting the book down.  This is an absorbing story where nothing is quite what it seems and the clues only lead to more questions for Taylor, as she tries to work out the connections between herself, Hannah, her mother and the character’s in Hannah’s book.  This is a book about secrets, anguish, pain, love, betrayal, hope, death, life and oh so much more.  It’s heartbreaking and beautiful.  It’s gorgeous and haunting.  It’s going to live with me for a long time, I’m sure. I’m so glad I gave it that third try.

Oh and this is important. Jellicoe Road won the Printz Award!

See Kailana’s review here.

And now, for Kailana’s questions for me:

What did you think of Taylor Markham? Did your opinion change as the novel progressed or stay the same?

As I said, this novel hit close to home.  My own father died when I was very young and I was basically abandoned by my mother around the age of 3.  The things Taylor has to go through in her quest to find out the all important “Why?” were things I was forced to go through too.

At first I had trouble liking Taylor.  She was so remote, so standoffish; she didn’t want to be liked or to like anyone.  But as the novel progress and I got to know Taylor better, I realized we had a lot in common.  I began to identify with her, rather strongly, and by the end I admit, I really came to admire her and the choices she made.  I think she was a wonderfully written, extremely well developed character.   I too can be remote, standoffish, I’m probably considered cold by many people.  It’s not true, but I know I have a tendency to hide myself away for fear of being hurt again.  I don’t make friends easily and the ones that I do have I protect with a fierce dread that I will loose them in some way.

As the novel progressed, I came to greatly admire Taylor for the choices she made and to envy her maturity.  She made choices that, upon reflection, I somewhat wish I had been able to make.

What are your thoughts on the cover? Did it make sense for the book at all? Do you like it?

At first glance, the cover really didn’t mean anything to me.  A red poppy?  Wow, it’s pretty, but eh?  I, the cover whore, was not taken with it.  But once it was introduced to the story and what it did mean became clear, well, I decided I liked it.

My questions to her, with my answers:

What did you think of the juxtaposition of Taylor’s first-person narrative and Hannah’s third-person omniscient “novel” in the book?

At first I had a really hard time with it, because I didn’t realize right off the bat that it was Hannah’s book.  I wasn’t sure what it was and once it got through my thick head that it was Hannah’s narrative I felt slightly dumb.  Once I knew what it was though, I thought the technique worked pretty well, especially since Hannah was gone from the narrative so early.  I thought it helped bring her story and Taylor’s story together in an interesting way.

Who was your favorite secondary character?

Hmmm…that’s a hard question.  There were so many characters I liked.  Jonah, Hannah, Webb, Raffaela, Santangelo… but I think I’ll have to say Jonah.  I just like those strong, silent, angsty types.

Also by Melina Marchetta:  Saving Francesca, Looking for Alibrandi

Also reviewed by:

The YA, YA, YAs | InkweaverReview | The Book Muncher | Book Review Maniac | Reading Keeps You Sane | Becky’s Book | Bookshelves of Doom | Novel Journey |Reviewer X | Angieville | Random Thoughts from a Random Teen | It’s All About Books (Suey) |

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