Rating: 2/5 stars
This book is unlike anything I’ve ever read before. It’s strange, but it draws you in. At first I had no idea what it was about, no idea what was going on, but as I kept reading and immersing myself in the story, everything started to make sense as my mind painted a picture of what was happening.
This is the kind of story I’d recommend starting without knowing anything about it. Chapter three is where it really hooked me and made me curious about our protagonist and his story and the overarching story and mostly the setting.
The setting is what’s the most unique: this book is set in this world, but it’s also set in an imagined savage futuristic version of this world. Sean has created this world as a sort of game and has a mail-in business where he sends you pieces of the story and you choose your path and then he sends you the corresponding piece of what happens next. Just the whole concept was fascinating to me.
I really enjoyed the authorial voice and the stream of consciousness writing style here. I haven’t read very many books that sound like this one did in my head but Sean notices things about the world that I loved reading about. This was the best part of the book in my opinion.
I don’t really have a lot more to say about Wolf in White Van because I’m intentionally trying to remain as vague as possible, but I think you should give this book a shot, at least. It has a very intriguing story, a protagonist with vivid imaginations, an interesting dual setting, and a little bit of a mystery aspect that will keep you invested until the literal last page. I didn’t expect to enjoy this as much as I did but I’m glad I gave it a chance because it was a breath of fresh air. Although I will say that the ending was kind of confusing.
Monday, January 27, 2020
Saturday, January 18, 2020
Review: UPROOTED by Naomi Novik
Rating: 2/5 stars
I wanted to love this book so much; I genuinely thought it would be my new favorite book. But unfortunately I found myself very distanced from the story and not enjoying the plot as much as I thought I would.
The synopsis on the back sounds interesting, but I quickly discovered the synopsis comprises only the first chapter of the book and I had no idea what the rest of the story was about. I kind of expected Agnieszka and the Dragon to just stay in his house practicing magic the whole time and fall in love, but instead they left to go into the Woods a bunch and then the Prince came, and there were some court politics, and some other people got involved, etc. and basically it wasn’t at all how I expected it to go.
But on top of that, I felt like the story was very slow and I found myself not really enjoying what I was reading. Like I said, I really wanted to love this book, but after about 40% though, I had to stop lying to myself and just admit that I was bored...
Plus I’m not sure who any of the characters were besides Agnieszka, Kasia, the Dragon, and Prince Marek; everyone else blended together to me and I didn’t care about anyone. Same with the towns. We desperately needed a map or something because every time a new town was mentioned, I just glazed over it because I had no idea where anything was or why it was important.
The more I read, the more detached I became from the story and the characters. I didn’t like how the magic worked and found it to be messily structured but also repetitive. Agnieszka constantly uses the same spells over and over so I felt like we saw no progression in her learning magic. Also, I really didn’t like how the relationship between Agnieszka and Sarkan developed and I thought it felt very contrived, especially later on in the story. This is the first time I remember ever not loving the protagonists’ relationship in a book, and I was disappointed by that. I was actually cringing during some of their scenes together because they just didn’t work at all and he was so rude to her that I couldn’t figure out why she liked him in the first place.
Uprooted has one of the most beautiful covers I’ve ever seen and its description sounded like something I’d normally love, but almost every part of this book didn’t work for me. The beginning really was the only portion I enjoyed. I read The Near Witch last year, and that book turned out to be exactly what I thought Uprooted would be as far as atmosphere and magic quality and character development go. It was a fairytale-esque story that felt ethereal and beautiful and was about a girl going into the evil forest to save someone, but it did everything right.
I know Uprooted is beloved by many, and I genuinely wish I loved it as much as I loved The Near Witch and had the same experience reading it as everyone else, but that’s just not the case, sadly. I still want to give Naomi Novik a chance though and read Spinning Silver and His Majesty's Dragon, so I hope those books work out better for me than Uprooted did.
I wanted to love this book so much; I genuinely thought it would be my new favorite book. But unfortunately I found myself very distanced from the story and not enjoying the plot as much as I thought I would.
The synopsis on the back sounds interesting, but I quickly discovered the synopsis comprises only the first chapter of the book and I had no idea what the rest of the story was about. I kind of expected Agnieszka and the Dragon to just stay in his house practicing magic the whole time and fall in love, but instead they left to go into the Woods a bunch and then the Prince came, and there were some court politics, and some other people got involved, etc. and basically it wasn’t at all how I expected it to go.
But on top of that, I felt like the story was very slow and I found myself not really enjoying what I was reading. Like I said, I really wanted to love this book, but after about 40% though, I had to stop lying to myself and just admit that I was bored...
Plus I’m not sure who any of the characters were besides Agnieszka, Kasia, the Dragon, and Prince Marek; everyone else blended together to me and I didn’t care about anyone. Same with the towns. We desperately needed a map or something because every time a new town was mentioned, I just glazed over it because I had no idea where anything was or why it was important.
The more I read, the more detached I became from the story and the characters. I didn’t like how the magic worked and found it to be messily structured but also repetitive. Agnieszka constantly uses the same spells over and over so I felt like we saw no progression in her learning magic. Also, I really didn’t like how the relationship between Agnieszka and Sarkan developed and I thought it felt very contrived, especially later on in the story. This is the first time I remember ever not loving the protagonists’ relationship in a book, and I was disappointed by that. I was actually cringing during some of their scenes together because they just didn’t work at all and he was so rude to her that I couldn’t figure out why she liked him in the first place.
Uprooted has one of the most beautiful covers I’ve ever seen and its description sounded like something I’d normally love, but almost every part of this book didn’t work for me. The beginning really was the only portion I enjoyed. I read The Near Witch last year, and that book turned out to be exactly what I thought Uprooted would be as far as atmosphere and magic quality and character development go. It was a fairytale-esque story that felt ethereal and beautiful and was about a girl going into the evil forest to save someone, but it did everything right.
I know Uprooted is beloved by many, and I genuinely wish I loved it as much as I loved The Near Witch and had the same experience reading it as everyone else, but that’s just not the case, sadly. I still want to give Naomi Novik a chance though and read Spinning Silver and His Majesty's Dragon, so I hope those books work out better for me than Uprooted did.
Saturday, January 11, 2020
Review: REVERIE by Ryan La Sala
Rating: 1/5 stars
I read this book for the book club at work, and I was hopeful that I’d actually like this one, but alas, this novel falls victim to poor execution of a great idea.
I actually really liked the concept of Reverie: people’s dreams come to life and the protagonists have to keep everyone safe from them. I’ve always been interested in stories set in dreams with the whimsy, magical depictions of dreamscapes, which is what I thought this book would be about. To quote how the book explained it though, “Reveries are what happens when a person’s imagined world becomes real. They’re like miniature realities, with their own plots and rules and perils.” So it’s not like a dream, not really. The full idea of reveries and how they work was never fully explained very well so I’m still only half sure what they are.
The execution of the plot here is not what I expected it to be, which isn’t a bad thing within itself, but I wasn’t enjoying what was happening and it was just bad. I found the plot to be very slow-moving and I felt like I was constantly waiting for something more to happen. It wasn’t until page 150 that we finally get an explanation that I think should have been delivered within the first few chapters.
At the start of the book, Kane wakes up with amnesia, so both he and the reader are in the dark about what’s happening. But after they enter the first reverie and I still wasn’t hooked, I thought it was because I just didn’t know enough information. I kept reading and the plot didn’t go anywhere. Then they entered the second reverie and I was forcing myself to continue reading the book because I just didn’t care and I didn’t know why I should care anyway.
The plot was confusing and underdeveloped and needed to be more fleshed out. Everything felt very messy.
This book just scratched the surface of the story it could have been. Each scene posed questions that we never saw answers to. The characters were so flat and all had the same voice and I can’t even tell you what any of our protagonists looked like. Character motivations were flimsy at best and I didn’t feel like there were any real stakes here. The whole plot felt very disjointed and unbelievable at times.
I honestly just didn’t enjoy the story. I struggled to pick it up to read. The idea was cool but the writing was bland, the characters were one-dimensional and I didn’t feel connected with any of them, and the overall storyline was confusing and not what I expected it to be. Plus nothing was fantastical enough for me in this book. It’s shelved in fantasy but that somehow feels wrong here. I wanted so much more than we got—I really did want to love this book, but all I feel is disappointment.
I read this book for the book club at work, and I was hopeful that I’d actually like this one, but alas, this novel falls victim to poor execution of a great idea.
I actually really liked the concept of Reverie: people’s dreams come to life and the protagonists have to keep everyone safe from them. I’ve always been interested in stories set in dreams with the whimsy, magical depictions of dreamscapes, which is what I thought this book would be about. To quote how the book explained it though, “Reveries are what happens when a person’s imagined world becomes real. They’re like miniature realities, with their own plots and rules and perils.” So it’s not like a dream, not really. The full idea of reveries and how they work was never fully explained very well so I’m still only half sure what they are.
The execution of the plot here is not what I expected it to be, which isn’t a bad thing within itself, but I wasn’t enjoying what was happening and it was just bad. I found the plot to be very slow-moving and I felt like I was constantly waiting for something more to happen. It wasn’t until page 150 that we finally get an explanation that I think should have been delivered within the first few chapters.
At the start of the book, Kane wakes up with amnesia, so both he and the reader are in the dark about what’s happening. But after they enter the first reverie and I still wasn’t hooked, I thought it was because I just didn’t know enough information. I kept reading and the plot didn’t go anywhere. Then they entered the second reverie and I was forcing myself to continue reading the book because I just didn’t care and I didn’t know why I should care anyway.
The plot was confusing and underdeveloped and needed to be more fleshed out. Everything felt very messy.
This book just scratched the surface of the story it could have been. Each scene posed questions that we never saw answers to. The characters were so flat and all had the same voice and I can’t even tell you what any of our protagonists looked like. Character motivations were flimsy at best and I didn’t feel like there were any real stakes here. The whole plot felt very disjointed and unbelievable at times.
I honestly just didn’t enjoy the story. I struggled to pick it up to read. The idea was cool but the writing was bland, the characters were one-dimensional and I didn’t feel connected with any of them, and the overall storyline was confusing and not what I expected it to be. Plus nothing was fantastical enough for me in this book. It’s shelved in fantasy but that somehow feels wrong here. I wanted so much more than we got—I really did want to love this book, but all I feel is disappointment.
“Just because something is imagined doesn’t mean is isn’t dangerous. Sometimes the things we believe in are the most dangerous things about us. That’s why people build entire worlds in their minds. Because they think they’re safe, but they’re wrong. Dreams are like parasites. They grow up in the dark within us, and they grow deadly. Trust me when I tell you these reveries can kill you.”
Thursday, January 2, 2020
Review: FIX HER UP by Tessa Bailey
Rating: 2/5 stars
Travis “Two Bats” Ford is a player—both of baseball and of girls. But a serious injury leaves him unable to play baseball again, sending him back to his childhood home and into a depressive spiral. Being Travis’s best friend’s sister, Georgette Castle grew up around Travis and has crushed on him since she was little. Despite his reputation, Georgie has always liked him and looked up to him. When he comes home after his injury, he bonds with Georgie in a new more mature way than the “little sister” he used to know. And this being a romance book, of course we know that they hook up.
Georgie is a sweet, wonderful, caring, innocent girl who I really enjoyed reading about. On the other hand, I couldn’t get over Travis’s disgusting reputation and couldn’t understand how Georgie would ever like him; I’ve never understood why girls always fawn over the guys that only want sex and nothing else and don’t even care about them and treat them like garbage, but I digress.
I liked this simple plot of this story: Georgie and Travis decide to fake-date each other for public appearances so they will both be taken seriously for reasons I won’t list here, but of course fake dating turns into real dating before they know it. (These aren’t spoilers, it’s in the description.)
I liked that Georgie was able to show Travis he is a worthwhile person and be there for him when literally no one has before, but I didn’t like the way Travis talked to Georgie. He obviously liked her more than just for sex, which even he seemed shocked about, but he was also pretty controlling of her and I wasn’t into that. I wouldn’t go so far to say he was abusive, but he was definitely demanding and liked to act like he was in charge of her, especially in the bedroom, which wasn’t cool. I know some people like that, but that wasn’t for me. For example, during their first night together he thought, “I want to own her,” and also that he was “making his mark” on her, and when he was done “he shouted his victory.” And at another time he tells her, “You might be on top but I’m still in charge.” Those thoughts are absolutely not okay and not sexy.
So while I liked the cute plot of this novel and I liked Georgie’s character and her coming-of-self subplot to get her family to show her more respect as a real adult, I didn’t really care for Travis as a character because he’s not someone I would ever be attracted to or want to be with so I was just kind of turned off of him the whole time. I didn’t dislike him enough to put the book down, but he had me sneering and scowling at his actions instead of swooning. I’m also really not into the story of the cocky, super experienced guy who takes the virginity of the super innocent girl. Please just stop with that plot.
I read this book because I like to read cute rom-coms in the middle of dark, cold December, and this book fit that mood, but it’s definitely not one I’d ever reread. I much prefer the swoony romances with the good guys and less smut (and don’t let this innocent cover fool you, this book is so smutty).
Travis “Two Bats” Ford is a player—both of baseball and of girls. But a serious injury leaves him unable to play baseball again, sending him back to his childhood home and into a depressive spiral. Being Travis’s best friend’s sister, Georgette Castle grew up around Travis and has crushed on him since she was little. Despite his reputation, Georgie has always liked him and looked up to him. When he comes home after his injury, he bonds with Georgie in a new more mature way than the “little sister” he used to know. And this being a romance book, of course we know that they hook up.
Georgie is a sweet, wonderful, caring, innocent girl who I really enjoyed reading about. On the other hand, I couldn’t get over Travis’s disgusting reputation and couldn’t understand how Georgie would ever like him; I’ve never understood why girls always fawn over the guys that only want sex and nothing else and don’t even care about them and treat them like garbage, but I digress.
I liked this simple plot of this story: Georgie and Travis decide to fake-date each other for public appearances so they will both be taken seriously for reasons I won’t list here, but of course fake dating turns into real dating before they know it. (These aren’t spoilers, it’s in the description.)
I liked that Georgie was able to show Travis he is a worthwhile person and be there for him when literally no one has before, but I didn’t like the way Travis talked to Georgie. He obviously liked her more than just for sex, which even he seemed shocked about, but he was also pretty controlling of her and I wasn’t into that. I wouldn’t go so far to say he was abusive, but he was definitely demanding and liked to act like he was in charge of her, especially in the bedroom, which wasn’t cool. I know some people like that, but that wasn’t for me. For example, during their first night together he thought, “I want to own her,” and also that he was “making his mark” on her, and when he was done “he shouted his victory.” And at another time he tells her, “You might be on top but I’m still in charge.” Those thoughts are absolutely not okay and not sexy.
So while I liked the cute plot of this novel and I liked Georgie’s character and her coming-of-self subplot to get her family to show her more respect as a real adult, I didn’t really care for Travis as a character because he’s not someone I would ever be attracted to or want to be with so I was just kind of turned off of him the whole time. I didn’t dislike him enough to put the book down, but he had me sneering and scowling at his actions instead of swooning. I’m also really not into the story of the cocky, super experienced guy who takes the virginity of the super innocent girl. Please just stop with that plot.
I read this book because I like to read cute rom-coms in the middle of dark, cold December, and this book fit that mood, but it’s definitely not one I’d ever reread. I much prefer the swoony romances with the good guys and less smut (and don’t let this innocent cover fool you, this book is so smutty).
Wednesday, January 1, 2020
2020 Reading Challenges
First of all, my Goodreads goal is set at 70 books. That's pretty achievable for me. Ultimately though I do hope to get to 100, but I know that I will be reading longer fantasy books this year that will take more time so I won't be able to finish as many books in a year. Last year I got to 96 books, so I thought that maybe this year I could get to 100, but last year I read a ton of short stories and graphic novels and also a ton of longer books, so that number is more inflated that it will likely be this year, when I'm planning to read fewer short stories and graphic novels, so 70 is this year's goal.
Next, my series goal. I had good luck with bingeing series last year, managing to complete five series from start to finish, and this year I again hope to do this. My goal is to complete at least six series this year, although there are a couple that I'm currently in the middle of, so I do hope to finish those as well.
Also, my neverending TBR goal. I currently have 350 books on my TBR at the start of 2020. I've noticed that I tend to gravitate toward newer books or books that I've acquired more recently, so this year I want to focus on reading as many books as possible that I've owned since high school since they've been on my TBR the longest. I currently have 36 books on my shelf from 2013 or years prior, and ideally, I'd like to get that number down to zero. Seven or more years or longer is too long to still have books on my TBR. So this year my goal is to give each of those books a chance and either complete them or DNF them, depending on if I like them or not. I know I realistically won't get to all of them, but that is still the goal because it's ridiculous to own unread books for so many years. Here is my list of unread books from high school:
Next, my series goal. I had good luck with bingeing series last year, managing to complete five series from start to finish, and this year I again hope to do this. My goal is to complete at least six series this year, although there are a couple that I'm currently in the middle of, so I do hope to finish those as well.
Also, my neverending TBR goal. I currently have 350 books on my TBR at the start of 2020. I've noticed that I tend to gravitate toward newer books or books that I've acquired more recently, so this year I want to focus on reading as many books as possible that I've owned since high school since they've been on my TBR the longest. I currently have 36 books on my shelf from 2013 or years prior, and ideally, I'd like to get that number down to zero. Seven or more years or longer is too long to still have books on my TBR. So this year my goal is to give each of those books a chance and either complete them or DNF them, depending on if I like them or not. I know I realistically won't get to all of them, but that is still the goal because it's ridiculous to own unread books for so many years. Here is my list of unread books from high school:
- Delirium
- Pandemonium
- Requiem
- Eon
- Eona
- The Unbecoming of Mara Dyer
- The Evolution of Mara Dyer
- Switched
- Torn
- Ascend
- Ship Breaker
- The Drowning Cities
- The Pledge
- Looking for Alaska
- Will Grayson, Will Grayson
- Between Shades of Grey
- Eldest
- Brisingr
- Inheritance
- Wuthering Heights
- Sense and Sensibility
- Fahrenheit 451
- The Picture of Dorian Grey
- Anne of Green Gables
- Paradise Lost
- Don Quixote
- The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
- The Girl Who Played with Fire
- The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest
- Gone Girl
- Memoirs of a Geisha
- The Da Vinci Code
- The Blind Assassin
- Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close
- Pop Kids
- Diary of Anne Frank
I can tell you right now there are some books on that list that I have no intention of reading this year, such as most of the classics and adult fiction titles, ones that if I do get to them I will be truly surprised. But I specifically do want to read all of the young adult titles, which I have bolded above. The older I get, the more distanced I become from young adult stories and their protagonists, and I want to read them while I still have some hope of enjoying them.
The last couple of years I have constructed a read-your-own-books challenge to help me read books from my TBR. This year I'm not doing that as I don't care what challenges I fulfill as long as I read any of my unread books. That is the main goal: read books from my TBR. Last year, 47% of the books I read were from my TBR. My goal this year is to have that number be 70% or higher.
Last year, working at a bookstore and a library, I acquired more books than I've ever acquired during any years prior, and thus my TBR grew exponentially. I unhauled many books I didn't want to read anymore, yet my TBR was still larger at the end of last year than at the beginning of the year. This year I hope to buy fewer books, read more of my own books, and commit to DNFing books if I don't like them.
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