Showing posts with label The Darkest Powers series. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Darkest Powers series. Show all posts

Thursday, November 05, 2009

3rd Canadian Reading Challenge: Mini Reviews


In the last few months I have read a lot Canadian book for the 3rd Canadian Reading Challenge. The problem is I apparently still need to review 5 books in order to count it as finished. So, I am going to do some mini-reviews. I think that you will see more of this in the next two months because it seems to be the only way I am ever going to review even a large part of the books I have read this year.

The Awakening by Kelley Armstrong (The Darkest Powers Series, Book 2)
I received a review copy of the first book in this series last year, and while I enjoyed it I didn't love it. This time around I decided to get the book from the library. What happened is I actually really enjoyed it! It really is hard for Kelley Armstrong to write a bad book. She is the author of the Women of the Otherworld series which I love! This series is a young adult one. It is a paranormal novel. My biggest problem with this book and with the book that came before it is the main character. She kind of annoys me, but she grew on me a bit more in this book. The other characters are compelling and I am looking forward to seeing what happens with them in the further books. I think there are some surprises in store as the characters grow into themselves and into their paranormal abilities. A recommended read!

As Nature Made Him: The Boy Who Was Raised As a Girl by John Colapinto
I spoke about this book a bit in one of my Sunday posts. To go into a bit more detail, I don't think this is what I was expecting. I just wanted to read what it was like for a boy to be raised as a girl. I was interested in that story, but I found all the other stuff that was mixed in got a bit unnecessary. There was one chapter I got annoyed and ended up skimming my way through. I think that the author was trying to accomplish too much in such a short book and it got a bit boggled down. I found parts of it really interesting, but overall I found this rather dull.

War Brides: The stories of the women who left everything behind to follow the men they loved by Melynda Jarratt
This book was actually really interesting! It is the personal story of the women and their family involved in the war bride movement during the second world war. The stories are told in their own words and do not just tell the success stories. Obviously when you only know a man for a short time and marry him you don't necessarily know him at all. It was shocking what these women came to Canada to live in. Many of them were from middle-class homes and they went to places where in some cases there was not even indoor plumbing, so it was a bit overwhelming. I think this is the best way to tell this story and I am glad that I read it. I recommend it!

The Iambics of Newfoundland: Notes from an Unknown Shore by Robert Finch
I totally read this book because of the title! It was just fun, so I had to see what it was all about. What happened was I read a really interesting book about Newfoundland. I should mention that while Nfld is near to me, I have never actually been there, so whether or not this is an entirely believable portrait is something that people that actually live there would have to tell you. What did happen, though, is I learned a lot without even stepping outside my living room. Plus, I could see a lot of Nova Scotia in it... Did it live up to the title? Maybe not as much as I hoped, but I still really enjoyed it. I recommend it.

The Lost Garden by Helen Humphreys
I read Coventry last year and I really liked it. This book was good, but I think it is a bit lost on me... I read a book for the story and am not a huge fan of fancy writing that sort of takes away from the story. This book was a bit flowery and it was not something that worked for me all the time. I entirely acknowledge that it is just me, though. At its core I really liked the story and the characters. I still plan to read more from Humphreys in the future. For whatever bothers me about her books, there is always wonderful things that keep me reading her. So, I guess I recommend this, but then on the other hand I don't. If that makes any sense...

Friday, July 18, 2008

The Summoning by Kelley Armstrong


After years of frequent moves following her mother’s death, Chloe Saunders’s life is finally settling down. She is attending art school, pursuing her dreams of becoming a director, making friends, meeting boys. Her biggest concern is that she’s not developing as fast as her friends are. But when puberty does hit, it brings more than hormone surges. Chloe starts seeing ghosts–everywhere, demanding her attention. After she suffers a breakdown, her devoted aunt Lauren gets her into a highly recommended group home.

At first, Lyle House seems a pretty okay place, except for Chloe’s small problem of fearing she might be facing a lifetime of mental illness. But as she gradually gets to know the other kids at the home–charming Simon and his ominous, unsmiling brother Derek, obnoxious Tori, and Rae, who has a “thing” for fire–Chloe begins to realize that there is something that binds them all together, and it isn’t your usual “problem kid” behaviour. And together they discover that Lyle House is not your usual group home either…
I have read Kelley Armstrong before, so this was not the first time. I have been working my way through her Women of the Otherworld series, and for the most part, I am a big fan of the series. I had originally planned to read another book in that series, but then this arrived in the mail and I thought I would give it a try. The first book in The Darkest Powers series, it was a really interesting first book to the series. Was I blown away by it? No. It was not even great for a young adult novel. For me, it was just interesting enough that I will probably continue the series. It is like Rachel Caine's Morganville Vampires series in that respect. I will read them if they are easy to find, but I will not go out of my way for them.

The biggest criteria, for me, for an average book is that I can hardly remember what happens in them. That is my problem with this book. I only kind of remember it, and it was not all that long ago that I read it, so it should still be fresh in my head. I suppose one of my big problems with teen fiction is that I get so annoyed with the heroines. In many cases they are the naive young ladies that romance novels contain, just younger. Maybe in some cases I am too close to that age to really appreciate the freshness of youth? I don't know. I find that my biggest problem with a lot of the popular young adult series is that the main character annoys me (*cough* Bella *cough*), and that normally takes away from my enjoyment of the book. I have also had a lot of issues the last couple years with adult books narrated by young people. I just have no patience for them, I guess.

Anyways, I am just rambling here... So, yes, just an average book. A few interesting scenes, but nothing that will blow your socks off. If you want to read Kelley Armstrong for the first time, start with the Women of the Otherworld series, and if you want a good young adult novel, there are probably better ones out there (The Host, for example). That being said, I plan to read book two, so it was not terrible.

My thanks to Random House for sending me a copy of this book!