Friday, August 28, 2015

The Faerie Prince Review

This time I’m going to review The Faerie Prince by: Rachel Morgan. Be warned, it is the second book in the series, so there are bound to be spoilers from the first book.

Violet has just one more hurtle before her graduation to become a guardian: her final assignment. Nothing goes according to plan and she has to deal with being partnered with her enemy/tormenter/kind of friend, Ryn. With the final assignment being more than she bargained for and the strange new emotions that are plaguing her when she’s around Ryn, she has to find a way to survive.

Honestly, I really don’t even want to be writing this review right now. Instead I just want to consume the next book. I’m forcing myself to review the books I’m reading before I start the next (especially ones in series) so everything’s fresh in my mind.

I really just can even deal with the ending. It’s a huge whapping cliff-hanger where so much is up in the air. For cliff-hanger endings, it’s excellent, but for those of you who want to hurl the book across the room after one, be warned.

I really loved Violet and Ryn. Their banter and friendship is just so much fun and I tried so many times not to smile too widely when reading those parts (mostly because I was in public and didn’t want to look like a weirdo). I think the tidbits we find out about Ryn are amazing too… My only complaint is that I feel like these might not have been totally thought out when writing the bonus material for the first book, but whatever.

There was so much going on that Violet didn’t know about and tiny pieces would break though to be mentioned to the reader, but I almost wish there was a bit more build-up of them. I totally loved how the book was, as is, but there just seems to almost be gaps with the stuff going on behind the scenes.

I really love this series and I can’t wait to dive into the next book.

Friday, August 21, 2015

The Faerie Guardian Review

Now it’s time for the review of The Faerie Guardian by: Rachel Morgan.

Violet is a faerie in training to be a Guardian, which means she constantly travels into the human world to protect the unsuspecting people from random attacks by the fae. One mission goes badly when Vi accidentally takes a human back to her world, Creepy Hollow, which is breaking the number one rule. However, things aren’t quite as they appear for this boy, or with her for that matter…

I really have some mixed feelings about this book. I totally loved it, especially the second half, but I just can’t get over how fast she seems to fall for Nate. She barely just met the guy and she is breaking all the rules for him. I totally get the rush for this (in the scope of the whole book), but it was kind of frustrating when I wasn’t far enough to understand why Rachel Morgan would write it this way.

Now, with that out of the way, I loved just about everything else about this book. After the big game-changer near the middle of the book, I couldn’t put it down. The plot from that point on really picked up and it was amazing.

I really loved Vi and Ryn as characters. I wish I could have gotten a better sense of who Nate was, but he was such a flat character and maybe that’s why his and Vi’s attraction seemed so sudden and strange. I sure did love, though, the part where Vi actually voiced the doubts rolling through my head and admitted to knowing Nate for only a short period of time, so she didn’t understand her emotional response to him. I also just loved how she could stand her own in a fight and really embodied the tough chick. So many times books can have a main character like her and then completely ruin it with their whinny thoughts. I think Rachel Morgan did an excellent job with Vi’s responses to everything that happened.

Now about Ryn, I totally didn’t like him at first, which is kind of the point, but I really, really like him by the end. Talking about the end, I really wish there was more to it. The bonus material after the book finishes helps me have a slight bit of closer, but it really wasn’t enough. I know this is part of a series, so I knew to expect a bit of a cliff-hanger, but I really wish series (in general) were more episodic verse how they tend to be just one giant book chopped into smaller pieces. I’m totally going to read the rest of the series, but I wish there was a more satisfying ending.

Overall, this was a well written and really gripping book. I can’t wait to pick up the next one (which I’m probably going to do in the next few minutes).

Oh, and by the way, I totally love the cover.

Thursday, August 20, 2015

Taking Our Own Advice

On the radio this morning, the host talked about his struggle with not feeling good enough. This actually was something he mentioned in a discussion about kids winning participation awards for sports. Most people seem to be on the side that think those awards will make people feel entitled to always win something.

However, the host launched into a personal musing to give a boost to the argument in favor of those awards. He mentioned that he used to play football, which there is only a winner and a loser. No one got awards for just being there. It’s just not part of the game.

When he got more into the arts, he realized that there will always be someone that is better than him, so maybe a recognition of effort wouldn’t be so bad when he couldn’t be the best. Someone out there would always be better than him. That thought could bring feelings of worthlessness and apathy. Why bother trying when you can’t be the best?

The host said he’d been struggling with this and, honestly, I have too, but right away when the host started saying it, my mind launched into a rebuttal...

Each one of us has something unique to bring. Sure, you may not be the best, but no one thinks exactly like another and you would bring something special just because you are you.

This reminds me of the show Hit Record. There is a site where people create and post the things they’ve done. Then others can take it and make something new with it. For example, many short films have been made with illustrations someone drew as the backdrop. The music is sung by one person who might have gotten the lyrics from someone else. It is animated by yet another person. The final product can be amazing, but it wouldn’t have been the same if only one person had worked on it.

We each bring our unique gifts.

After a few moments where I gave lengthy advice in my mind, something struck me. I’m quick to give advice to help someone else, but I rarely listen to my own advice. I want to help others, but I don’t try to fix my own problems.

All the stuff I mentioned above is a great example of how I wasn’t taking my own advice. So many times I’ve just given up because I wasn’t the best. I didn’t try so that I couldn’t fail. Then, I would turn around and encourage people not to do the very thing I didn’t realize I did.

Often I know the answers and how to help others with their problems, but I don’t try to fix myself. Maybe it’s ignorance and I just don’t recognize my own issues. Maybe it’s laziness and I don’t want to put the effort to improve. Maybe none of the above.

It’s so easy to deal out words meant to help others, but it’s much harder to actually take our own advice.

Friday, August 14, 2015

Unlikely Allies Review

This time I’m going to review Unlikely Allies by: Tiffany King.

Kimberly just turned eighteen and her mom laid down a bomb-shell. Dropping everything, she goes to spend time with the father she’s never met, which lands her smack dab in the middle of the Colorado wilderness. Her dad runs a summer camp for foster kids and Kimberly is determined to prove that she can live in this backwards place. Not to mention, the attractive Mason is bent on pointing out her every flaw.

I really enjoyed this book, but once again I read the reviews before I picked it up, so I think my expectations were a bit too high. The book was well written and I loved the characters and plot, but from the reviews, I thought it would be a bit more intense and traumatic than it was. People were saying they were crying and had so many emotions coming out of this book, but I just didn’t feel the same. That is why I think I had a bit too high of expectations for the book. There is tragedy in this book and I think the author did an excellent job with writing it, but I just thought there would be like ten more blows before the book was over.

I really liked all the characters in this book, a lot. Tiffany King did an excellent job with presenting great back-stories for some of the campers (it would have been nice to hear more of Amy’s and even more of Mason’s). I loved Kimberly’s strength and determination. I’m so glad that she wasn’t one of those whinny girls that hated the outdoors, which going into this book, I thought she would be. Her dad is also an amazing person and he made me want to go and give my dad a big hug.

Overall, this book was really good. My issues above are nothing against the book at all. It’s just more of a person issue of my expectations.

I really wish the book could be a bit longer, actually. There was so much great content and the author could really push so many things in this just a step further. After the drama of this book comes to the climax, I really wish there was more to the fall-out/recovery. But the book is still worth the read.

Friday, August 7, 2015

Forgive My Fins Review

This time, I’m going to review Forgive My Fins by: Tera Lynn Childs.
Lily Sanderson is not your typically teenage girl crushing on the popular swimmer boy, Brody. She’s also a mermaid. Through a few unfortunate circumstances, she ends up bonding with her neighbor and tormentor, Quince. For mermaids, bonding is for life, unless broken before the next lunar cycle. Lily doesn’t waste a moment in trying to get the bond broken, but is it what she actually wants?

When buying books I don’t know much about, I’ve started to read the reviews others have posted. There were a decent amount of people that didn’t like the book, but I decided to buy it anyways because the book was on sale for $1.99. I really regret it.

There was definitely a lot of good things in this book. I loved how the author incorporated the sea slang into the book. I found the mermaid mythology to be really interesting and I liked that the author actually clothed the mermaids (which is a very rare thing with mermaid stories).

My biggest issue with this book is Lilly, the main character. I can totally understand (and identify) with the whole ‘having a crush on a guy that you don’t really know,’ but Lilly took it too far. She couldn’t get over him at all and they barely spoke. I was so frustrated when she couldn’t even recognize her growing feelings for Quince. Any normal person wouldn’t be that stupid to brush them off so easily.

I really liked Quince’s character, but I wish there was a bit more of the real him showing through before they were bonded. Everyone could tell that he picked on her because he liked her, but I feel like his shift between annoying and caring was a bit abrupt. Once they were bonded, he seemed to just completely stop picking on her/joking about her and that is a bit uncharacteristic of him.

I really didn’t enjoy the ending. (Spoilers) Because of Lily’s stupidity, they get the separation and then she finally understands that she love him. It’s so aggravating that he was going to give up everything for her, but she just threw it back in his face. Then she goes back to land to be with him. Ugh! Could you not have just been a little less pig-headed and stayed bonded with him? I understand it’s sweet and all that she’s now sacrificing her world for his, but as of the synopsis of the next book, we see she has to go back. (End Spoilers)

I would really love to know how this all ends, mostly because I can’t really stand starting a series and not finishing it, but I really don’t want to have to sit through the rest of the books. I could feel myself just wishing this book got to the inevitable point – where Lily realized she loved Quince. Don’t get me wrong, the writing in this book was good, but I just couldn’t stand Lily’s frustrating emotions and stubbornness.