Showing posts with label lauren oliver. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lauren oliver. Show all posts

Sunday, 4 October 2015

The Unreadables

01:03:00 0
Warning: Spoilers! (duh.)

Now, we've all been there. You start a book, sometimes by an author you know and love...then it sucks. As a determined reader I try, honestly I try but sometimes whatever is wrong with the book gets in the way. Therefore in order to relieve myself of guilt for denying these books a review, here are a few of the books I was unable to finish and a few reasons why.

The Vanishing Girls by Lauren Oliver




This book gives me a lot of sadness. I have loved every book Lauren Oliver has written but this book was just not up to scratch. Even the blurb seemed right up my street - a little mystery, sisterly relationships and a terrible trauma. Oooh the tension. It could have been something amazing, but if it was, I never got to it.

I had to give up at a hundred pages. The tension that was promised was not delivered and  the pacing was so slow I knew it was ending toward a big finish, but as they say it isn't the ending that matters, its the journey -though an ending does help. So if you like a slow build to a shocking end, I'm sure you'll love this book but for me, Panic was such an outstanding novel that Vanishing Girls was a lot slower and less touching and therefore disappointing.

The Game of Love and Death by Martha Brockenbourgh

That title, it's beautiful, no wonder I bought this right? Even the synopsis Love and Death placing bets on two humans. Will they die or will they choose love. Oh it's exciting! Or I thought it would be. Love and Death essentially choose two humans of whom, if they fall in love it could cause disaster. They make them, soulmates shall we say. Flora and Henry are on either side of racial segregation. This gave me chills, oooh period drama, oohh forbidden love. But then Martha Brockenbourgh obviously felt very uncomfortable with her subject matter. Racist's were very polite and none of them even got near to using the dreaded N word. For a world that is so disgusted by dark skin at this time, a fact the author feels the need to emphasize. There is also the fact, the author refuses to tell the audience that Flora is coloured - we'll just have her play  jazz music and have people look at her a bit funny, that should do it.


As a writer, I honestly believe that if you are trying to comment on society, a time that was wrong, political statement etc. You have to go for it. Don't be afraid to offend people because you will. The readers knows that anything you write isn't necessarily how you feel. You are not your characters and that was the reason, I could not continue with this book.

Take back the Skies by Lucy Saxon



Lucy Saxon, cool cosplayer, a friend with someone I know. How I wish I'd loved this, but I didn't. I was thinking this would be Arya goes off alone in Game of Thrones but this book was very young. It seemed like it was for a much younger audience than it was advertised for. The main character is about fourteen which is immediately a dead giveaway. There are many reasons to stop a book, but at one point when you realise a series isn't for you. I think it's brave to put it down and move onto different things.


This book is also one of those series in which each book follows a different character and I really didn't want to invest in a character and then lose them. I just can't set myself up for that kind of hurt (wipes eyes away dramatically).

So there are a few of the books I have been unable to finish. I have a whole bookshelf on Goodreads dedicated to them, so if that sounds interesting you can find that here. 

If not I would love to hear about books you've read and forced to put down. It would surely help with my own book guilt. And don't be afraid to put down your books, there's always more round the corner and it won't be going anywhere.

Happy Reading.
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Wednesday, 29 October 2014

Panic by Lauren Oliver

02:42:00 0
Warning: Spoilers! (Duh.) 

Heather never thought she would compete in Panic, a legendary game played by graduating seniors, where the stakes are high and the payoff is even higher. She’d never thought of herself as fearless, the kind of person who would fight to stand out. But when she finds something, and someone, to fight for, she will discover that she is braver than she ever thought.

Dodge has never been afraid of Panic. His secret will fuel him, and get him all the way through the game, he’s sure of it. But what he doesn't know is that he’s not the only one with a secret. Everyone has something to play for.

For Heather and Dodge, the game will bring new alliances, unexpected revelations, and the possibility of first love for each of them—and the knowledge that sometimes the very things we fear are those we need the most.



After the Delirium series I really didn't know what to expect from this book. The blurb seemed incredibly unrealistic and I couldn't figure out how it would work, so I put off reading it. This, makes me an idiot.

This book was incredible. Heather is this wonderfully flawed and likeable character. She's smart and determined but also kind of a pushover and obsessed with some asshole who clearly doesn't care about her. But I was rooting for her. She suddenly gave a huge middle finger to the world and just fearlessly went for it. It was like no matter what was thrown at her she just did it, and that doesn't even relate simply to the game Panic.

Her relationship with her sister was beautiful, the neglectful mother and them becoming homeless was heartbreaking because it was written so realistically. It wasn't fanciful or like everyone would be able to tell because nobody guessed, most had no idea and I loved it. 

Bishop, oh Bishop. I knew immediately e was a judge, which was disappointing because I would have liked a big gasp moment, which I got, but we'll get to that. He was incredibly charming and after Heather being all with Matt I mean, I just loved him. I understood his journey. 

Dodge was a tricky one for me, there were so many things to like, his love for his sister, his love for Nat, his disposition but he was also a nutcase, he tried to kill someone and almost got Heather killed in the process, when Nat gave Heather his keys - that was my GASP moment! I was so terrified. This book had me physically reacting, it was so immersive. 

Nat however, hated her. I thought she was whiny and weak and led people on. She didn't seem to understand the idea of consequences and there isn't really any character development for her. She was this kind of steady annoyance and it wasn't going to change. 



The actual game of Panic I found very interesting, in the book it actually made sense which I didn't expect. A secret group of seniors plan it behind the back of authority. It worked, I mean I wasn't sure what to expect but it worked. 

Overall my favourite thing was the message. Messages can be preachy in books so authors have to be careful. But Lauren Oliver succeeded in creating this moment in which we know things are okay now and they won't be okay forever  but when things aren't okay, everyone will  stand together nonetheless. It was really lovely. Really nice ending, incredibly peaceful and I put down the book and felt resolved. 

Absolutely wonderful read.
Happy Reading. 

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Monday, 23 June 2014

Thoughts on Delirium Pilot

14:15:00 0
Warning: Spoilers! (duh.)

You can watch the Pilot all on the up and up here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XB0yfeJ2SGI

I, like many readers of the Delirium series, was left feeling unsatsified after Requiem. Therefore with the announcement of a Delirium based television show we were excited initially and then disappointed when the pilot wasn't picked up. However many many months later Hulu (kinda like Netflix only it's not Netflix) have picked up the pilot and it is now available to watch on the internet.

So I watched the trailer and my expectations flew, then I watched the episode and well, my notes consisted of:

Awkward Dialogue
INSTA-LOVE!
Kiss and Declaration of Love 19 minutes in.
Anti-climactic reveal *snore*
Party raid scene was incredible.
Casting is excellent
Julian is delightful but I do not ship him and Hana. YUCK!
Blaze through a lot of info every quickly
Too contemporary, doesn't seem realistic.


I may have been a bit harsh but I studied Media so naturally, I'm aggressively judgmental. I feel like this Pilot will make zero sense if you haven't read the book. The pacing of this episode is awful, it's really awfully written. I can describe it through use of The Vampire Diaries. In the Pilot we get a hint that he is a Vampire and that they will be in love, but none of that happens until later in the series, she doesn't find out and they don't have  INSTA-LOVE just to get on with there own rewrite all in the first episode. That pilot enjoyed the journey.

This Pilot was the entire first book, leaving characters and plots underdeveloped. A 300 page book in 43:20 minutes just makes it sloppy. There is so much possibility and fun to be had with this series, she definitely shouldn't have  crossed the wall, fallen in love with Alex then watch him die all in 1 episode, that actually makes me angry because there is more to it, development, moments that you yearn for when you read the book.

If I was Lauren Oliver I would be furious. This undermined everything that happened in the book to make way for there ow storyline. I mean you want to add to it and twist it go ahead. TVD didn't exactly stick to the book narrative but it was still TVD at it's core and in fact it was better.

I JUST CANNOT EVEN PUT INTO WORDS MY FRUSTRATION RIGHT NOW! Dammit Delirium.


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