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Top Ten Books I Resolve To Read in 2013

2nd January 2013 By Julianne 3 Comments

This is my fourteenth Top Ten Tuesday post, though again it’s Wednesday! Top Ten Tuesday was created and is hosted by The Broke and the Bookish.

My TBR pile has nearly reached 200 so I’ve decided that it is time to cut it back and dedicate some serious time to reading the books I’ve already bought, been sent for review, or borrowed from the library. To spur me on I will be doing the TBR Double Dog Dare challenge, and definitely avoiding bookshops and the library until I’m done. With this in mind, I decided to include only books from my current TBR. There are loads of other books that I would like to read in 2013, but these |(and the remaining books from my Top Ten Unread Books On My Bookshelf) are current priorities that I am allowed to read before April! 🙂

Top Ten Books I Resolve To Read in 2013

1. The Sweet Far Thing, by Libba Bray – I got Rebel Angels last Christmas and read it in September, so I had to ask for The Sweet Far Thing this year. I hope to get it read ASAP so that I can read The Diviners soon! It is a massive book so it’s going to take quite a while, though I’m sure I’ll be addicted once I get started.

2. Kiki Strike: Inside the Shadow City, by Kirsten Miller – This series sounds really cool. Delinquent Girl Scouts? As a former Girl Guide (the British equivalent), how can I resist much longer?

3. The Diviners, by Libba Bray – I got a review copy last year and I was thrilled. It sounds fantastic and I love anything set in the 1920s.

4. God Save the Queen, by Kate Locke – Queen Victoria as a vampire, still ruling in 2012? It’s had mixed reviews but I love the premise.

5. White Cat, by Holly Black – I finished the Modern Faerie Tale trilogy in 2011 and I’ve had White Cat on my TBR for a while now.

6. Attack of the Theater People, by Marc Acito – I wanted to re-read How I Paid For College and review it before reading its sequel, but Attack of the Theater People has sat for so long on my TBR that maybe I should just review How I Paid For College from memory and get on with it. I do remember HIPFC quite well, after all.

7. Soulless, by Gail Carriger – I did pick this up this year and read a couple of pages but I had to abandon it for review copies I wanted to read.

8. 172 Hours on the Moon, by Johan Harstad – the Atom team raved about this but I haven’t seen many reviews! I must read my copy pronto.

9. The Classic Annotated Fairy Tales, by Maria Tatar – I love fairy tales! I bought this years ago! That’s all!

10. The New Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain, by Betty Edwards –  This is the odd one out on this list. I always wanted to be able to draw but was terrible at it. I’ve had this book from the library for ages but have yet to open it and give drawing another go.

Have you read any of these? Which should I start first?

Filed Under: Recommendation Lists Tagged With: book chat, books, Top Ten Tuesday

Book Review: The Iron King, by Julie Kagawa

28th December 2012 By Julianne 1 Comment

Photo by Eamon Curry

Meghan Chase is not particularly excited about her sixteenth birthday. She doesn’t expect her mother and stepfather to remember it, and she only has one friend at school, where she has never fitted in. But when she gets home, she finds her mother, bleeding and unconscious, and her brother Ethan is no longer the sweet, loving child that he has always been. She quickly learns that the child in the house is not Ethan at all but a faery changeling, and that she doesn’t have much time to find Ethan and bring him home.

I had read a couple of reviews of Julie Kagawa’s books before but only picked up The Iron King after I was given a copy at the MIRA Ink Blogger Party, where there was a live video call with Julie Kagawa. All the other bloggers there were thrilled and she came across as a really nice, friendly person so I knew I would have to read it before the year was out.

At first I found it a bit difficult to get into The Iron King. The story didn’t immediately grab me the way that Holly Black’s Modern Faerie Tale series did, and I found Meghan a little frustrating as she so easily accepted the meagre information that other characters gave to her about what she was getting herself into. I have the same problem with many books though – sometimes I find it unbelievable that a character wouldn’t just refuse to get involved without all the information I would deem necessary. I made a similar comment in my review of Tithe.

However, about halfway through I was hooked. I love the idea of the Iron Fey, created when human’s dreams shifted away from nature and towards science and technology. I also liked seeing how Meghan grew up and became a stronger person, and as the story that I think will be the centre of the series emerged, I felt myself settling in for the long haul!

I also really liked the contrast between the two love interests. Yes, there’s a triangle, and ordinarily I’d be yawning at the merest whiff of one but I don’t know which of the two guys I prefer yet! Also, it’s really not that important to the story, at least not in The Iron King, and I hope it remains somewhat of a background detail and stays out of the major plot in the future books.

The characterisation was best for Puck and Ash, but they stand out from the rest of the fey with their morally ambigious natures. It’s more difficult to figure them out than most of the other characters. I loved Grimalkin the best, however, and I hope he appears a lot in the other books. I can’t tell what he wants, ultimately, but he is very funny and clever.

I am going to largely reserve my judgement until I have read the rest of the series, but I enjoyed The Iron King and would recommend that you give it a try if you’ve enjoyed other stories set in the world of the fey.

If you’ve already read amd loved The Iron King, some suggestions for you:

  • Tithe, by Holly Black – another story about a faery changeling, but this time, the main character is the changeling
  •  Ash, by Malinda Lo – a retelling of Cinderella in which she makes a deal with a powerful fairy, rather than being saved by a fairy godmother

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: American, book review, books, faeries, fairies, fantasy, Julie Kagawa, love triangle, teen fiction, teenage, teenage fiction, YA, young adult

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Hi! I'm Julianne and this is my book blog. Click my picture to read more about me.

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