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You are here: Home / Archives for teen fiction

teen fiction

Book Review: Catching Fire, by Suzanne Collins

15th July 2012 By Julianne Leave a Comment

This book is the second in a trilogy and therefore this review will inevitably contain spoilers for the first book, The Hunger Games. In the next paragraph below the picture! So if you haven’t read it or watched the film and want to without spoiling the end, stop reading this blog post now. Seriously!

 

Photo by Dave Stokes

So Katniss and Peeta have won the 74th Hunger Games and returned home to District Twelve, where they now live in comparative luxury in the mansions reserved for victors. Whilst her sister and mother enjoy their new surroundings, Katniss misses the comparative freedom of her old life – hunting with Gale in particular. The Victory Tour is approaching and Katniss knows she will have to start pretending to be madly in love with Peeta again, otherwise all their lives will be at risk. The stakes become even higher when she hears about  possible rebellions in other districts, and there is also the approaching Quarter Quell to worry about – a special version of the Hunger Games that takes place every twenty-five years.

Some readers have said that they didn’t enjoy Catching Fire as much as The Hunger Games. Not me! I loved it. I really liked how the plot developed and enjoyed trying to work out what was going on. However, I can see where they’re coming from in that there are a lot of similar scenes to the first book, and then not much is revealed until the end. You finally find out what’s going on at the end of the book but then of course it’s the end of the book! Argh. I wouldn’t say Catching Fire is filler as it does advance the plot and characterisation, but if I’d read these books when they were originally published, and didn’t have access to Mockingjay straight away, I would have been really frustrated.

I think the characterisation was better in Catching Fire than in The Hunger Games, simply because Katniss spends more time with more other people. In the first book, she spent most of her time in the arena, alone, which was fantastic for setting her up as a self-reliant, clever individual, but we didn’t really get to know the other tributes, or her family and friends. I really liked seeing how Katniss’ relationships with the other characters developed in Catching Fire, slow as that development might be, and finished absolutely thrilled about the prospect of the final book, Mockingjay.


Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: book review, books, dystopia, review, Suzanne Collins, teen fiction, teenage, teenage fiction, The Hunger Games, thriller, YA, young adult

Book Review: Bunheads, by Sophie Flack

15th June 2012 By Julianne Leave a Comment

Photo by Ollie Crafoord

Nineteen year old Hannah has devoted almost her entire life so far to dancing. Now a member of the corps de ballet at the Manhattan Ballet, she spends her nights onstage and her days exercising and practicing in the hopes of becoming an ever better dancer. She dreams of being selected for a solo role – the first step on the path to promotion.

But then she meets Jacob, a cute boy and a ‘pedestrian’ – a non-dancer. As Hannah spends time with him, outside the theatre, she starts to wonder if she is really cut out to be as dedicated a dancer as she planned.

I was really excited about reading Bunheads for three reasons. Firstly, I was fascinated by ballet when I was a child – mostly because of the costumes. Secondly, the protagonist is nineteen, which is unusually old for teen/young adult fiction. Finally, the blurb mentions that Jacob plays guitar and I just can’t resist cute fictional musicians.

I wasn’t disappointed by Bunheads, though it wasn’t quite what I expected. The ballet scenes definitely lived up to my expectations, especially the dressing room scenes. I loved reading about the rivalries and tension between the dancers at different levels. The dancers have to deal with jealousy and the need to be competitive, even against their friends and other dancers they admire. I think that Sophie Flack chose a good range of personalities to include in Hannah’s dressing room cohort. I was really intrigued by wealthy Zoe and excitable, easily-panicked Daisy.

I learned several things about ballet that I didn’t know before, for instance, how dancers break in their pointe shoes, and that was very cool.

I also really liked the way that Hannah developed as a character and progression toward the decision she makes in the end. I had been a little bit afraid, before I started reading Bunheads, that it would be a story about a woman who gives up her career for romance (there are far too many of those going around), but my fears were not realised. In fact – and this is where my expectations divulged from what the novel delivered – the romance wasn’t that big of a factor in Hannah’s mind or in the plot. Jacob is the one that gives Hannah the idea that maybe she’s missing out on something, but she doesn’t do what she does for him, she does it for herself. I was pleased with that.

The only thing I found a little out of place was that although supposedly Hannah has little time for activities outside of ballet, she does a fair bit of designer-name-dropping and says that she found particular outfits in a thrift store. She doesn’t mention fashion as being one of her interests, yet the inclusion of these details suggests that it is. This is only a minor niggle though and I probably only noticed it because I’m into clothes myself and know how time consuming ‘thrifting’ (as they call it in the US of A) can be.

I would recommend Bunheads to anyone who’s ever had an interest in dance. It’s not a novel that revolves around romance but I’m sure plenty of readers would really like Jacob. I’m really intrigued to find out what Sophie Flack writes about next, especially as it seems like Bunheads was at least partly autobiographical!

Thank you to Atom Books for providing me with a review copy.

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: American, ballet, book review, contemporary, dance, review, Sophie Flack, teen fiction, teenage, teenage fiction, theatre, 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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