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You are here: Home / Archives for weird unpopular rebels

weird unpopular rebels

Book Review: Ironside, by Holly Black

5th December 2011 By Julianne Leave a Comment

Photo by Jon Mountjoy

This book is the third in a trilogy and therefore this review will inevitably contain spoilers for the first book, Tithe, and the second, Valiant.

On the darkest day of winter, Roiben will be crowned King of the Unseelie Court, and as terrible and terrifying as the Unseelie Court can be, Kaye can’t resist going down to celebrate. Kaye’s known that she is a faerie for a few months now, but the ways of the fey, especially the court customs, are mostly a mystery to her.

Just as they are to Cornelius Stone, who is still recovering from his sister’s death and the time he spent in the Unseelie Court as the human pet of the former queen’s knight, and later king, Nephamael. He’s desperate to find out how to protect himself from the fey, so that they can never hurt him or his family again.

But whilst Corny is nervous and prepared, Kaye is rash and wild, and her official declaration of love to Roiben ends with her being given an impossible quest – to find a faerie that can lie. No such creature exists, and so Kaye is forbidden from even speaking to Roiben – a task that proves increasingly difficult as Silarial, Queen of the Seelie Court, is still determined to win the war and rule over Unseelie.

My favourite sequels are those that make me feel like I’m slipping comfortably into a familiar world, and I definitely felt that when I read the first few pages of Ironside. It’s difficult to comment on the characterisation and world-building, because most of the characters and many of the locations were introduced in Tithe and Valiant, and Ironside provides more of the same atmosphere. I liked Kaye better, but I still didn’t feel that I understood her as much as I understood Corny and Val. However, the plot was fantastic. It was a fun and satisfying conclusion to the trilogy of Modern Faerie Tales, and I was gripped the whole way through.

Although this series had a shaky start, the engrossing world, dark elements, and plot drew me in and kept me interested. I can see why these books, particularly the first one, have had mixed reviews, but if you like dark fantasy, and don’t mind teenagers doing things that many adults would disapprove of, I would recommend the Modern Faerie Tales. I’m really looking forward to reading more from Holly Black in the future.

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: American, book review, books, dark fantasy, faeries, fairies, fantasy, Holly Black, teen fiction, teenage, teenage fiction, weird unpopular rebels, YA, young adult

Book Review: Valiant, by Holly Black

25th November 2011 By Julianne Leave a Comment

Photo by cosmicautumn

This book is the second in a trilogy and therefore this review may contain spoilers for the first book, Tithe.

Val has a quick temper and a tendency to respond to insults violently, but when she walks in on the worst of all insults, and sees her boyfriend and her mother kissing and getting undressed, all she can think to do is get away. She goes to the hockey game that was supposed to be a date, and then she doesn’t go back. Homeless in New York City, she meets friendly, strange Lolli, and Dave, her infatuated friend. Lolli is immediately welcoming, Dave is more reluctant, and his brother, Luis, is against Val’s presence from the start. Luis is guarding a secret, one it turns out Lolli is all too happy to blab – Luis can see faeries, and works running errands for one, a troll. Lolli is addicted to a mysterious faerie drug, and also all too happy to lead Val into the troll’s lair…

The troll, Ravus, is an exile from the Seelie court, which is how Valiant ties in with Tithe, and it does so beautifully, introducing a vivid new cast of characters, and including brief appearances from Kaye, Roiben and Silarial. The story is tightly focused around Val and her development, which is realistic and appropriately paced, but it also firmly advances the plot of the trilogy.

Like Tithe, Valiant is laden with atmosphere. Yet in terms of build up, Valiant is the opposite of Tithe. I felt it was almost too slow to get going into the plot, although I could appreciate the proper introduction that we got to Val’s character, after the rush that was Tithe and my discomfort with Kaye’s characterisation. I think that the pacing and characterisation in general were much better than in Tithe. The motivations of the characters were definitely clearer.

Another way in which Valiant is dramatically different to Tithe is that whereas Kaye and Roiben’s romance had a bit of a whiff of the ol’ insta-love about it, the romance that develops in Valiant is more like slowly burning lust that turns into love. I also liked that the romance wasn’t the whole of the plot, in fact most of the time there wasn’t any romance, as Val was focused on trying to avoid her previous life. I’m trying not to spoil the plot but Valiant is billed as a retelling of Beauty and the Beast and it’s the only retelling of Beauty and the Beast I have liked thus far, being devoid of Stockholm Syndrome, which I can’t stand. Give me insta-love any day of the week over Stockholm Syndrome. Or better yet, give me Valiant, which has neither. Hurrah.

On the subject of plot – it was totally gripping, I loved it! Valiant had me doing something I hadn’t done in a long time – staying up late to finish the book! I just could not bear to consider sleep until it was done. All in all, I thought Valiant was a brilliant second book, it left me desperate to read Ironside and find out what happened to our motley heroes in the end.

Valiant is definitely a book for older teens – it’s got swearing, sex, and the consumption of fairy drugs. Plus plenty of other stuff some parents may disapprove of, like teenagers with dyed hair and piercings. To me, all this stuff makes a book a must-read, but your mileage may vary…

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: American, book review, books, dark fantasy, faeries, fairies, fantasy, Holly Black, teen fiction, teenage, teenage fiction, weird unpopular rebels, 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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