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You are here: Home / Archives for young adult

young adult

Book Review: White Cat, by Holly Black

18th January 2015 By Julianne 4 Comments

Cassel Sharpe, our narrator, is the youngest in his family of “curse workers” – magic users. But unlike his mother and brothers and grandfather, he doesn’t have any powers of his own. He’s an outsider, isolated from his family, but also from the rest of the world, brought up to be a conman, and hiding a very dark secret. He doesn’t know how or why, but he killed his best friend, Lila. His brothers have told him how they found him and protected him. His secret is safe, even from himself.

Cassel goes to a boarding school where he runs a betting pool to earn the money he needs to keep up appearances and to give himself a role to play in the school’s social life. But the whole charade, as well as Cassel, nearly comes tumbling down when he wakes one night on the roof of the school dorms, after a dream about a white cat. Forced to return to his family home, he slowly becomes aware that his brothers are still keeping secrets from him.

This is the second series by Holly Black that I’ve read. I had mixed feelings about the Modern Faerie Tale series, as you’ll see if you check out my reviews of Tithe and Valiant. I found it difficult to empathise with Kaye’s story in Tithe and found the pacing hard to get on with, but on the other hand I loved the worldbuilding and adored Valiant – it’s one of my favourite books.

I think that a lot of readers tried Tithe and didn’t like it, so they’ve never given Holly Black another chance, and that’s why I hadn’t heard a whole lot about White Cat before reading it.

But for me it was a must-read. What I loved most about the Modern Faerie Tales was that the teenaged characters seemed so real. They have messed-up families, and create powerful bonds with their friends. They do things that are morally dodgy. They are by turns selfish and selfless. Sometimes they run away from their problems, and other times they try desperately to put their wits to work and fix everything.

I was hoping to get more of the same with the Curse Workers series, and I was not the slightest bit disappointed.  I really, really loved this book. I loved it so much that a) I got the second book in this series and started reading it immediately afterwards and b) I lent my copy of White Cat to my boyfriend (he also really enjoyed it – it made his Best of 2014 Books list).

As much as I love the classic paranormal creatures, vampires, witches, fairies and the rest, it was totally refreshing to read about something new. The idea of ‘curse workers’ is brilliant and fits in so well with the criminal gangs that Cassel’s family are involved with. I also loved that the story revolves around several mysteries – Cassel is the perfect narrator for this, observant and critical. The writing is very well balanced between action and exposition.

I did guess some elements of the big reveal, but that didn’t stop me enjoying how it all played out and there were some parts that I didn’t anticipate.

In short, White Cat is amazing, Holly Black is underrated, and you should go read it now.

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: book review, Curse Workers, Holly Black, teenage fiction, urban fantasy, YA, young adult

Book Review: Adaptation, by Malinda Lo

11th September 2014 By Julianne Leave a Comment

Reese remembers the birds. She remembers when they attacked. She remembers the plane crashes. She remembers right up until the accident, and then nothing after. A month has passed when she wakes up in a government facility. She knows that something has changed her. Something has changed the world. She has survived when she should have died, and so has her debate partner, David. And no-one has any answers to give her – or do they?

I enjoyed Adaptation a lot, possibly even more than Ash, despite my eternal love of fairy tales. They are very different books, but they both have a powerfully atmospheric quality to them. Adaptation is particularly interesting because it combines this atmosphere with a science-fiction story that has a massive mystery at its heart.

The world of Adaptation is verging on apocalyptic. After the birds, the public doesn’t know what is going on. They are scared. They make up strange theories. Some of them try to investigate. Others trust the authorities, desperately hoping for protection. Reese doesn’t know whether to cling to everything that she knows as normal, or to plunge headlong into this strange new chaos.

Of course, having read ‘The Birds’ by Daphne du Maurier, and watched Hitchcock’s The Birds, I could not help but be reminded of them when reading Adaptation, which made it even creepier for me.

I loved the love triangle in Adaptation, despite not usually being a fan of them. Typically, they persist because the main character is trying to decide which love interest s/he is more attracted to or which would be the better choice, but in Adaptation the romantic options represent something more. They indicate two different sides of Reese; two different paths she could take. But at the same time, they are not just symbols, they are interesting characters in their own right who are just as entangled in the plot and the mysteries of the story as she is. I thought I knew which of the two I preferred, part way through the book, but by the end I was fascinated by both of them and I am looking forward to learning more in the sequel, Inheritance.

I also liked all the other characters, from the mysterious figures at the government facility to Reese’s mother, who stands up for her daughter and Gets Things Done.

I think that this might be a bit of a Marmite book because of the pacing. From the synopsis you might expect a thriller, and this does have some exciting scenes where I was reading on the edge of my seat/bed, desperate to find out what was going to happen. However, it was also quite a slow burner. I liked this, because it built up the atmosphere and it kept me guessing, but other readers might not.

I am looking forward to reading the sequels – the novella, Natural Selection and the full-length novel, Inheritance. Many thanks to Hodder Children’s Books for allowing me to read the ebook of Adaptation via NetGalley.

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: book review, Malinda Lo, science fiction, 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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