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You are here: Home / Archives for review

review

Book Review: Blood and Chocolate, by Annette Curtis Klause

18th October 2015 By Julianne Leave a Comment

Vivian is loup-garou, a child of the Moon, a werewolf, and she loves it. She relishes the thrill of the change, delights in running through the forest in the dark, feeling powerful and beautiful. She used to love being part of the pack, as well, until one of them killed a human, and vigilantes burned down their home, killing Vivian’s father, the leader of the pack.

Now they have moved to a town, leaving their old lives and hopefully their fears behind. Vivian feels isolated and lonely. She wants friends. So when she finds a poem about werewolves in the school magazine, she is intrigued. The writer is human, but could he be the one to truly understand her? Will they fall in love?

Blood and Chocolate was first published in 1997, but for the most part it doesn’t feel that dated. The review quote from Publishers Weekly on the front of my copy calls it ‘as addictive as chocolate’ and I have to agree, I really struggled to put it down! Vivian is a teenage girl with no self-esteem problems at all – she’s hot and she knows it. She’s very aware of her own sexuality and desire, and she sets out to seduce Aiden, the poem’s writer, rather than waiting to be approached. She also pays a lot of attention to the politics of the werewolf pack, and her own role in the group – her confidence is tempered by her fear that it was her fault that her father died.

Whenever she’s rejected or anyone attempts to order her about, she’s angry and defiant. On the other hand, she desperately wants peace and longs to be able to run free with the pack without worrying that there is a killer in their midst or that they will be hunted by humans. These internal conflicts drive the story and make Vivian a compelling and unusual protagonist.

This novel is by no means perfect. It’s hard to know what the author is trying to say about the gender politics of the pack for most of the novel, and ultimately a lot of those issues are unresolved. I guessed who the killer was before it was revealed.  I strongly disliked the ending and the resolution to the romantic storyline.

But I loved the energy throughout, and Vivian’s refreshing confidence. I would recommend Blood and Chocolate with the caveat that there may be aspects of it that you really hate, but that overall it’s very interesting. Definitely a book I want to discuss with other people.

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: Annette Curtis Klause, book review, review, teenage fiction, werewolves, wolves, YA, young adult

Book Review: Killing the Dead, by Marcus Sedgwick

8th October 2015 By Julianne Leave a Comment

I hadn’t read a World Book Day book in ages. I may have only read one World Book Day book previously – Shop Dead by Kate Cann, which was one of the books in 2001. It’s about a girl who is obsessed with shopping and the way she looks, told from the point of view of a guy who takes her on a date. Kate Cann is amazing at writing teenage boys. I remember my sister got it with her voucher (I invariably forgot to use mine). Shop Dead is pretty dark, as is Killing the Dead.

Apparently Killing the Dead has some relationship with The Ghosts of Heaven, one of Marcus Sedgwick’s full length novels, or at least they both heavily feature spirals. I didn’t want to look into it too much in case of spoilers. I did enjoy Killing the Dead so I’m very intrigued by this and will have to give The Ghosts of Heaven a go.

At first Killing the Dead seemed like an odd choice for a World Book Day book. It’s historical fiction, set in an American all-girls boarding school in 1961. I’ve always thought of World Book Day books as being aimed at reluctant readers, and the setting and time period won’t be familiar to most teenagers, as you learn almost nothing about the Sixties at school. But then it got really dark. If there is one thing I believe about teenagers’ reading preferences, it’s that they love it when things get dark. I did. I still do.



Killing the Dead is set during the aftermath of the death of a schoolgirl, Isobel, and in the run-up to the school’s annual Procession Day. We see this time from the perspective of different characters, slowly building up a picture of what Isobel was like and what might have happened. Then there’s a twist that contradicts this picture and our assumptions.

I thought that both the build-up and the twist were very well done. It’s a very short book – 117 pages of quite large type – and Marcus Sedgwick doesn’t have a lot of space for characterisation but I found almost all the characters well-drawn and easy to imagine. There were two exceptions. Isobel is a mystery. Even when we learn what happened, she maintains some mystery, but this seems appropriate – she is, after all, dead. Margot, another schoolgirl, the new Procession Queen, apparently haunted by Isobel’s ghost, is also a mystery, but it felt less like she should be. Her personality isn’t really detailed until her role in Isobel’s death is explained, which works for preserving the mystery, but as I was reading the chapters in the run up to the reveal I felt like I should have more of a handle on her character than I did. I couldn’t really imagine what kind of girl she was and why she did things. I was left trying to fill in those gaps for myself without much to go on.

I’d love to discuss Killing the Dead so please let me know what you thought in the comments or tweet me!

 

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: book review, Marcus Sedgwick, novella, review, short story, teenage fiction, world book day, 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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