Sunday, December 1, 2013
Review of Circle of Death (Damask Circle #2)
Circle of Death, the second installment of the Damask Circle series, is a bit of a step up from the first, but with a great deal of similarities. The main characters, Doyle and Kirby, are similar to Maddie and Jon in many ways. Doyle is a bit of a rogue, but more smitten and more committed than Kirby to a budding romance. Very similar to Jon's character. Kirby is afraid of her power as Maddie was and had also killed with it, making her reluctant to use it again. It seems she, like Maddie, used her power to protect herself and other young girls from an abuser.
The story seemed a bit smoother than Circle of Fire. The romance angle still far-fetched, but the ending was a lot less ridiculous. We also got to learn a bit more about what the Damask Circle actually is in this book. Still not terribly well crafted, as was my complaint from the first book. Mariel, the bad guy, wasn't very scary. Certainly less so than the abundant evil creatures in this story, eating brains and the like. Better, but not great.
ARC provided by Netgalley
Review of Tie Me Down by Tracy Wolff
I love a good sexy book. The more hard-core loving, the better. I am not a fan of the romance genre, per se, but I will read a book that has a romantic story line, especially if there is a hard-edged story to go along with it. Unfortunately, this story did not fit the bill for me. The police procedural story line was weak at best, and almost seemed written as an afterthought. That would have been ok with me if the sex story line had done the job. That part started out fine, although I thought it a bit weird that the first sex scene was only a few pages into the book. There was absolutely no build up between the characters. No sexual tension, except the tension the author told us was there between the characters. That also might have been ok, except that every time these two had sex, whatever they experienced was the "hardest" or "wettest" or "strongest" they had ever experienced sex or their body parts. After a while, when the author wrote this EVERY SINGLE TIME the characters had sex, it got a little ridiculous. This book just didn't do it for me.
ARC provided by Netgalley
Circle of Fire (Damask Circle #1)
This is clearly a first book. I am a big fan of Keri Arthur, having burned through the Riley Jensen series and eagerly reading the Risa Jones series as well. This book isn't half as compelling as all of those others. For starters, this is the first in the series of The Damask Circle. Well. Having read this book, I don't have the faintest clue what the Damask Circle is, does or represents. There is exactly one sentence in the story referring to what they are, and we don't actually meet any of their members, other than Jon.
So let's talk about Jon. We don't actually learn anything about him either, other than the fact that he's a hawk shifter and hunts evil magic users. And yet Maddie, a weak character herself, takes him back at the end, after an 18 month absence, with no reluctance at all. He's not so bad as a romantic lead, or at least he has potential but it isn't realized in the story. Maybe the comparison isn't fair, but he's no Quinn.
As for Maddie, maybe I'm just used to kick-ass women like Riley and Risa, who are both more complicated and more interesting than Maddie. Maddie at least had the backstory that Jon was lacking, but one that didn't add much to the story, except as a vehicle for her constant terror.
I also found Eleanor, the "bad guy", to be a cardboard cut-out when compared to characters like Madeline Hunter and quite a few others from Arthur's other stories.
I felt almost as though these books were a framework, one that the author could have easily enhanced with some of the complicated plot points or ideas that she has previously.
The one thing I did enjoy in this story was the lack of vampires that have become so ubiquitous in UF novels. I liked the fire starter angle, as well as a non-wolf shifter. For those reasons, I think it's possible this series might have some potential. I will try the next book in the series and hope for the best.
ARC provided by NetGalley
The Cleansing by Sam Kates
The Cleansing is an interesting tale with a very of-the-moment theme: the Doomsday Virus. Throw in some thousands-of-years old aliens, a few cultural references, and you've got one heck of an action story. I found it fascinating that "the people" believe themselves to be above and better than humans, who they refer to as drones, but that their behavior is as human as you can get. Some, like both Milandra and Peter, are sympathetic to the human cause, even after spending thousands of years watching us commit all manner of violent acts on each other. Others, like Simone and Troy, are cruel, violent and epitomize the very worst of humanity while still feeling superior.
I enjoyed how the author made us guess who was going to be a "good guy" (for lack of a better word), and who a "bad guy". There were some interesting surprises along the way, here, which added to the originality and excitement of the story. In all, I throughly enjoyed his book.
ARC copy provided by Netgalley
Thursday, August 2, 2012
Sunday, July 29, 2012
A Review of Gone Girl by Gillian Flynn
In reading Gone Girl, by Gillian Flynn, I was struck by several things. This book began clearly, as a whodunit, and ended as a descent into madness, for virtually all of the characters. It was uneven for this reason and didn't appear to ever get into a smooth rhythm. It was also a book of pure hate, not the least of which is a long series of characters (not all of them men) who are both obvious and subtle misogynists.
The two main characters, Nick and Amy, married five years, are about to celebrate their fifth anniversary when Amy disappears. It seems, for this first part of the book, that Nick may have had something to do with it.
However, at about 1/3 of the way through, we begin to see who Amy really is, and who Nick really is as well. These two are the most self-aggrandizing, vitriolic, hate-spewing people on the planet. Amy is ridiculous. Nobody, including her child-psychologist parents, seems to have any idea that she displays clear signs of sociopathy. People seem to "hurt themselves" around her all the time, but they just want to be her or be loved by her, or so Amy says, and her parents buy it every time. They are the few characters who aren't painted as hating women, but they certainly seem to care less for their child than the books they write about her life and make a living from.
Aside from this, both Amy and Nick seem to think all women are either smart, but nasty bitches or just flat-out dumb. There was some clear indication that the author, a Midwesterner, seems to find the stereotype about New Yorkers thinking Midwesterners are dumb rubes to be true.
I didn't care much for this story. It was too frustrating to read about innocent characters getting framed or hurt over and over, and the ending was absurd.
I did think the concept was interesting, but the execution was unpleasant and not at all fun to read. I would not recommend this book.
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