Showing posts with label Kathy Dawson Books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kathy Dawson Books. Show all posts

Friday, October 28, 2016

The #FridayReads Review (10/28/16)



Welcome to The #FridayReads Review, a regular Friday segment where I share what I've been reading the past week, and what I'm planning to read next! Want to join the Friday fun? Post your own #FridayReads Review and leave the link in the Comments below, or just Comment with what you've been reading!


>> CURRENTLY READING <<
The Continent (The Continent, #1)
The Continent by Keira Drake (ARC)
This sounded like just my sort of read so I've been excited to get to it, but I'm two chapters in and so far not really impressed. A lot of people have really loved it though, so I'm hoping it gets better!



>> DNF <<
Trouble Is a Friend of Mine (Trouble, #1)
Trouble is a Friend of Mine by Stephanie Tromly (ARC)
DNF at Chapter 4. There's something off about the writing for me that makes it harder to follow, I'm not crazy about the characters or setting, and I'm not interested in the slightly creepy mystery plot (granted I'm not much for mystery plots in general). Sad this didn't work out but going to pass.


>> JUST FINISHED <<
Glitter
Glitter by Aprilynne Pike (ARC)
Stars. A near-future suspense with lots of intrigue, tension, and historical glamour. Review to come!


>> [POSSIBLY] READING NEXT <<
(subject to change with my ever-shifting reading whims)
Not Lives Vol. 3
Not Lives vol. 3 by Wataru Karasuma (PBK)
I really enjoyed the first two volumes so I'm excited to continue the series!


So what are you reading this week?

Friday, October 21, 2016

The #FridayReads Review (10/21/16)



Welcome to The #FridayReads Review, a regular Friday segment where I share what I've been reading the past week, and what I'm planning to read next! Want to join the Friday fun? Post your own #FridayReads Review and leave the link in the Comments below, or just Comment with what you've been reading!


>> CURRENTLY READING <<
Glitter
Glitter by Aprilynne Pike (ARC)
I haven't felt much like reading novels the past week or two (it happens sometimes), but with the launch party this coming Tuesday I couldn't put this beauty off any longer! So far it's been an easy and engaging read, although I occasionally find myself staring at the gorgeous cover and forgetting to actually read the book. ;)


>> JUST FINISHED <<
Handa-kun 1 (Handa-kun, #1)
Handa-kun vol. 1 by Satsuki Yoshino (PBK)
Stars. I've been really enjoying the Barakamon series, but in this prequel series teenage Handa's gloomy and defeatist demeanor is off-putting for me. While the situations and other characters are amusing, he is not. Read the first two chapters and then skimmed the rest; will sadly not continue the series.


>> [POSSIBLY] READING NEXT <<
(subject to change with my ever-shifting reading whims)
Trouble Is a Friend of Mine (Trouble, #1)
Trouble is a Friend of Mine by Stephanie Tromly (ARC)
I've been seeing ARCs of the sequel around a lot lately so it's probably about time I gave it a try! I've heard good things.


So what are you reading this week?

Monday, August 17, 2015

Review: The Accident Season (Moira Fowley-Doyle)

The Accident Season
Title: The Accident Season
Series: standalone
Author: Moira Fowley-Doyle (site)
Publisher: Kathy Dawson Books
Release Date: August 18, 2015
Genre: Young Adult Paranormal Contemporary Mystery
Told: First Person (Cara), Present Tense
Content Rating: Older Teen (heavy teen drinking & smoking & partying, minor drugs, hinted & flashback child abuse (probably sexual) and cutting and attempted suicide, adult abuse, sensuality, some language, violence)
Format Read: ARC (publisher)
Find OnGoodreads
Purchase OnAmazon | B&N | Book Depository
Summary:

Every October Cara and her family become inexplicably and unavoidably accident-prone. Some years it's bad, like the season when her father died, and some years it's just a lot of cuts and scrapes. This accident season—when Cara, her ex-stepbrother, Sam, and her best friend, Bea, are 17—is going to be a bad one. But not for the reasons they think.

Cara is about to learn that not all the scars left by the accident season are physical: There's a long-hidden family secret underneath the bumps and bruises. This is the year Cara will finally fall desperately in love, when she'll start discovering the painful truth about the adults in her life, and when she'll uncover the dark origins of the accident season—whether she's ready or not.



*          *          *

Review copy provided by publisher for an honest review. Thank you, Penguin!


Three Words: Spooky. Lyrical. Heavy.

I must start off by saying this was not my kind of read. I like my stories on the lighter side and shy away from heavy, depressing content, and this was most definitely a heavy and depressing story. However, it was also highly imaginative and somewhat beautiful, and I think it might prove a rather breathtaking read for those who enjoy darker contemporary stories with paranormal elements.

The Story

This book was essentially three stories in one: a mystery, a ghost story, and a romance that wove together seamlessly even as they flowed separately.

The mystery was one of accidents and tragedies, secrets and highly troubled emotions. It was a crumbling house of abuse and trauma and loss and neglect, and explored how people cope differently with things they can't handle or accept with love, obsession, dismissal, sometimes even more of the same. Thankfully most of the abuse was compressed into half-remembered memories and vague accounts or embellished with wild imaginings, but the raw emotions still punched through. It was rather depressing and a bit disturbing, but the revelations saw the onset of healing.

The ghost story was strange but unique with a confusing beginning, surreal end, and spooky and magical journey between. While its logic made little sense overall, it was haunting and bewitching and the best part of the book for me.

The romance focused not on one relationship but several that were diverse and passionate and poignant and complicated. They were struggles of the heart and the soul and the mind and transcended family and gender and convention. All the love proved rather messy and painful, but blessedly a little peace was found in the end.

The Characters

Thanks to their secret traumas and passions, all the characters in this book (but especially the teens) were seriously messed up. To cope, the teens smoked, drank, partied, took crazy risks and did crazy things. Once the secrets began unfolding though it was harder to fault their behavior, and once it was over I really couldn't blame them for continuing well past the final page. Cara was an imaginative but disorienting narrator due to her otherworldly visions and fondness for liquor, but as the most innocent of mind and soul she was the best point of view character for the tale and her fanciful imaginings added a dark and heady magic to the story.

The Writing

The writing was vivid and disorienting, lyrical and disjointed. Sometimes it was a little too much, but it flickered whimsical and creepy images through my mind. Time was sometimes a slippery thing, and with it movement - a moment could drag on for pages, only to jump from one place or time to another without warning in just a few words. It left me confused on several occasions as I found myself unsure where we were or what we were doing, but the disconcerting atmosphere also added to the mystery and magic when things seemingly appeared out of nowhere. Overall I was able to follow the story well enough, and rather enjoyed the shift and blend of reality and whimsy.

Conclusion: I picked up this book for the magic and got even more than I'd hoped for, but the heavy contemporary content weighed me down much more than I prefer. If it hadn't been for review I wouldn't have finished it, but now that it's over I guess I'm glad I saw it through, if only to answer the mystery of the accident season. Recommend for paranormal contemporary lovers who enjoy unusual, imaginative reads with heavier content.

Diverse Elements: Irish setting and characters; bisexual characters and romances

For Fans Of: heavy contemporaries with paranormal elements

Scribble Rating
3 of 5 Scribbles


Wednesday, December 31, 2014

2014 WoWs: Worth the Wait?

The Waiting On Wednesday meme hosted by Breaking the Spine is my favorite weekly feature to post. I do it rather religiously, really, and have barely missed a Wednesday since I started blogging seriously in January 2013. For those who don't know, WoW is the chance for avid readers to spotlight yet-to-be-released titles they are really excited to read. But when those titles finally release and we finally get to read them, were they actually worth the wait? Here's how my 2014 WoW picks measured up!


WORTH THE WAIT?

YES!!!
The Accidental Highwayman: Being the Tale of Kit Bristol, His Horse Midnight, a Mysterious Princess, and Sundry Magical Persons Besides (Adventures of Kit Bristol, #1)Invisible (The Twixt, #2)Relax, I'm a NinjaOn the FenceRebel Belle (Rebel Belle, #1)The Unbound (The Archived, #2)Split Second (Pivot Point #2)Erased (Altered, #2)Waistcoats & Weaponry (Finishing School, #3)This Shattered World (Starbound, #2)Illusions of Fate

The Accidental Highwayman by Ben Tripp (review)
Invisible by Dawn Metcalf (review)
Relax, I'm a Ninja by Natalie Whipple (review)
On the Fence by Kasie West (review)
Rebel Belle by Rachel Hawkins
The Unbound by Victoria Schwab (review)
Split Second by Kasie West (review)
Erased by Jennifer Rush (review)
Waistcoats & Weaponry by Gail Carriger (review coming soon)
This Shattered World by Kaufman & Spooner (review coming soon)
Illusions of Fate by Kiersten White (review coming soon)

IT WAS OKAY...
Time Killers: Kazue Kato Short Story CollectionThe Chapel WarsThe Paper Magician (The Paper Magician Trilogy, #1)

Time Killers by Kazue Kato (review)
The Chapel Wars by Lindsey Leavitt (review)
The Paper Magician by Charlie N. Holmberg (DNF review coming soon)


I WAITED FOR THIS?
Stitching SnowFool Me Twice (If Only . . . #1)The Winner's Curse (The Winner's Trilogy, #1)The Fourth Wish (The Art of Wishing #2)Fire & Flood (Fire & Flood, #1)Hungry

Stitching Snow by R.C. Lewis (review)
Fool Me Twice by Mandy Hubbard (review)
The Winner's Curse by Marie Rutkoski
The Fourth Wish by Lindsay Ribar (review)
Fire & Flood by Victoria Scott (review)
Hungry by H.A. Swain (review)


It's exciting just how many were worth the wait this year!! Although unfortunately there were quite a few disappointments as well, most of them serious disappointments (I'm still sniffling over The Fourth Wish)The rest of my 2014 WoW picks are either 2015 titles I have yet to get my hands on, or reads I just haven't been able to get to yet. So many reads, so little time...

So have you read any of these? What did you think of them? 



Thank you to Inspiring Insomnia for letting me swipe the idea for this post!

Monday, August 25, 2014

Review: The Fourth Wish (Lindsay Ribar)

The Fourth Wish
Title: The Fourth Wish
Series: sequel to The Art of Wishing
Author: Lindsay Ribar
Publisher: Kathy Dawson Books
Release Date: July 31, 2014
Genre: Young Adult Contemporary Fantasy
Rating: Older Teen (sexual situations, sensuality, some language, minor violence, bullying)
Told: First Person Singular (Margo), Past Tense
Format Read: ARC (from publisher)
Find It On: Goodreads

Summary:

Here's what Margo McKenna knows about genies: She's seen Aladdin more times than she can count; she's found a magic genie ring and made her three allotted wishes; she's even fallen head over heels in love with Oliver, the cute genie whose life she saved by fighting off another genie. But none of this prepared her for the shock of becoming a genie herself.

Everything Margo's taken for granted--graduating high school, going to college, hating math, performing in the school musical, even being a girl--is in question. Just at a time when she's trying to figure out who she wants to be, Margo is forced to become whomever her master wants. But Margo is also coming into a power she never imagined she'd have. How will she reconcile the two? And where will she and Oliver stand when she's done?


*          *          *

Why I Read It: I absolutely loved the first book, The Art of Wishing, so I couldn't wait to get my hands on the sequel.

Series: This is the sequel to The Art of Wishing, and completes the duology. You definitely have to have read TAOW before reading this book as it picks up immediately where TAOW left off. You can find my review of The Art of Wishing here.

Writing: Such an easy read - Lindsay's style makes me feel like a speed-reader! She has a mastery of description, pace, and her dialogue is superb.

Setting: The real world, but with genies. I think we were (and always have been, actually) in New Jersey? This came as a surprise when I realized it well into this book, but if it's not essential to the story I tend not to notice (I can be a bad reader like that ;).

Story: To my great disappointment, the story was a rollercoaster of frustration for me. I don't think I agreed or liked any of Margo's decisions, and when they were particularly disagreeable I had to put the book down and walk away for a while. As with the first book, I didn't agree with the ending, which really didn't surprise me by the time I got there. Both Margo and Oliver felt like completely different characters from the first book, and I didn't like who they were in this book at all.

Characters: Margo was selfish. Period. She wanted everything her way, on her schedule. It was only when her independent boyfriend resisted that she altered herself to fit him so she wouldn't lose having him all to herself. As mentioned above, this new personality led to no end of frustration for me. If she had stopped to give some thought to not only those around her but the person she had been in the first book, she would've seen the perfect solution to all her problems without doing harm to not only everyone around her but herself as well. And Oliver...I did not enjoy discovering the "real" Oliver. I loved Margo's Oliver in the first book (definitely book boyfriend material), but the "ancient genie with different masters" Oliver just wasn't for me. I understood him, and he was plausible, but he pushed Margo even further in the wrong direction and for it I just couldn't like him.

Romantic Relationship: They'd been together all of a few weeks, and (spoiler) sure she'd killed someone to save him (end of spoiler), but she focused her life around him more than was healthy. We're talking New Moon unhealthy here. While he was a new kind of bad influence, essentially he was the same bad boy rebel that most mothers rightfully warn against, and I just couldn't approve of him and what he did to her - and made her do.

Bullying: A lot of hot-button topics come up in this book, but one that I'm not seeing thrown around is bullying and I feel it warrants mentioning - and not in a good way. I did not like how the Ryan situation went down, and especially ended (spoilers, so I shall be vague). Don't get me wrong he was a first class d-word, but he was basically your average male teen driven by the brain in his pants and I don't think he deserved the level of bullying he received. Considering Margo essentially started the whole mess and did him wrong, when nothing came of it and she didn't learn the important lesson she should've - and the fact that it didn't seriously mess Ryan up when it really should have - I felt the whole situation was not portrayed or handled especially well.

Conclusion: As much as I adored The Art of Wishing, and as much as I wanted to adore this sequel, I just couldn't. It rubbed me the wrong way from all directions, and the changes to both Margo and Oliver's personalities were not good ones. Lindsay's writing was this book's only saving grace, and my love for the first book was the only reason I persevered with this sequel. I will continue to recommend The Art of Wishing to anyone who will listen, but will also be recommending they treat it as a standalone and skip The Fourth Wish.

Read It Again?: Sadly, no