Sunday, 1 September 2019

Review: You by Caroline Kepnes



This book had a terrifying air to it. Joe’s obsession was clearly highlighted by his lack of description of much other than Beck and this is where the choice of first person was key. The lack of time spent on Benji’s death really struck me and made me realise properly how messed up Joe was.

I must admit that I watched the Netflix adaptation first and there was a time when the book was a let down in comparison to this. The series seemed to take it’s time from when Joe enters therapy till Beck’s death but in the book it seemed rushed. I feel like the book could have had another fifty or a hundred pages and I would have loved to have an extended version of that time.


Thursday, 24 January 2019

Review: Call Me By Your Name by Andre Aciman




The realness of this book was what struck me most about it. I could so easily see Elio as a real seventeen-year-old boy with all of the emotion and lust and confusion that comes with that. It also meant that when he did things that I didn’t particularly like, or agree with, I wasn’t as upset or as disappointed as I would have been if he had been portrayed as a falsely understanding or knowledgeable character.

Another point of realness is that this book is not a fantasy love story. A lot of such stories have obstacles that keep the characters apart, which this book does have, but then they shift to the characters being together forever and dealing with all the problems that face their relationship together. This book doesn’t have that element; Elio and Oliver are together for two weeks and they end and it’s heart-breaking, but it’s also real. You don’t end up with everyone that you fall in love with and you’re denied time together with such people, but that’s life. An important message that this novel puts across is that someone can be very definitive in your life and play a huge role in shaping your future, but that doesn’t mean that they’ll be a part of your future.

This book is Elio looking back at the time that he and Oliver were together, and the novel reads really well as that. In our memories, some things stick out more than most and usually I would be annoyed with a lack of certain descriptions, which could have easily added another hundred or so pages to this book, but in this case, I wasn’t because that’s not what this book is.

This book managed to make me happy, sad, disgusted, angry and most other emotions in between. Still, a week after I finished it, I find myself continuing to go back and reading the final few paragraphs again; that’s the impact it has.


Friday, 24 August 2018

Review: Me Before You by Jojo Moyes



Having already seen the film adaptation of this book before reading it, I did know what the general gist of the book would be before reading it. However, I was pleasantly surprised by the depth of detail and the level of insight into Louisa's personal journey that taking care of Will took her on. I have to admit though, this book failed to make me cry.


(Goodreads parallel)

Friday, 22 June 2018

Review: Every Day by David Levithan



This was certainly one of the most interesting contemporary style books I've read. I enjoyed the switching of perspectives with each new day and finding out how A would deal with it. It was also good at highlighting the stigmas against certain body types. The main disappointment this book had was its hinting about the reason for A switching bodies, but never going into that much detail. With the lack of insight provided I would have preferred for it not to have been covered at all because it left what I would think of as a good stand-alone novel too open ended.


(Goodreads parallel)

Saturday, 16 June 2018

Review: The Elite by Kiera Cass



This book was, overall, disappointing. There was very little exploration to anything beyond the selection process, such as into the rebels, the writing was far too much telling and not showing and, above all, America was annoying. This book was definitely easy to read, but I quickly lost interest in the love triangle and though I do want to find out what happens, I won't be rushing out to buy the third book.


(Goodreads parallel)

Saturday, 27 August 2016

Review: Steelheart by Brandon Sanderson


An action-packed, fast-paced tale filled with characters you can quickly come to love. Sanderson shows off his incredible world-building skills, plus adds in twists and turns where you would least expect them, this novel sets the bar on how dystopian-fantasy should be done.

Sunday, 21 August 2016

Review: Dark Triumph by Robin LaFevers


This series is so easy to put down and pick up again much later due to each book having a different protagonist. As some may think it means, the characters don't lack growth as a result of only having one novel in which the main part of their story is told. Instead, the layers they have are peeled back slowly, changing them with each event that does so. Added to that, skills as an assassin, saints siring children and an historical base, this book really was great.