Posts Categorized: Review

Thursday, May 29, 2014

Review: Complicit by Stephanie Kuehn

Posted by • 13 Comments

I received this book for free from St. Martin's Griffin in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review.

Review: Complicit by Stephanie KuehnComplicit by Stephanie Kuehn
Published by St. Martin's Griffin on June 24th 2014
Genres: Mystery, YA
Source: St. Martin's Griffin
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four-half-stars

Two years ago, sixteen-year-old Jamie Henry breathed a sigh of relief when a judge sentenced his older sister to juvenile detention for burning down their neighbor’s fancy horse barn. The whole town did. Because Crazy Cate Henry used to be a nice girl. Until she did a lot of bad things. Like drinking. And stealing. And lying. Like playing weird mind games in the woods with other children. Like making sure she always got her way. Or else.

But today Cate got out. And now she’s coming back for Jamie.

Because more than anything, Cate Henry needs her little brother to know the truth about their past. A truth she’s kept hidden for years. A truth she’s not supposed to tell.

Trust nothing and no one as you race toward the explosive conclusion of this gripping psychological thriller from the William C. Morris Award-winning author of Charm & Strange.

Complicit is exactly the kind of book I like to read, but have so much trouble finding. At the same time it is exactly the kind of book that I hate reviewing. Full of twists, turns and unreliable characters, this novel keeps you guessing until the very end and leaves you with a conclusion that will have your jaw on the floor.

Jamie Henry is 16 years old and he doesn’t know much about his past. He knows that he was adopted at a young age and that he was very lucky to have gotten to stay with his sister, Cate through all of that. He knows that his mother was shot and killed right in front of him and he knows that his sister is not stable nor is she to be trusted. What’s so great about this story is uncovering everything about Jamie’s past right as he does so himself. I have to say that it was rather easy to predict the BIG reveal of the novel but I’m happy to report that it didn’t hinder my enjoyment of it at all. Clocking in at just over 250 pages, Complicit has a pace that just never lets up. There are seeds planted all along that build the mystery surrounding everything happening to Jamie expertly and seeing everything come to fruition once it’s all revealed was a real thrill ride.

One thing that I can, and will, talk about when it comes to this story is the relationships. Jamie had so much darkness in his life when it came to Cate. Once she gets out of prison she toys with him, plays mind games and as the reader you aren’t very sure what her end game is. What you are sure of though is how much it frustrates Jamie and how it effects him emotionally and even physically. The stress and anxiety that he goes through in the novel was so well conveyed that it was really palpable to me as the reader. I felt frustration when Jamie felt frustration and I felt his happiness when his emotions swung that way as well. Bringing this light into his life is Jenny. The contrast of the scenes from when he is alone dealing with his thoughts about Cate were perfect balanced with the joy Jenny brought to him. I can’t say that it’s my favourite romance that I’ve ever read but I do think that it was perfect for the story while still allowing Jamie to remain who he is.

There is so much more I want to say about this book but I know deep down that I shouldn’t. The most important thing about going into a novel like Kuehn’s latest is to go into it blind. I even think that the blurb gives to much away for this one and I am happy that I refrained from reading it fully until I had finished reading the novel. Complicit is a novel that deals with mental illness in a really interesting way and it’s a story that really reels the reader in and keeps them hooked until the turn of the final page.

four-half-stars

4.5 Hot Espressos

Review: Inland by Kat Rosenfield

Review: Inland by Kat Rosenfield

Posted by on 05/27/2014 • 10 Comments

Inland was a mixed bag for me. On one hand I love the cryptic nature of books like these where part of the fun is how it plays with our imagination, but for this to work I have to turn the last page with some kind of stunned wonderment, and that did not happen here. While the writing is great and the magical realism feel with its eerie mystique is initially intriguing, I ended up being quite bored for the most part, and eventually underwhelmed in the end. I was left disappointed with no more than what I felt after I read the synopsis. Also, that epilogue/ending kinda confused me – if anyone can shed a light on what the heck it meant that’d be great O_O

This is the…

Review: Born of Deception by Teri Brown

Review: Born of Deception by Teri Brown

Posted by on 05/26/2014 • 14 Comments

*Spoiler free for the series*

Having really enjoyed the wonderfully atmospheric and captivating Born of Illusion last year, I was excited to get back into Anna’s world full of magic and mystery.

Born of Deception is just as mesmerizing in its storytelling, and even more-so with its historical London setting. Brown is gifted in bringing these settings to life; making us walk the busy streets alongside our protagonist, feel the vibrancy of the city and the excitement of the crowds. As far as the writing goes, I loved it all. I did find disappointment in the plot itself, however. While Born of Illusion was full of mystique and wonder, this second installment has a big focus on a new love triangle in addition to – and somewhat the cause…

Review: To All The Boys I’ve Love Before by Jenny Han

Review: To All The Boys I’ve Love Before by Jenny Han

Posted by on 05/23/2014 • 19 Comments

Around the time that To All The Boys I’ve Loved Before came out I saw nothing but love for it on my GR feed. This made me pretty excited to get around to reading it myself. I’d never read anything by Jenny Han before and this seemed like the perfect book for me to get started with. I think all of those expectations came back to bite me in the butt because I was pretty bored and annoyed through the entirety of this novel.

Lara Jean is the middle Song sister. She has her older sister Margo who is just setting off to college in Scotland and her younger sister Kitty who she is in charge of in Margo’s absence. Their mother died long ago and the girls have learned…

Review: (Don’t You) Forget About Me by Kate Karyus Quinn

Review: (Don’t You) Forget About Me by Kate Karyus Quinn

Posted by on 05/22/2014 • 18 Comments

Holy crap! I feel like my brain is totally spent after this mind-f*ck of a book! Books like these are so hard to review, so I’m going to do my best to make sense of my thoughts. First, I gotta warn you this not the kind of book that will mesh with everyone. For one, it’s so different it breaks all molds of normalcy ever built around story-telling. For another, it introduces the kind of paranormal where you have to go in with an open mind, and just accept this town for what it is (similarly to Teeth by Hannah Moskowitz).

Welcome to Gardnerville. A place where no one gets sick. And no one ever dies.

This is the story of Gardernville. A bizarre isolated town where sickness and…

Review: Torn Away by Jennifer Brown

Review: Torn Away by Jennifer Brown

Posted by on 05/21/2014 • 11 Comments

I grew up in a city where we had one devastating tornado in our history.  I’ve heard stories about the tornado of ’88 more times than I can count and I have always been fascinated by them.  After reading Torn Away I don’t think tornadoes are that cool anymore.  This novel brings to light the devastation that lays in their aftermath and shows you how people truly lose everything.  

Torn Away starts out with a bang.  We meet our MC Jersey as she is heading home from school on the day that a tornado rips through her community in the mid-western city of Elizabeth.  We see that she is frustrated with her little sister, Marin, and even annoyed at her mother as they head out to Marin’s…

Review: Say What You Will by Cammie McGovern

Review: Say What You Will by Cammie McGovern

Posted by on 05/20/2014 • 19 Comments

Say What You Will is a moving story about two people facing incredible challenges that fall in love and find hope in each other. It’s sweet and wonderful, but also sad and frustrating at times. 3rd person is always hard for me to connect to characters in a book, and this is where my inability to love this one stems from. I also found it a tad long which is probably related to the latter. But it’s a book I’m glad I read; the raw honesty of these people’s harsh lives ended up being both eye opening and inspiring.

Told in dual POV, we have Amy who has cerebral palsy, she needs the help of a walker to get around, and she can only speak using a computerized voice box….

Review: Dangerous Girls by Abigail Haas

Review: Dangerous Girls by Abigail Haas

Posted by on 05/16/2014 • 18 Comments

This is a book that has gone seriously under-noticed and that’s a shame because it’s brilliant! And even though it’s a tad predictable, I would have disappointed if it would have ended differently. It was a daring and manipulative story – and I’m a sucker for those!

This is the story of Elise’s murder, told in the perspective of the prime suspect – her best friend. In a way, this reminded me of a YA Jodi Picoult novel. You have the murder, followed by the trial – which lasts for most of the book, and this is where you learn the details of what happened filled with secrets and lies that give just enough clues to make you crazy – then at the end all is revealed with the help…