Posts Categorized: Review

Wednesday, April 02, 2014

Review: The Wicked We Have Done by Sarah Harian

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Review: The Wicked We Have Done by Sarah HarianThe Wicked We Have Done by Sarah Harian
Series: Chaos Theory #1
Published by Intermix on March 18th 2014
Genres: New Adult, Thriller
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four-stars

Evalyn Ibarra never expected to be an accused killer and experimental prison test subject. A year ago, she was a normal college student. Now she’s been sentenced to a month in the compass room—an advanced prison obstacle course designed by the government to execute justice.

If she survives, the world will know she’s innocent.

Locked up with nine notorious and potentially psychotic criminals, Evalyn must fight the prison and dismantle her past to stay alive. But the system prized for accuracy appears to be killing at random.

She doesn’t plan on making friends.

She doesn’t plan on falling in love, either.

A funny, recurring conversation I always have with my friends is about the stark contrast between books I like and movies I like.  See, I love me a good action movie. Give me Jason Statham, Mark Wahlberg or a nice gory horror film any day of the week. But when it comes to reading, I want the “chick-flicks” I want heartbreak, I want emotion, I want to be left so emotionally wrecked that I can’t even see through my tears.  The Wicked We Have done brought everything that I like in movies so perfectly to a book that it surprisingly worked incredibly well for me!

What struck me right off the bat with this one was how original it was. First of all there is the fact that it is an NA novel and it’s not just a sexy-times romance about two broken characters coming together and boinking, how refreshing is that? I loved the idea of these criminals being thrown into an area and tested to see where their morality lies and if they are a fit for the death penalty or not.  I mean that’s the big argument against the death penalty right? The system isn’t perfect and what if an innocent loses their life.  But in the world of The Wicked We Have Done they have created a system that implants a chip into the back of a criminals head and they throw them into a Compass Room where they are faced with tests and their reactions are constantly monitored.  Cool, hey? What made this so intense was that there was genuinely good people in this dome and there were also people who were out for blood. And was there ever blood, people exploding, stabbings, shootings, you name it.  The action scenes were excellently written and the pacing was kept up so well that I was on the edge of my seat for the entirety of the novel.  After mentioning all of the blood and gore in these pages I’m not sure what it says about me that I had so much fun reading it, but I did!

As I am sure you can guess from above, we are greeted to some very… interesting characters in this novel.  Our MC Evalyn was someone that I came to like quite a bit by the end of the story.  She is very closed off when we meet her and struggling with all that has come about since she committed her crime (which we find out more about through flashbacks in the story.)  She proves to be really strong and intelligent in the Compass Room and I loved being in her head.  There is a bit of insta-love when it comes to her and Casey, which I could have done without but I do see and understand what the romance added to the story and Evalyn’s will to live.  She wasn’t the only one finding herself in this room, we are treated to a budding lesbian romance which was really refreshing and didn’t feel insta-lovey to me at all.  I really liked Jace and Valerie. Oh and there is also the young brainy boy Tanner who I liked for all of his technical thinking as he tried to figure out the inner workings of the Compass Room.  So yea, I liked the characters and even the really bad ones that they were thrown into the room with served to keep me highly entertained.

One thing I did long for a bit more in the story was a more about the character, Nick.  He came into Evalyn’s life prior to her crime and it’s made clear that he was a big part of it.  Through Evalyn we are led to not trust him at all and know he is not a good person but I wanted more to define just how crazy bad he was.  I was trying to explain this to a friend and it got me all tongue twisted, but the best way to put it is that I didn’t NEED more to enforce his darkness but I just WANTED more.  I was perfectly ok to believe he was as twisted as we are led to believe but I wanted to read more about what made him tick.  Maybe a novella could be in the works? A girl can dream, right?

If you are looking for a thrill ride, Sarah Harian’s debut is sure to fit the bill.  I will anxiously be awaiting anything (AHEM, see above paragraph) that comes out in this series.

four-stars

4 Hot Espressos

Review: The Last Forever by Deb Caletti

Review: The Last Forever by Deb Caletti

Posted by on 04/01/2014 • 16 Comments

I really don’t even feel like I can effectively review this book because all I want to do is flail all over the place and shove it in people’s faces so they read it too.  This book was absolutely perfect for me, I picked it up on a Saturday morning and before I knew it I was halfway through and dreading the book ending.  This book is emotional, this book is funny and this book is engrossing.

We meet our MC Tess as she is grieving the recent loss of her mother to cancer.  She is living with her father and just going through the motions of day to day life.  One afternoon the two of them pack up her father’s truck and head out to finally see the Grand…

Review: Don’t Look Back by Jennifer L. Armentrout

Review: Don’t Look Back by Jennifer L. Armentrout

Posted by on 03/31/2014 • 24 Comments

With a strong blurb and a cover that’s both creepy and pretty, I went into this one with a lot of expectations. It is my favorite genre and an author I’ve previously enjoyed, after all. I can’t say I’m disappointed, exactly, but I’m sad that didn’t end up loving this one as much as I was hoping.

Amnesia is a commonly used trope in mystery novels, but I still find myself drawn to them every time. Even though it’s been done before, I found the memory loss aspect very well executed. When Samantha reappears into a life where she had it all, she’s not sure how to deal with the way people describe her. She was a selfish bitch, to put it bluntly. I found this contrast between her…

Review: Something Real by Heather Demetrios

Review: Something Real by Heather Demetrios

Posted by on 03/28/2014 • 27 Comments

Not only is this a wonderful story, but it touches you from many angles: family, romance, friendship, homosexuality, privacy – just to name a few. It’s thought provoking and inspiring, with characters who are just plain genuine.

Chloe (aka Bonnie™) is a celebrity who was literally born into a reality show. This show, reminiscent of Jon & Kate Plus 8, was a real eye opener on how reality TV isn’t reality at all. Not only that, but they’re almost criminal in how they affect children who don’t even have a choice in the matter. Can you imagine your whole life chronicled for the world to see? Your childhood tantrums found with a simple Google search? It’s incredibly frustrating to see these kids’ lives manipulated – more like hounded –…

Review: She Is Not Invisible by Marcus Sedgwick

Review: She Is Not Invisible by Marcus Sedgwick

Posted by on 03/27/2014 • 14 Comments

Last year I read Marcus Sedgwick’s Midwinterblood and while I wasn’t the biggest fan of the way the story unfolded I was a fast fan of the writing.  Upon seeing that he had a more contemporary tale coming out this year I was anxious to get my hands on it.  While She Is Not Invisible isn’t the most action packed novel I have ever read it is incredibly thought provoking and a story that I just could not put down.

We meet Laureth Peak as she is trudging through a London airport with her younger brother and his stuffed raven, Stan.  She is trying to convince herself that she is doing the right thing and that she is not abducting her younger sibling.  Through some well done flashbacks we see…

Review: House of Ivy & Sorrow by Natalie Whipple

Review: House of Ivy & Sorrow by Natalie Whipple

Posted by on 03/25/2014 • 23 Comments

You know those dogs that are so ugly they’re cute? This book is kind of like that. It was so ridiculous, that it became entertaining in its absurdity. I went into this expecting a more Gothic kind of witch read, and what I got was more Sabrina the Teenage Witch kind of fantastical (except Sabrina did it well!). I mean, if you go into this with the right mindset maybe you’d like it better?

The witch lore starts out intriguing with some interesting aspects. I liked how there’s no good vs evil or white vs dark, it’s all black magic and the way you use it is what matters. That’s how far my liking of this book went, unfortunately, as the more pages I turned, the more nonsensical it…

Review: Great by Sara Benincasa

Review: Great by Sara Benincasa

Posted by on 03/24/2014 • 17 Comments

What a weird book this was.  I have to be honest and preface everything I am about to say by letting you know that I have never read The Great Gatsby.  I know nothing of what it is about, all I know is that Leonardo DiCaprio recently starred in a movie version about it that I have not seen.  Naturally I won’t be able to compare GREAT to the source material at all but I can talk about the book for what it is.  So what was it? Well, it was a contemporary tale about richie rich Hamptons kids who use “summer” as a verb and it had little vines of mystery snaking into the story here and there.  I had fun reading it, but I am not too certain…

Review: The Here and Now by Ann Brashares

Review: The Here and Now by Ann Brashares

Posted by on 03/21/2014 • 25 Comments

What a disappointment. And an unexpected one since I was such a fan of her Sisterhood in the Traveling Pants series (which rocked my socks off!). I didn’t dislike this one right away; at first I was very much into it. We start by learning of their dystopian-like community that has formed in the past (our present), after having escaped from a plague ravaged future. A future that is, quite frankly, not at all unrealistic, making it all the more terrifying. Once we get down to business, though, things go downhill fast. From underdeveloped characters, to random – often boring – plot detours, to unemotional insta-love romance.

Prenna starts out as a great character – stubborn and determined. She’s from a future where touching meant death, and is now controlled…