Posts Categorized: Review

Thursday, January 23, 2014

Review: Burned by Ellen Hopkins

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Review: Burned by Ellen HopkinsBurned by Ellen Hopkins
Series: Burned #1
Published by Margaret K. McElderry Books on April 1st 2006
Genres: Contemporary, Verse, YA
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four-stars

I do know things really began to spin out of control after my first sex dream.

It all started with a dream. Nothing exceptional, just a typical fantasy about a boy, the kind of dream that most teen girls experience. But Pattyn Von Stratten is not like most teen girls. Raised in a religious -- yet abusive -- family, a simple dream may not be exactly a sin, but it could be the first step toward hell and eternal damnation.

This dream is a first step for Pattyn. But is it to hell or to a better life? For the first time Pattyn starts asking questions. Questions seemingly without answers -- about God, a woman's role, sex, love -- mostly love. What is it? Where is it? Will she ever experience it? Is she deserving of it?

It's with a real boy that Pattyn gets into real trouble. After Pattyn's father catches her in a compromising position, events spiral out of control until Pattyn ends up suspended from school and sent to live with an aunt she doesn't know.

Pattyn is supposed to find salvation and redemption during her exile to the wilds of rural Nevada. Yet what she finds instead is love and acceptance. And for the first time she feels worthy of both -- until she realizes her old demons will not let her go. Pattyn begins down a path that will lead her to a hell -- a hell that may not be the one she learned about in sacrament meetings, but it is hell all the same.

In this riveting and masterful novel told in verse, Ellen Hopkins takes readers on an emotional roller-coaster ride. From the highs of true love to the lows of abuse, Pattyn's story will have readers engrossed until the very last word.

I thought I had been a good blogger when I went out and bought the first book in each of Ellen Hopkins series. I even covered all my bases and bought her standalones as well. Well now look at me sitting here kicking myself because I’ve finished Burned and I don’t have the sequel to jump into immediately. Burned is the heartbreaking tale of Pattyn Von Stratten, a young girl raised in a strict mormon household who begins to question the way that her family lives and they way that her father treats all of the women in his life.

I’m not usually a fan of books that deal heavily with religion, but I always appreciate when a character is questioning the way that they have been brought up. Pattyn was a perfect example of this. She has grown up in a strict mormon household where her mother is essentially a baby maker, constantly at work trying to provide a son for her husband. Her father has a drinking problem and on the nights that he hits his bottle of Johnny all the girls in the house walk on pins and needles just waiting for his monster to come out and lay into their mom. Pattyn realizes that she doesn’t want to grow up and be in a situation like her mother’s. She wants to be strong, she wants to be independent and she wants to live life on her own terms, not her husbands.

Hopkins’ bare bones, straight to the point writing style completely immersed me in Pattyn’s life. Her emotions and frustrations with life were wholly palpable and I was right there with her at every moment in this story. As she tastes freedom when she goes to live with her Aunt J for the summer I felt like a weight was lifted off my shoulders and when she was forced back to her parents home I felt like the walls were once again closing in on me. That’s a true sign of skill in an author and something that I look for in every single novel that I read. The use of verse is once again spot on and for me Hopkins’ take on the style is really the benchmark for any novels told in this way. She consistently manages to create characters that are deeply flawed, that I can relate to in some way or another and she forges relationships that are just as complex as the characters immersed in them.

The one weak point that I could mention about this novel is the swiftness with which Ethan and Pattyn’s relationship grows. It may have only felt this way because of the use of verse which, to me, makes any novel feel like it is told in fast forward, but it didn’t seem like that much time had passed. Other than that I think the romance was incredibly sweet and I was a huge fan of Ethan and of Pattyn when she was with him. He brought out a confidence in her that she didn’t know was there and he always strived to be a true gentleman. Just as complex as the romance at the forefront of the novel was Pattyn’s rocky relationship with her family. She resented her mother’s weakness and though she wanted to love her father she couldn’t because of the monster that was inside him. As her father’s beatings start extending to her sisters she is torn between wanting to continue living the free life she has found with her Aunt J and wanting to go back and stand up for her siblings.

I really can’t recommend Hopkins’ work more highly, anyone who loves contemporary stories is sure to fall in love with her stories. I also want to make a point of saying here that even if you are scared of verse (as I once was) please venture out of your comfort zone and give it a try, you might just find that it works for you as it does me.

four-stars

4 Hot Espressos

Review: The Lure by Lynne Ewing

Review: The Lure by Lynne Ewing

Posted by on 01/21/2014 • 20 Comments

The Lure and I went through a tumultuous relationship. I started out in love with it and that love slowly declined as the novel went on, eventually leading me to be pretty angry at where we ended up. See, in the beginning it was gritty, authentic and raw, but by the end I didn’t know if I was reading a contemporary novel or the screenplay for a daytime soap opera.

As the novel starts out we meet Blaise and her friends Melissa, Ariel and Kaylee as they are making their way home one night. The atmosphere is set right from the beginning and we realize that these girls don’t come from a good neighbourhood. Seeing a group of people drinking on a stoop and then hiding in the trees while…

Review: Timestorm by Julie Cross

Review: Timestorm by Julie Cross

Posted by on 01/20/2014 • 21 Comments

*Spoiler free for the series*

While I enjoyed Tempest and Vortex, this one was explosive to a whole new level!

I can count on two hands the number of times I was entirely surprised by an ending. I usually catch on, at least to some extent, to what direction it’s going to spin (mostly because I think up SO many theories that one of them has to be close to being right), but Timestorm is a freaking masterpiece of an ending that caught me completely off guard. It also left me in a puddle of emotional goo. It’s tragic, beautiful, and perfect for this story, but still, there is a part of me that is so torn! I guess we’ll call it bittersweet. The ending was not the only great…

Review: And We Stay by Jenny Hubbard

Review: And We Stay by Jenny Hubbard

Posted by on 01/17/2014 • 17 Comments

And We Stay is a book that will resonate with some, and left others feeling detached. It’s a very poetic writing style which on one hand gives us a beautifully written novel, but on the other hand it makes it hard to embed yourself into the main character’s thoughts and emotions.

The main reason for this detachment is due to the fact that it’s written in 3rd person present. This tense always makes it hard for me to feel anything but indifference towards a story and its characters. It does make for a pretty writing style – and it is – but Emily’s emotional turmoil is kept out of reach as a result. It felt like she was telling someone else’s story, not reliving her own. This writing is…

Review: Fake ID by Lamar Giles

Posted by on 01/16/2014 • 21 Comments

The synopsis for this book is one that I actually took the time to read, I know, shocking right? The mysterious vibe it gave off immediately had me hooked and I had to get the book off Edelweiss to find out exactly what is going on in this boy who calls himself Nick Pearson’s life. After diving in I was sucked into and intrigued by the twisted web that is weaved involving the Witness Protection Program (WitSec) and the ties this family has to the mob.  While it didn’t fail to keep me entertained it did fail to provide much substance to any of the characters to lead me to actually care about their well being.

We meet Nick on his first day of high school in a new town…

Review: Cress by Marissa Meyer

Review: Cress by Marissa Meyer

Posted by on 01/14/2014 • 30 Comments

Holy crap what a wild ride! In this 3rd novel of the Lunar Chronicles series, we meet Rapunzel Cress and embark on her unplanned journey to earth. This novel is easily my favorite in the series thus far – and funnily, Rapunzel is also my favorite fairytale princess! We are just meant to be!

We swing into action from the very beginning of this novel, during which we meet Cress and get to know the kind of life she lived inside this satellite for almost a decade. Like always, I love the references to the original fairy-tales this series is based on. After an explosive start, we engage on a survivalist-type story through a desert that is described with such realism you will feel parched and out of breath, Cress’s…

Review: Cruel Beauty by Rosamund Hodge

Review: Cruel Beauty by Rosamund Hodge

Posted by on 01/10/2014 • 32 Comments

Cruel Beauty is really confusing, even kind of a mess at first, but eventually the story does paint a gorgeous, dangerous picture. Still, much of it is quite mind-boggling. I’ve been mulling over what I read for days.

Retellings are always difficult for me, especially that I wasn’t big in fairy tales as a child. I’m kind of discovering them inside retellings, actually, so they can be a hit or miss. Cruel Beauty falls in-between for me. I did love the Beauty and the Beast angle, all while bringing an extremely creative story to the table. Originality is not something Cruel Beauty is lacking. It involves a world that becomes simply mind-blowing. Distorting the perception of everything you thought you knew, kind of mind-blowing. It’s not easy to grasp,…

Review: Stolen by Lucy Christopher

Posted by on 01/09/2014 • 29 Comments

Stolen was a surprise from my 2013 holiday season.  It showed up in the mail one day, a gift from Giselle of Xpresso Reads and am I ever happy that it did.  See, Giselle knows me. When trying to find books to get me for Christmas she looked at Listopia lists titled “Books that made me cry.”  She knew just where to go to find the books that I need on my shelf.  While this one didn’t effect me as emotionally as I had hoped (which I think was due to the long stretch of time I took to read it) it was a unique reading experience that tackled Stockholm syndrome in an incredibly interesting way.

So first I’ll talk about why I think it didn’t effect me as much…