Tuesday, July 09, 2013

Review: Nomad by J.L. Bryan

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I received this book for free from J.L. Bryan in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review.

Review: Nomad by J.L. BryanNomad by J.L. Bryan
on July 26th 2013
Genres: Dystopia, NA, Sci-Fi
Source: J.L. Bryan
Buy on Amazon
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four-stars

A new dystopian novel from the author of Jenny Pox - coming July 26.

They took everything: her family, her home, her childhood.

By the age of nineteen, Raven has spent most of her life in the sprawling slums of America, fighting as a rebel against the dictatorship. When the rebellion steals an experimental time-travel device, she travels back five decades to the year 2013. Her plan: assassinate the future dictator when he is still young and vulnerable, long before he comes to power. She must move fast to reshape history, because agents from her own time are on her trail, ready to execute her on sight.

JL Bryan has always impressed me with the level of originality and excitement he works into his novels (big fan of Jenny Pox), and I was yet again taken aback, this time by a time-travel dystopian that is full of thrills and has a kick-ass heroine to boot!

Time-travel dystopian! When I saw those words together my mind kind of flipped, making me unsure of what to expect. For one, time-travel is nothing to play around with if you’re not fully committed to deliver. I have a low level of patience for ignored time loops and paradoxes, and while I’m still wrapping my head around the details of JL’s take on it with Nomads and the universe taking care of itself, it’s one of very few time-travel plots that I can say I’m ok with (and “ok” is about the best you’ll get). Some things still hurt my brain if I think about it too hard, but that’s time-travel for ya.

Taking us straight into the action, this story begins with Raven suddenly finding herself in 2013 with no recollection of where she is, nor where she’s from. It doesn’t take long for her to realize she’s in unfamiliar terrain, though, with old-fashioned… everything and bizarre gadgets in her pockets. It also takes just as long for trouble to find her! Raven’s personality and smarts made it easy for me to take a liking to her. She’s quick on her feet and intelligent in a way that completely fits with where she’s really from – the future is not a pretty place. It also makes her loyal to her cause. However great of a protagonist she is, though, she brought out my enthusiasm more than my emotions. Perhaps due to the nature of the plot with its distant past and new present, together with flashbacks and the Nomads theory, it made it hard to get attached with this nonlinear character building. I did, nevertheless, find myself intrigued and unexpectedly enthused by the peculiar romance that she stumbles upon with its sensual pull and lingering sense of wrongness. I was also surprisingly content with the direction JL decided to take with these two.

This plot brings in a layered butterfly effect that requires pinpointing what needs to be changed to bring about a full metamorphosis of Raven’s future. This means most of the book takes place in our day and age, where she wants to try to make things better with a nudge – or bullet – but what if it isn’t enough? Or makes it worse? Aside from this fun to ponder time-travel bit, I loved learning about the future Raven came from; especially the realistic plausibility of it all. The advancement in technology, the history that lead to this dystopian society, even the fashion, it’s a solidly imagined world that is made believably futuristic without any overkill.

Highly entertaining with a time-travel aspect that is just as fascinating as it is perplexing, Nomad is a unique dystopian that’s perfect for reluctant dystopian readers, or those who just want a different mix! You might as well pick it up; this book is in your future! (I’ve seen it!)

FYI – This book is considered New Adult; college life, sex, violence, and a few swear words thrown in.

four-stars

4 Hot Espressos

Review: In the Shadow of Blackbirds by Cat Winters

Review: In the Shadow of Blackbirds by Cat Winters

Posted by on 07/08/2013 • 30 Comments

It excites me so when I come across a novel that shows me there can still be books that thoroughly stand out from any other in its originality and outstanding story-telling. I can not even believe that In the Shadow of Blackbirds is Cat’s debut novel!

What I love most from this book is how, through impressive research, Cat achieves an exceptionally poignant historical atmosphere from a time that saw through so much death and horror. The fall of 1918 had not only the highest death toll from the Spanish Flu which killed over 50 million people (some sources even say up to 100 million), but it was also in the throes of the first World War. Having been fascinated by an epidemic flu that, even to this day,…

Stacking the Shelves (62)

Stacking the Shelves (62)

Posted by on 07/07/2013 • 47 Comments

Stacking the Shelves is a meme hosted by Tynga’s Reviews featuring the books we got this week, and I also mention blog news/happenings of the past week. 

Happy belated 4th of July to my American friends! 🙂 I hope you’re all having great weather. It’s sweltering here. And of course I have a cold. Blah! So did you see? Our Cover Madness giveaway hop started this week! There are 60 blogs all hosting giveaways for some pretty covered books so make sure to hop away! I also posted a sweet giveaway for an ARC of Antigoddess for my UK and England peeps! And how’s everyone finding life without Google Reader? Not so bad eh? I’m preferring Feedly and Bloglovin myself I find they’re even better than GR! Have you all…

Fresh Batch (New Releases July 7th – 13th)

Fresh Batch (New Releases July 7th – 13th)

Posted by on 07/06/2013 • 10 Comments

Exclusively titled for Xpresso Reads, Fresh Batch features the hottest releases of this upcoming week.

Flavor of the week:

Fifth Grave Past the Light Darynda Jones Series: Charley Davidson #5 Publication date: July 9th, 2013 by St. Martin’s Press

Charley Davidson may not look like your everyday, run-of-the-mill grim reaper, but she has vowed to reap grimness wherever she goes despite this unfortunate fact. Sadly, she gets sidetracked when the sexy, sultry son of Satan, Reyes Farrow, moves in next door. As he is the main suspect in her arson case, she is determined to stay away from him until she can find out the truth. According to her therapist, however, she lacks conviction.

When dead women start appearing in her apartment-lost, confused and terrified beyond reason-Charley…

Book Girls Don’t Cry: Where Are All the Parents?

Book Girls Don’t Cry: Where Are All the Parents?

Posted by on 07/05/2013 • 32 Comments

Inspired by Book Buzzers, Book Girls Don’t Cry is a weekly feature where we each discuss/vent/advise on the chosen weekly bookish topic. Don’t miss Jenni on Mondays, and Amy on Saturdays:  

So Many Orphans!

Seriously? Where are the parents in YA novels? I have noticed a common theme where the characters are either orphans, live away from home (like in a private school dorm or with an uncle), have parents who are always at work or otherwise clueless/uninvolved in the book at all, or gone on vacation for the duration of the story. I know that these “excuses” are things that can happen. A lot of parents are uninvolved, too busy with their careers or otherwise to be very… parenty, but it seems to be such a common occurrence…

Review + Playlist: This Love by Nazarea Andrews

Review + Playlist: This Love by Nazarea Andrews

Posted by on 07/04/2013 • 18 Comments

Perfectly timed for summer, the This Love blog tour is dropping by today. This is a great summer romance for New Adult fans. Why don’t you have a look at my review, and then you can check out the playlist for the book to put you in the mood! 🙂

A perfect for summer read, This Love is a forbidden love story involving a student and a professor that you know is doomed before it begins, yet you keep hoping, denying the fact that the end of their crazy, sexy summer is coming.

The beginning of this book was a little rough for me and left me uncertain as to if I would enjoy it. The story is told through a dual POV that switches quite often and…

Waiting on Wednesday (84)

Posted by on 07/03/2013 • 25 Comments

Waiting on Wednesday is a weekly event that is hosted by Jill at Breaking the Spine  and spotlights upcoming releases that we’re eagerly anticipating.  My pick this week: The Drowned ForestKristopher Reisz Genre: YA Thriller Publication date: February 8th 2014by Flux

A Southern Gothic about a drowned girl who’s haunting her best friend, who has been lost without her and may be dragged down into the river with her unless she finds a way to put Holly to rest.

Creeeepeeeh!! *fist pump*

Yep that is pretty much all! 😀

What are you waiting on? Link me up! 🙂