Genre: YA


Thursday, October 29, 2015

Review: The House by Christina Lauren

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I received this book for free from Simon & Schuster in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review.

Review: The House by Christina LaurenThe House by Christina Lauren
Published by Simon & Schuster BfYR on October 6th 2015
Genres: Horror, Paranormal, YA
Source: Simon & Schuster
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three-half-stars

Gavin tells Delilah he’s hers—completely—but whatever lives inside that house with him disagrees.

After seven years tucked away at an East coast boarding school, Delilah Blue returns to her small Kansas hometown to find that not much has changed. Her parents are still uptight and disinterested, her bedroom is exactly the way she left it, and the outcast Gavin Timothy still looks like he’s crawled out of one of her dark, twisted drawings.

Delilah is instantly smitten.

Gavin has always lived in the strange house: an odd building isolated in a stand of trees where the town gives in to mild wilderness. The house is an irresistible lure for Delilah, but the tall fence surrounding it exists for good reason, and Gavin urges Delilah to be careful. Whatever lives with him there isn’t human, and isn’t afraid of hurting her to keep her away.

I do love a good creepy book so of course I wanted to read this. Right in time for Halloween, it was a spooky read. The characters were great and the story was really cool. Most importantly, House actually kind of scared me. The writing was fantastic at bringing you right into things. I was able to clearly imagine House and Table and other things moving about. It felt very magical at first, but then becomes scary and very unsettling.

Gavin is a boy who there are many rumors about. He lives in the “haunted house”, he doesn’t have parents, he’s weird, all sorts of stuff. He doesn’t have any friends, but it’s because he in fact does live alone. Well, not really alone, but he doesn’t have parents. House takes care of him though. Anything he needs, House supplies. He is well fed, has anything that he needs such as clothes, books, and other things, and House takes care of him. If he is sick, there is soup made. The fire is going to keep him warm, and lights turn on and off as he needs them. Even Piano taught him how to play. Gavin has never known anything else and is happy living there. That is until he Delilah comes into his life. Or back into his life I should say. She makes him happy and he can see a future with her. He is falling in love with her. He even brings her home and introduces her to House. That’s where things start to go very bad. House isn’t about to let someone else have Gavin, and it will do whatever it has to so he will never think about leaving.

Delilah has just returned from a fancy boarding school because her Grandmother is too ill to take care of her anymore or pay for the school. Her parents aren’t very attentive and she feels like they just really don’t care if she is there one way or another. Of course, they have rules for her and are a bit strict about boys and curfew though. When she starts attending school again at home, she instantly zeroes in on Gavin. He has changed a lot since they were younger, and she is very interested. They start spending time together and then it begins turning into more. She is at first fascinated with his home, but still a bit nervous. She has good reason, as House starts doing some really creepy things and leaving her warning messages. She tries to not be paranoid about it, but soon realizes that her life may actually be in danger. She’s a smart girl and quite brave. She is willing to fight house if it means getting Gavin out of there and keeping them safe.

This book has the perfect pace to ease you into things. It starts off very charming and cute with Gavin and Delilah getting to know each other and slowly progressing to falling for each other. It also has a good slow build up to House pretty much going insane. It was very creepy at times, mostly because I was just imagining how messed up some of the things happening were. There is much more to the story than Delilah and Gavin’s relationship and House being jealous though. Delilah’s best friend is a big part of the story, and learning about Gavin’s parents. I thought it was really well done and a great read for anytime, but especially close to Halloween. I highly suggest picking this up if you have any interest in this type of book, or even if you don’t and it just sounds like it might be something fun to try.

three-half-stars

3.5 Hot Espressos

Blog Tour: Review – We Are All Made of Molecules by Susin Nielsen

Posted by on 10/28/2015 • 4 Comments

When I received the email for the blog tour for this book, upon reading about the book was very excited to read it. Of course I had to be part of this blog tour! The book was really great and I am so happy that I said yes to this. It was a quick read with a lot of important topics. It is told from both Stewart and Ashley’s POV’s. Stewart is a really smart kid. Or as he likes to say, gifted. He felt that his life was pretty great with his just him, his mom, and his dad. Then, his mom dies and things get tough. They learn to cope though and eventually start to move forward. Especially his dad who is dating someone and they are moving…

Review: NEED by Joelle Charbonneau

Posted by on 10/23/2015 • 8 Comments

At first glance, NEED by Joelle Charbonneau sounds like the fricking bomb. Its premise speaks of the following:

A small town full of selfish high schoolers; A social media tool that promises to fulfill your every need if you do certain conditions; A heroine who has a brother who desperately needs a kidney transplant.

This was basically me:

But unfortunately, while I do agree that this was a fast-paced novel, it wasn’t something that left a huge impact in me.

Let’s talk about multiple, emotionless, deadpan-like POVs.

For a premise like this, I do understand the need of having multiple POVs, especially since you have a tempting social media tool that promises to fulfill even your most extravagant wishes for a price. It’s something that affects the people on a…

A Letter to Kady (Illuminae) by Amie Kaufman & Jay Kristoff

Posted by on 10/21/2015 • 11 Comments

I’m excited to have the Illuminae tour stop by the blog today with a fun guest post! I’ve got both Amie and Jay here today with a letter to their main character, Kady! Also don’t forget to enter to win before you go! Before we get to that, let’s see what this book is all about:

Guest post by Amie Kaufman and Jay Kristoff

A Letter to Kady

Dear Kady,

Okay, first up, we’re sorry. WE’RE SORRY. Please don’t delete our back-up files, remotely active our car alarms or plaster our embarrassing baby photos all over the internet. We know you know how. And okay, maybe you’d be justified. We put you through some stuff in Illuminae. We can acknowledge that.

We’re particularly sorry about…

Review: The Detour by S.A Bodeen

Posted by on 10/20/2015 • 6 Comments

I don’t even know where to start with this one. I find that if I don’t like a book, I always have more to say about it. This is one of those. It was super predictable for one. For two, the main character is awful and I was actually hoping that bad things would happen to her. (That is so awful, I know. But I know it’s not real and I would never wish harm on anyone in real life.) And third, I couldn’t help but keep thinking of Misery by Stephen King and how this was a total failed attempt at trying to make a variation of that type of story. That sounds harsh, but this book drove me crazy. Some might enjoy it, but it didn’t have many…

Review: Daughters Unto Devils by Amy Lukavics

Posted by on 10/16/2015 • 7 Comments

I may or may not have pissed my pants after reading this book.

Spoiler: I definitely did piss my pants after reading this book.

Horror aficionados, come and meet your match (made in hell). After reading Rin Chupeco’s Girl From the Well and The Suffering, I’ve been on a frenzy hunt for the next book that would tickle my scary bone and leave me trembling in the night. I’m not sure if you guys know, but I relish the feeling of getting scared. When my imagination goes out of control and when it feels like something is whispering to me or is floating beside me or is following me all because of a book – well, let’s just say, I feel absolutely thrilled by it. Yes, it is probably weird, but no, I am not…

Review: The Next Together by Lauren James

Posted by on 10/09/2015 • 11 Comments

Wow… just wow.

When you hear the word “time-travel”, the first thing that comes to mind (usually) is “science fiction”. You think of the technology and machines that make this feat possible; you think of the physics involved, of subatomic atoms transferring from one place to another (or however that is supposed to be done); you think of action-packed plots, of conspiracy theories, that push our heroes and heroines to time travel in the first place.

But… romance? With time-travel? To be quite honest, the cynic in me long believed a time-travel with romance in the center would be hard to pull off without it being too cheesy. With a different audience in mind, it would also be hard to talk about the technicalities of how time travel works in the…

Review: What We Saw by Aaron Hartzler

Posted by on 10/02/2015 • 5 Comments

You know how I would describe “being speechless” by something? It’s when you’re overwhelmed with so much emotions that words escape you. Something made you happy so much that you could only cry. Something made you so sad that your throat tightens and you can croak nothing out. Something made you so angry that find it hard to mutter a single word because you’re just fuming inside. This is basically what happened to me after reading What We Saw by Aaron Hartzler. It rendered me completely speechless.

I honestly don’t know how to review this book, if I can even review this book and give it the justice it deserves. It’s the sort that you know everyone – and I mean, everyone – should read; the sort in which when people ask you why…