Genre: YA


Friday, April 11, 2014

Review: We Were Liars by E. Lockhart

Posted by • 25 Comments

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

Review: We Were Liars by E. LockhartWe Were Liars by E. Lockhart
Published by Delacorte Press on May 13th 2014
Genres: Contemporary, Mystery, YA
Source: Delacorte Press
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five-stars

A beautiful and distinguished family.
A private island.
A brilliant, damaged girl; a passionate, political boy.
A group of four friends—the Liars—whose friendship turns destructive.
A revolution. An accident. A secret.
Lies upon lies.
True love.
The truth.

We Were Liars is a modern, sophisticated suspense novel from National Book Award finalist and Printz Award honoree E. Lockhart.

Read it.
And if anyone asks you how it ends, just LIE

I have been sitting on writing this review for over a day and a half now. WE WERE LIARS is one of those books that I loved so much as a reader and of course I want to share that love with everyone. But I also want people to go into the book just as blindly as I did so they can be taken by surprise as I was. So this review is going to be quite vague and I won’t be touching on many of the plot points.

What I can talk about here is the wonderful writing. I have an update on my Goodreads at 7% where I say that I loved the writing already. The words literally grabbed me at page 1 and did not let go until I had read the final one. Yes, this was a one day read for me because I just couldn’t walk away from it. The descriptions are really quite beautiful and the mysterious way that things are approached had me looking for double meanings in almost everything that I read. The vivid descriptions that Lockhart uses to describe the way emotions and pain affect the characters is fantastic. A few examples: A shot to the heart leaving the character lying bloody on the front lawn is the pain of a broken heart and bloody wrists that bleed and bleed from unsaid feelings about the death of a grandmother, I thoroughly enjoyed the physical descriptions used to explain the pain the characters were feeling. What is strongest about the writing is the fogginess that comes along with it. I have talked about this before after reading novels by Nova Ren Suma (the comparison came to mind quite a few times while reading WE WERE LIARS.) As the reader you are not sure who is good or bad, what is real and what isn’t and you are just wading your way out of the fog as things become clearer for you.

This style of writing is really perfect for the novel because Cadence is making her way out of a fog as well. She suffers a head injury pretty early on in the novel and has no idea the circumstances surrounding what happened to her. Why was she alone that night? Why did she go where she went? A trip back to the private island where she spends her summers with her aunties, cousins and grandfather is her chance to piece back together what happened 2 summers prior. While on the island there is a very remote sense given to the reader. It’s as if no one exists but the people on the island and nothing happens outside of the island. We get to know the characters in Cadence’s extended family quite well because they are really all we know of this world. I’m not going to talk about any of them really because I want you to come to your own conclusions about them but just know that I liked the development used for each and every one and I liked how my perspective of them changed so much throughout the novel.

I think that’s about all that I can do here for my part as reviewer of the novel. I hope my vagueness doesn’t turn you off of it because I really want everybody and their dog to pick this one up and give it a go. I haven’t read anything else by E. Lockhart but I will definitely be grabbing anything that I can by her, though it seems this is the first of her novels that is written in this vein, the others seem fluffy and fun. But, anyway, back on topic: READ THIS BOOK. PLEASE. FOR ME.

five-stars

5 Hot Espressos

Review: Pointe by Brandy Colbert

Review: Pointe by Brandy Colbert

Posted by on 04/10/2014 • 24 Comments

I have mixed feelings towards Pointe and it leans closer to a 3.5 read. For one, it ended up being an incredibly heartbreaking, tragic, and important story. For another, it’s well written with a compelling narrator who’s a realistic portrayal of a teenager with a shattered self-esteem. And all of it is very very gritty. But, before you realize what it all has to do with the heart of the story, the book feels like it’s dodging the real issue at hand with the introduction of tons of others. It kept circling around the actual kidnapping for so long – which was what attracted me to this book in the first place – that I started to feel let down at about the half way mark. It makes us wait…

Review: The Fault In Our Stars by John Green

Posted by on 04/09/2014 • 33 Comments

I bought The Fault In Our Stars nearly a year ago and had been holding off on reading it because it just hit too close to home for a while.  Upon seeing all of the excitement for the movie trailer I knew it was time to pick it up and make my way through it. In the end, I’m not even sure what to say other than “WOW!” There isn’t much that I can say about this amazing book that hasn’t already been said so this is probably going to be short but this is a must read for everyone. EVERYONE.

The writing in this book is stunning. I loved the voice that Green gave to Hazel Grace Lancaster; it was honest, it was intelligent and it was beautiful.  The…

Sekret Dream Cast + Giveaway!

Sekret Dream Cast + Giveaway!

Posted by on 04/04/2014 • 16 Comments

This week we’re celebrating the release of Sekret by Lindsay Smith, and today is my stop on the blog tour with a Dream Cast of Sekret along with a giveaway!

Sekret Dream Cast

Yulia, telemetrist and ration rat

Tatiana Maslany or Freya Tingley

Yulia, who can read the memories of objects and people through touch, is strong-willed, resourceful, and sometimes stubborn to a fault. I love Tatiana Maslany’s character(s) on Orphan Black, and how she convincingly slips into whatever role is required to get what she needs to survive. That definitely fits Yulia! But Freya Tingley (Hemlock Grove) also excels at just the right amount of attitude for Yulia — the one that lets you know she’ll obey your orders for now, but she won’t be broken…

Review: Prisoner of Night and Fog by Anne Blankman

Review: Prisoner of Night and Fog by Anne Blankman

Posted by on 04/03/2014 • 34 Comments

To anyone who thinks research for a book is not worth the time or effort, Prisoner of Night and Fog proves to the contrary. Based on true historical events, Anne has crafted a brilliantly compelling and incredibly authentic story entwined with real historical figures who are given a second breath of life. This is a story of a girl’s desperate search for the truth.

Underneath it all, Prisoner of Night and Fog is a gripping account of Hitler’s rise to power. The plot introduces many real-life characters who were part of Hitler’s entourage or impacted his life in some way. Naturally, fictional characters are also added to the mix to initiate an engaging mystery that, although fictional, is entangled inside real historical events. I may not be a history buff,…

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 –…