Saturday, April 2, 2011

Blood Harvest by S. J. Bolton


Image taken from shearersbookshop.com.au

Just finished reading this book today, and had to tell you all about it before I went to bed tonight. The other books I had read in the past couple of months, and just didn't get around to reviewing them until now.

"Blood Harvest" details the lives of three ordinary people: a ten year old boy, whose family has just moved into the quiet village of Heptonclough, a psychiatrist who is working with a patient living in the same village, and a priest who has just arrived to take on the parrish there, which has been left neglected for a few years. The novel describes how these three characters interact with each other, as weird happenings begin to occur. The boy keeps seeing a deformed child hanging around the church graveyard, beckoning his younger siblings to follow her. The patient of the psychiatrist, whose daughter had died in a fire three years ago, insists that her daughter is not dead, and that she comes back to haunt her. And the priest, while outwardly welcomed by members of the village, receives chilling and deadly cryptic messages to keep his nose out of learning about the town's past. Three seemingly different scenarios, yet they are all linked up as part of one big chilling murder mystery.

I bought this book purely by chance as I was finishing off Torment, and was desperate for a new book to read. I had never heard of S. J. Bolton before, nor had I ever heard any of the other books that she has written. But if she writes with the same mystery and suspense in this book as she does in her other ones, I am going to have to seek out her other books as well. She sets up a very intricate and elaborate plot, which all comes together nicely in one stunningly chilling conclusion (you will NEVER guess who the real killer is!)

All in all, it was a very enjoyable read.

Torment by Lauren Kate

Image taken from OBS Book reviews

The sequel to Fallen is just as good as its predecessor. While I NOW know what the story line is about, I ended up buying the book to find out what happens next, and not because of another stunning front cover (although, to tell you the truth, I really like the front cover to this as well)...

At this stage, Luce has just found out that she is in love with a fallen Angel. She and Daniel have been together for centuries (hence all the de ja vu feelings in the first book), and that ever seventeen years or so, he has to watch her die and come back to him again, reincarnated, all because of his choice to be with her instead of tending to his heavenly duties. This is all that Luce knows so far about her past. But because she didn't die like she was supposed to this time around, everybody - angels, demons, even Luce herself - are confused as to why things are different this time around. There is talk of end of days, the final battle, when eventually angels and demons will have to fight again for the last time. And there are a truck load of other supernatural beings all either fighting for Luce to join their side, or simply to kill her off. These are very dangerous times for Luce and for the people she cares about.

On the plus side, the "shadows" that Luce had originally mistaken in the first book to be bad omens are actually quite helpful in helping her glimpse into her past lives. She learns at her new school how to summon them and be able to see into her past for clues as to what her relationship with Daniel had been like in the past. But will this knowledge end up furthering enlightening her on her past, or destroy her hopes of her ever being together with Daniel for eternity? One must read on to find out...

While the content in this book is still pretty dark, I found the book to be more comical than the first one was. There are new characters introduced who add a bit of humour to the plot. Not that this is a bad thing, as the characters are quite likeable. And there's another love interest added to the plot, with Miles also trying to get with Luce. AND, Luce is wondering whether it would be better to be with him or not, so the relationship with her and Daniel gets more complicated than it originally was.

In all accounts, a very good read indeed. Cannot wait until the third installment comes out in a couple of months time!

Fallen by Lauren Kate

Image taken from freebooks.net


OK. So I've been meaning to read this book for a while, managed to get myself a copy of it last year, which I did not get the chance to read until early this year. To be honest, it was not so much the storyline that got me hooked (because I didn't know what it was about), but it was actually the FRONT COVER that drew me in. A couple of people have joked with me when I've told them the story that you shouldn't judge a book by its cover, but I have to say that the story is just as good as the front cover that adorns it.

The story is about 17 year old Lucinda Price (Luce for short), who is sent to a reform school after a dreadful accident which happened to her would-have-been boyfriend, none of which she has ever recollection of happening, but which the authorities believe she is in someway responsible for. We learn that ever since she can remember, she has been followed by these supernatural creatures called "shadows", who continually pop up just when something dreadful is about to happen either to her or one of her friends. Determined to stay off the psychotic drugs she had been forced to take as a child because of these sightings, she lies to her parents and to her doctor that she has stopped seeing them. However, they still haunt her, and they appear to be haunting her more frequently now that she is away from home.

Then from day one when she arrives at the school, she meets the most handsome young man she has ever seen named Daniel, who she feels a strange connection to. Sometime, somewhere, they have known each other before, but Luce is unable to pinpoint where, and how this is even possible. But Daniel knows her all too well, and is initially unprepared to tell her anything. That is, until strange events begin happening at the school, and Luce insists on knowing what the shadows and her de ja vu feelings for Daniel have in common. The truth which she eventually finds out in the end is both beautiful and unbearable. To find out what that truth is, you will just have to read on for yourself...

Lauren Kate sets up this book quite nicely, detailing the scenery of Sword and Cross and of what it is like to live there. The gives subtle hints as to where the story is about to go, without giving too much away. Her description of "the shadows" and their appearance at various stages of the book come at times just when you are feeling "comfortable" with the narrative, shocking you back into a feeling of uneasiness and suspense. I thoroughly enjoyed the suspense I was feeling all the way towards the final chapter.

While this is definitely catered for young teenage girls, guys such as myself can appreciate its slightly dark undertones, not to mention the little bit of violence that is contained in it. As a romance novel, it does not go "mushy" or "over the top" with its romantic content. As a contemporary gothic novel, it has all the makings of a good horror story.

In short, I highly recommend this book to anyone who is into either of those genres.

Mockingjay by Suzanne Collins


Image taken from Shelf Elf.

Well, it was about time I updated this blog, now moving on to talk about the third and final installment of the Hunger Games, and once again, Suzanne Collins has not disappointed me in the slightest!

As you can probably tell from what I recounted from the second book, the uprisings have continued, and have escalated since we last hear of them. District 13 DOES exist (sorry to spoil the ending of the second book, but I figured that within the two months of my having reviewed it, you would have and should have read it by now). Katniss is dubbed as the "mascot" for the new rebellion, and it is her job star in propaganda videos and raising hope for all of Panem. But of course, being "The Mockingjay" has its setbacks. You have the Capitol hungry for your blood. You are only told what you "need" to know when prepping up to give the speeches (leaving room for more doubt as to whether the cause you're fighting for is a just one). On top of that, you have two boys fighting over you, which is undoubtedly the LAST thing you want to deal with right this very moment. Needless to say, we read of a very emotionally fragile Katniss in this book, who everyone expects to just be able to pull things together and make everything right again.

I was told by a few people who read the book before me that they did not like how the book concluded. They felt it a bit too "rushed", and they were kind of getting sick of the whole Gale/Peter love triangle thing. I personally found the Gale/Peter thing to be an important part of the storyline, and did not feel the ending to be "rushed" at all. I felt the timing was just right for Collins to conclude the book in the way she did. And, without giving too much away, there is definitely a happy ending for Katniss after all, however bitter-sweet it appears to be.

Well, that's enough of my rambling. Go out and buy the book! You won't regret it...