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Wednesday, 29 June 2016

The Night Circus


Title: The Night Circus
Author: Erin Morgenstern
Rating: 5 stars
Genre: Historical, Fantasy
Number of Pages: 490
Publisher: Vintage Books
Publication Date: 2011
Summary: The Circus arrives without warning
No announcement proceeds it...
It is simply there, when 
yesterday it was not

Within the black-and-white striped canvas tents is an utterly unique experience full of breathtaking amazements, and it's only open at night.
But behind the scenes, a fierce competition is underway - a duel between two young magicians, Celia and Marco, who have been trained since childhood expressly for this purpose by their mercurial instructors. Unbeknownst to them, this is a game in which only one can be left standing, and the circus is but the stage for a remarkable battle of imagination and will. Despite themselves, however, Celia and Marco tumble headfirst into love.
True love or not, the game must play out, and the fates of everyone involved, from the cast of extraordinary circus performers to the patrons, hang in the balance, suspended as precariously as the daring acrobats overhead.

In part one of The Night Circus we meet the main characters of the story over the expanse of several years. We get brief glances of our main characters from the age of 5 in 1873 till their late teens 1886. The story starts off with introducing lots of intriguing ideas and establishes much of the story. Usually these long wind up stories will bore me and I give up but this book has such an enchanting feel to it, that even if there was no plot line for the entire book I probably would have kept reading. Never have I read a book that the writing and story dazzle in perfect synchronicity.

In is in part two that we are introduced to the Circus...and what a Circus it is. The entire circus is a work or art and incredible imagination. Le Cirque des Reves, the Circus of Dreams,  is only open at night and is entirely decked out in black and white and the best performers. But this is no ordinary circus, hiding in plain site , the circus is the platform of extraordinary magic not the illusions that the audience believes it is seeing. Marco and Celia are pitted in a game where they don't know the rules or how to win, all they know is that they must out do each other in feats of breathtaking imagination.

But as the years go by Celia and Marco find that they no longer compete against each other but instead build their magical creations for each other. But the competition must come to an end and Celia and Marco must find a way to end the competition without the drastic consequences that threaten the circus and their love.

But Celia and Marco aren't the only characters to tell a story, born under the strange and unique circumstances of the circus' magical opening night, the Murray twins, Poppet and Widget are two key players in the survival of the circus with their unique abilities and the help of a farm boy, Bailey with big dreams.

In short, I loved this book! It was magical and enchanting and was a world that I would love to see come to life. The book doesn't have the most compelling story line but it is written beautifully and I couldn't put it down.

Thursday, 23 June 2016

Black-Eyed Susans


Title:Black-Eyed Susans
Author: Julia Heaberlin
Rating: 4 stars
Genre: Thriller/ Mystery
Number of Pages: 349
Publisher: Penguin
Publication Date: 2015
Summary: Seventeen-year-old Tessa, dubbed a 'Black-Eyed Susan' by the media, became famous for being the only victim to survive the vicious attack of a serial killer. Her testimony helped put a dangerous criminal behind bars - or so she thought.
Now decades later, the case has been reopened and the black-eyed Susans planted outside Tessa's bedroom window seem to be a message from a killer who should be safely in prison.
Tessa agrees to help with the investigation, but she is haunted by fragmented memories of the night she was attacked and terrified for her own teenage daughter's safety, Can she unlock the truth about the killer before it is too late?


I really struggled to get into this book. The main reason for this was that I found that rather than saying what was happening, it just seemed to dance around events and teased you with information to the point where you wanted to pick the book up and throw it across the room. If you picked this book up without reading the summary first, I really think you would spend the first 70 or so pages of this book wondering what was going on. For people who love suspense and being kept guessing this is the book for you. Me, would have liked a bit more information to understand what was happening.

However, once I got through the first part of this book I really, really enjoyed it. The mystery begins to unfold in a way that allows you to follow and make your own assumptions, pushing and pulling you on the right track and sometimes leading you down dead ends. This book was filled with an amazing amount of little details, and the past and present are highly intertwined in a way that shows the amount of thought and detail that Heaberlin has put into this book,

This book alternates in perspective between Tessa or present day and a younger Tessie following the events of her attack. By telling the story in this perspective, Heaberlin doesn't really have Tessa talk about the events of her past so much as she focuses on the present and the results of what happened all those years ago. The story told from Tessa's point of view was definitely more enjoyable as this was what told the bulk of the story and was were ultimately the mystery and thriller aspect of the book were present. This meant that sometimes the other chapters told from a different perspective sometimes felt a little irrelevant to the overall story and were almost acting as a filler or breaker.

Saturday, 18 June 2016

The Lux Series




 I first picked up the Lux Series about two years ago, I flew through the first three books and for what ever reason I just decided to stop. So I figured it was about time I went back and finished what I had started.

The first three books for me, I would probably describe as a contemporary/ science-fiction cross over. Rather than focusing so much on the fact that there are aliens present in this book, this almost takes a back seat to everyday teenage problems, such as friendships and relationships. 

The first three books Obsidian, Onyx, and Opal are told through the perspective of Katy, a book vlogger/ blogger who has just moved with her mother to a small town where she quickly gets to know her new neighbours Dee and Daemon. I found that these books seemed to changed from everything happening at one time to nothing happening at all, there wasn't much of an inbetween. But for whatever reason though, this worked for the series and I didn't really dwell on it.

The final two books in the series are, however, when everything changes. Origin and Opposition are told from dual perspectives. With both Katy and Daemon narrating these final two books the world of the Lux expands exponentially. These books have probably got the best dual perspective I have ever read. No other book has created such clear distinctions between the two characters, showed different sides of both the main and minor characters and shaken the whole plot line up quite so dramatically. By doing this, Armentrout created a huge and complex amount of depth to all of her characters and I really wish that she had done this through the first three books as well.

Alongside this series is the book Shadows a prequel to the events of first book and told through a different POV again, Dee and Daemon's brother Dawson. While this book is not necessary for the series it does help to once again build on the complexity of the characters in this series.

And finally to top of this series is the book Oblivion the first three books condensed down to tell Daemon's POV. I was worried when I picked this up that it would be like every other book that I have read like this and simply tell the same story but from a different perspective, totally a waste of time. I couldn't have been more wrong. Reading the dual perspectives has nothing on this book. Reading Daemon's POV of events was enlightening to say the least, all of sudden you see more character flaws in character's that Katy didn't and in Katy herself. Character's that hadn't made much sense before suddenly did. This book really drove home the point of 'you can't understand a person until you walk in their shoes'.

While I don't consider these books to be great master pieces, I gave each of them 4 stars because I did ultimately really enjoy them. I did find that Armentrout is clearly an author more suited for New Adult books than YA as I did find that this reflects through her work and I found it quite obvious in some places of her writing. I'm really interested now to actually read a book of hers that is New Adult.

Saturday, 16 April 2016

March Wrap Up

For the month of March I didn't get as many books read as I would have liked due to the fact that I was moving house and many of my books ended up in boxes, boxes which I was only just about to unpack last weekend. And because I was moving I had no internet for two weeks, so rather than going back and trying to write full in detail reviews of the books I have read I will instead wrap them all up in one post.


Tales from the Shadowhunter Academy by Cassandra Clare and others.

In the beginning of march I finished reading the last five books from the Tales from the Shadowhunter Academy. I didn't enjoy these short stories as much as I do enjoy her novels. I did, however, find that they gave a really interesting insight in the inner working of the Shadowhunter world as it was set in Idris as opposed to an Institute. I also loved that we got to learn so much about Simon, because who doesn't love Simon in all his dorkiness.
5/5 Stars






Clockwork Prince by Cassandra Clare

March was very much a Cassandra Clare month. I continued with my Shadowhunter fix by re-reading Clockwork Prince, the second book in the Infernal Devices Series. As this is a re-read it not really surprising that I give this book a 5/5 stars. My favourite thing about this particular book in the series is how much we learn about Jem as he quite often gets overshadowed by Will as a character.
5/5 Stars






The Aeneid by Virgil

My TBR Challenge for February was to read a poem but in February I was in a reading slump so it just didn't happen. Granted the Aeneid isn't a poem in the traditional sense that most people would call a poem, especially once it has been translated from Latin to English. But an epic poem is still a poem.
This book is a well loved classic for a reason as it tells the story of Aeneas fleeing Troy after it has been destroyed by the Greeks and follows his journey to establish a new kingdom and race that would go on to become the Roman Empire. This book is filled with propaganda for Augustus and the greatness of Rome,
5/5 Stars



The Book Thief by Markus Zusak

I have been wanting to read this book for a really long time but after watching the movie and becoming a sobbing mess I have also been putting it off. This book is very unique in how it is told as first of all, death narrates the story which gives a very airy feeling of how true some of the events in this book are. Secondly the book is broken up into multiple parts and within each of these parts there are a number of short stories which all amalgamate into the over all plot of the book. I loved this book as it made me laugh, smile and cry and cry some more. If you do plan to read this book, have a box of tissues ready, especially at the end
5/5 Stars - easily



I did read a few other books in March but I was able to write reviews for those so feel free to check them out.

Sunday, 13 March 2016

Lady Midnight


Title: Lady Midnight
Series: The Dark Artifices - book 1
Author: Cassandra Clare
Rating: 5 stars
Genre: Young Adult, Urban Fantasy
Number of Pages: 669
Publisher: Simon & Schuster
Publication Date: March 8th 2016
Summary: In a secret world where half-angel warriors are sworn to fight demons, parabatai is a sacred word, A parabatai is your partner in battle. A parabatai is your best friend. Parabatai can be everything to each other - but they can never fall in love.
Emma Carstairs is a warrior, a Shadowhinter. She lives for battle. Alongside her parabatai, Julian Blackthorn, she patrols Los Angeles, where vampires party on the Sunset Stripe, and faeries - the most powerful of supernatural creatures - teeter on the edge of war with Shadowhunters. When the bodies of humans and faeries are found murdered in the same way Emma's parents were when she was a child, an uneasy alliance is formed. This is Emma's chance for revenge and Julian's chance to get back his brother Mark, who is being held by the Faerie Courts. All they have to do is solve the murders within two weeks... and before the murderer targets them.
Their search takes Emma from sea caves full of sorcery to a dark lottery where death is dispensed. And each clue she unravels uncovers more secrets. What has Julian been hiding from her all these years? Why does Shadowhunter Law forbid parabatai from falling in love? Who really killed her parents - and can she bear to know the truth?

Lady Midnight is an action packed and intense and for the first book of a series that is promising to be spectacular one. I hadn’t realised how much I missed a new Cassandra Clare book. Going into Lady Midnight, the assumption is that you already know the structure of the world that Cassandra Clare has created and as a result we don’t have to get a whole lot of world building allowing us to get straight into the story and learn the characters, and there is quite a few new characters to learn. Unlike previous books the characters grew up in the Shadowhunter world.

In the previous Shadowhunter books while adult presence has been limited, it is almost non-existent in Lady Midnight, the adults that are present have fleeting appearances and little sway and guidance over Emma, Julian and the rest of the Blackthorn children. As a result some of the old fashioned beliefs that the Shadowhunter’s hold onto do not apply to our characters. There are two obvious examples of this. The first is in the behaviour of the characters. All Shadowhunter’s grow up fast, it is a given, they grow up and fast because they die young. But our main characters have had to grow up more than others. They are this odd mix of having had to grow up too fast and still holding onto their child like dreams and ambitions. This helps to make the story both compelling and heart wrenching.

The other way this lack of adultness is seen, is in the presence of technology. Without adults forcing the Blackthorns and Emma into thinking that mundane technology is useless they have thrived under its influence. The characters make references to movies and use computers in a way that would stump our previous Shadowhunter characters, even those of the Mortal Instruments.

Cassandra Clare is a no-holds-bar author, you have no idea who can trust, or who is going to live; even the main characters are up for grabs. But so as to keep spoilers to the minimum I will just look at main characters.

Emma is very much a combination of Clary and Jace. She is reckless and stubborn, and constantly getting into trouble. Above all else Emma is loyal and driven with a need to find answers and work out who she is. Emma is slow to trust and care for others but when she does, it is final. Emma needs nothing more than to close the final chapter of one part of her life so that she can learn to live in the next.

Julian on the other hand is a mix of Will and Jem, he is quiet and reserved but rather than music we get art as his passion. But like with Will you never see the real him, you get his protective side that shows through and the absolution that he will put his family and Emma first but keeps secrets. He keeps secrets in the same way that Will does, they are perfectly put together but are the story progresses we see these secrets begin to unravel and pull him apart at the seams.

This book is neither slow nor fast despite its bulking size (669 – and it’s just the first book) it was a well paced and well written book. This is the best book Cassandra Clare has written so far and as her writing has grown and become even more amazing I am sure that her books will one day kill me. Cassandra Clare forces you to feel so much for her characters and then she rips your heart out with betrayals, lies, secrets and deaths.