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6/08/2015

The Ocean At The End Of The Lane By Neil Gaiman
Release Date: June 18, 2013
Publisher: William Morrow Books
Pages: 181
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Synopsis (from Goodreads): Sussex, England. A middle-aged man returns to his childhood home to attend a funeral. Although the house he lived in is long gone, he is drawn to the farm at the end of the road, where, when he was seven, he encountered a most remarkable girl, Lettie Hempstock, and her mother and grandmother. He hasn't thought of Lettie in decades, and yet as he sits by the pond (a pond that she'd claimed was an ocean) behind the ramshackle old farmhouse, the unremembered past comes flooding back. And it is a past too strange, too frightening, too dangerous to have happened to anyone, let alone a small boy.

Forty years earlier, a man committed suicide in a stolen car at this farm at the end of the road. Like a fuse on a firework, his death lit a touchpaper and resonated in unimaginable ways. The darkness was unleashed, something scary and thoroughly incomprehensible to a little boy. And Lettie—magical, comforting, wise beyond her years—promised to protect him, no matter what.

Having just finished this book, I am at a loss for words to describe all the emotions I'm feeling.Well let me just start off by saying Gaiman is a master writer and I don't know any other author that can take pen to page, or in this case keyboard to screen, and make you feel every emotion under the sun whilst having you begging for more. I was sad to get to the end of this rather short work (it was only 181 pages).

However, let me say that I LOVED The Ocean at the End of the Lane. I was teary at times, smiling at others, terrified and genuinely touched. This book captures the innocence of childhood, of dreams and the imagination. I honestly don't know how Gaiman does it but I'm glad he does what he does like no other writer out there. His voice is so unique and sweet and different that I'm glad he was a destined to be a writer so that those of us who are in awe of his skill at least get to enjoy his beautiful words. Thanks Mr. Gaiman for introducing us to Lettie Hempstock and letting us escape to her ocean.

Here are some bits and pieces that stuck with me:

"All monsters are scared.
That's why they're monsters."


"I found myself thinking of an ocean running beneath the whole universe, like the dark seawater that laps beneath the wooden boards of an old pier: an ocean that stretches from forever to forever and is still small enough to fit inside a bucket, if you have Old Mrs. Hempstock to help you get it in there, and you ask nicely."


"I saw the world I had walked since my birth and I understood how fragile it was, that the reality I knew was a thin layer of icing on a great dark birthday cake writhing with grubs and nightmares and hunger. I saw the world from above and below. I saw that there were patterns and gates and paths beyond the real. I saw all these things and understood them and they filled me, just as the waters of the ocean filled me. Everything whispered inside me. Everything spoke to everything, and I knew it all."

Adults are content to walk the same way, hundreds of times, or thousands; perhaps it never occurs to adults to step off the paths, to creep beneath rhododendrons, to find the spaces between fences. 

“I’m going to tell you something important. Grown-ups don’t look like grown-ups on the inside either. Outside, they’re big and thoughtless and they always know what they’re doing. Inside, they look just like they always have. Like they did when they were your age. The truth is, there aren’t any grown-ups. Not one, in the whole wide world.”

“And did I pass?"
The face of the old woman on my right was unreadable in the gathering dusk. On my left the younger woman said, "You don't pass or fail at a being a person, dear.”

1/19/2015

The Graveyard Book By Neil Gaiman
Release Date: September 30, 2007
Publisher: Harper Collins
Pages: 312
Genre: Children's Literature 
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Synopsis (from Goodreads):
 After the grisly murder of his entire family, a toddler wanders into a graveyard where the ghosts and other supernatural residents agree to raise him as one of their own.

Nobody Owens, known to his friends as Bod, is a normal boy. He would be completely normal if he didn't live in a sprawling graveyard, being raised and educated by ghosts, with a solitary guardian who belongs to neither the world of the living nor of the dead. There are dangers and adventures in the graveyard for a boy. But if Bod leaves the graveyard, then he will come under attack from the man Jack—who has already killed Bod's family . . . 

Beloved master storyteller Neil Gaiman returns with a luminous new novel for the audience that embraced his New York Times bestselling modern classic Coraline. Magical, terrifying, and filled with breathtaking adventures, The Graveyard Book is sure to enthrall readers of all ages.


This book was amazing in every way. The characters, the setting, the atmosphere and overall suspense, all of it was on point and executed to perfection.  Mr. Gaiman had gotten the idea almost twenty years before writing it and needless to say the wait was definitely worth it because what we've been given is an instant classic. The Graveyard Book was endearing, poignant and profound in many ways. Well done. I loved it.

5/27/2014

Shatter Me By Tahereh Mafi
Release Date:
November 15, 2011
Publisher: Harper Teen
Pages: 338
Genre: Young Adult
Buy this book: Amazon

Synopsis (from Goodreads):

I have a curse
I have a gift

I am a monster
I'm more than human

My touch is lethal
My touch is power

I am their weapon
I will fight back

Juliette hasn’t touched anyone in exactly 264 days.

The last time she did, it was an accident, but The Reestablishment locked her up for murder. No one knows why Juliette’s touch is fatal. As long as she doesn’t hurt anyone else, no one really cares. The world is too busy crumbling to pieces to pay attention to a 17-year-old girl. Diseases are destroying the population, food is hard to find, birds don’t fly anymore, and the clouds are the wrong color.

The Reestablishment said their way was the only way to fix things, so they threw Juliette in a cell. Now so many people are dead that the survivors are whispering war – and The Reestablishment has changed its mind. Maybe Juliette is more than a tortured soul stuffed into a poisonous body. Maybe she’s exactly what they need right now.

Juliette has to make a choice: Be a weapon. Or be a warrior.

First, let me preface this by saying that I tried to read this book twice before succeeding the third time around. The main reason for this was the fact that this novel was riddled with so many smilies and metaphors (some of them not making sense and others ill placed) that it took away from the actual storytelling. I'm not going to go in depth with this review because there really isn't much to go in depth with. The synopsis is essentially dragged out over 300+ pages and the ending leaves a lot to desired (not to mention it was entirely unoriginal). 

I will give the author points for originality and taking risk in narration style but it doesn't work here. I wouldn't recommend this one but I give myself a pat on the back for getting through it though.

5/23/2014

The Wolf Gift By Anne Rice
Release Date: February  14, 2012
Publisher: Knopf
Pages: 404
Genre: Adult
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Synopsis (from Goodreads): The time is the present.

The place, the rugged coast of northern California. A bluff high above the Pacific. A grand mansion full of beauty and tantalizing history set against a towering redwood forest.

A young reporter on assignment from the San Francisco Observer. . . an older woman, welcoming him into her magnificent, historic family home that he has been sent to write about and that she must sell with some urgency . . . A chance encounter between two unlikely people . . . an idyllic night—shattered by horrific unimaginable violence. . .The young man inexplicably attacked—bitten—by a beast he cannot see in the rural darkness . . . A violent episode that sets in motion a terrifying yet seductive transformation as the young man, caught between ecstasy and horror, between embracing who he is evolving into and fearing who—what—he will become, soon experiences the thrill of the wolf gift.

As he resists the paradoxical pleasure and enthrallment of his wolfen savagery and delights in the power and (surprising) capacity for good, he is caught up in a strange and dangerous rescue and is desperately hunted as “the Man Wolf,” by authorities, the media and scientists (evidence of DNA threaten to reveal his dual existence). . . As a new and profound love enfolds him, questions emerge that propel him deeper into his mysterious new world: questions of why and how he has been given this gift; of its true nature and the curious but satisfying pull towards goodness; of the profound realization that there are others like him who may be watching—guardian creatures who have existed throughout time and may possess ancient secrets and alchemical knowledge and throughout it all, the search for salvation for a soul tormented by a new realm of temptations, and the fraught, exhilarating journey, still to come, of being and becoming, fully, both wolf and man.


Rueben, a young reporter, narrowly escapes a wolf attack and soon finds himself experiencing a change that transforms him into a man wolf. Soon after this he begins to take on the role of a vigilante by taking the law into his own hands. As a result the police scientists being looking for him, as well as others with the same gift...

I really wanted to like this book but I found certain things problematic. For one, the protagonist was very one dimensional and flat. Rueben is a 23 year old with a Porsche who recites poetry and philosophy... how realistic is that. It didn't seem very believable and this took away from the possible deeper layers of the character.

Secondly, Reuben randomly has a love connection with a women who appears in the woods. No reason is given for why she lives so reclusively or why she isn't horrified by the man wolfs appearance. But soon after spending the first night together they fall deeply in love and we don't get to know more about either character other than their love for each other. I am not a big fan instant. I find it dull and in this case thats what we get.

The rest of his family are also underdeveloped. Reuben's mom, a doctor, is defined by her job and it is the only light we see her in. And similarly so is his brother who is a priest.

Despite these criticisms, Anne Rice is great at myth building. The back story to the wolf gift (chrism) is fascinating and the strongest point in the book. Her descriptions of the old house in which Reuben lives as well as the redwood forest is so vivid its breathtaking and there is something to be said for that.

5/12/2014

Changing Planes By Ursula K. Le Guin
Release Date: August 1, 2005
Publisher: Ace
Pages: 239
Genre: Young Adult
Buy this book: Amazon

Synopsis (from Goodreads)
: Sita Dulip has missed her flight. But instead of listening to garbled announcements in the airport, she has found a method of bypassing the crowds at the desks, the long lines at the toilets, the nasty lunch, the whimpering children and punitive parents, the bookless bookstores, and the blue plastic chairs bolted to the floor.

This method - changing planes - enables Sita to visit fifteen societies not found on Earth. She will encounter cultures where the babble of children fades over time into the silence of adults; where whole towns exist solely for holiday shopping; where personalities are ruled by rage; where genetic experiments produce less than desirable results. And many other exotic landscapes whose denizens are fundamentally human...


Airports are boring places so when I read the synopsis of this novel I had to read it. And let me say that it did not disappoint. Le Guin is an amazing writer with immense imagination. She goes to areas and spaces where many writers haven't gone before. The stories are interesting and unlike anything I had ever read before.

This collection of stories was an exercise in imagination and it was thought provoking. I would recommend this book to anyone who wants to be transported.

5/01/2014

Red Glove By Holly Black (Curse Workers #2)
Release Date: April 5, 2011

Publisher: Margaret K. McElderry Books
Pages: 325
Genre: Young Adult
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Amazon

Synopsis (from Goodreads): After rescuing his brothers from Zacharov’s retribution, Cassel is trying to reestablish some kind of normalcy in his life.

That was never going to be easy for someone from a worker family that’s tied to one of the big crime families—and whose mother’s cons get more reckless by the day. But Cassel is coming to terms with what it means to be a worker, and he’s figuring out how to have friends.

Except normal doesn’t last very long. Soon Cassel is being courted by both sides of the law and is forced to confront his past—a past he remembers only in scattered fragments, and one that could destroy his family and his future. Cassel will have to decide whose side he wants to be on, because neutrality is not an option. And then he will have to pull off his biggest con ever to survive….

I am a big fan of Holly Black and her Faerie series but unfortunately this series was off the mark for me. It wasn't the writing, because we all know Holly can write, it was the premise I found less than titillating or engaging. 

The plot set up of forbidden love set behind the backdrop of a world where con-artistry magic and the mafia mix should work but ultimately doesn't. i didn't feel the characters were real enough or that I cared too much about them. 

Overall I would say that the strength of the writing saves the story but it was the story itself that I found to be flat.

3/16/2014

The Girl of Fire and Thorns  By Rae Carson (Fire and Thorns #1)
Release Date: September 1, 2011
Publisher: Greenwillow
Pages: 423
Genre: Young Adult
Buy this book:
 Amazon


Synopsis (from Goodreads): Once a century, one person is chosen for greatness.

Elisa is the chosen one.

But she is also the younger of two princesses, the one who has never done anything remarkable. She can't see how she ever will.

Now, on her sixteenth birthday, she has become the secret wife of a handsome and worldly king—a king whose country is in turmoil. A king who needs the chosen one, not a failure of a princess.

And he's not the only one who seeks her. Savage enemies seething with dark magic are hunting her. A daring, determined revolutionary thinks she could be his people's savior. And he looks at her in a way that no man has ever looked at her before. Soon it is not just her life, but her very heart that is at stake.

Elisa could be everything to those who need her most. If the prophecy is fulfilled. If she finds the power deep within herself. If she doesn’t die young.

Most of the chosen do.


i was pleasantly surprised by The Girl of Fire and Thorns by Rae Carson. I first heard about it online through several blogs and most of the reviews were very good. When I finally did get my hands on it I have to say that it was a slow read at the beginning. It took me a while to finish but when I did the overall story arc was very satisfying. The characters are very endearing and the protagonist Elisa is a character who I really felt I could get behind. She wasn't whiney as some characters tend to be. She was relatable and surprisingly real leaping off the page instantly. Being in her head wasn't a bad place to be and seeing her world through her eyes was different and great.


The grand love affair (a spice in any great novel) is also a bit of a surprise. I really enjoyed the twists and turns especially the way it was all resolved in the end. 


I do recommend this book and I have to say... Rae Carson tells an intriguing story and I followed her till the end.