Showing posts with label Series. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Series. Show all posts

Thursday, 14 August 2014

Review, Excerpt & Giveaway: The Lost Kingdom — Stephanie Beerden

"A Prophecy made long ago, announced the arrival of the new Ladies of Elements.

And now almost a millennia later, it finally came true …

All her life Arima thought she knew who and what she was. That is until the day of her sixteenth birthday came and her world is turned upside down, when she’s told she’s not a White Witch but Lady Spirit. And that she is the one that has been foretold, will unite the Five Ladies of Elements once again and save Ilendia and the Other Lands from Ahriman, the Demon King.

At first Arima refuses to accept her new fate, but when Shanums come and destroy her village and kill her loved ones, she has no choice but to flee and fall right into the destiny she never wanted. As she grudgingly starts her journey into the unknown, she is accompanied by her unicorn familiar Sirrim, Blythe, a Vampire with a dark past and Myrddin, a mysterious Ljosalfar.

And the longer her journey lasts, the more Arima begins to realise that she can’t escape her own destiny and she must learn to control her powers and learn to be a Lady for the sake of the Sisters she doesn’t know and the people of Ilendia and the Other Lands.

However, things get more complicated when Arima comes into the possession of a key. Her instincts compel her to go towards danger when she discovers that the key she holds, can unlock the legendary kingdom of Eléssima, the home of the Ladies of Elements.

She will have to make the choice to follow her instincts or stay on the path that has been laid out for her."
— Official Synopsis from Good Reads


Review
    
I was given an ebook copy of this book for free in exchange for an honest review.

Arima is raised as a white witch by her white witch grandmother. She is taught numerous magical skills and even swordfighting by her grandmother’s friend. However, moments before she turns sixteen years old her grandmother tells her she is the Lady Spirit. With a daunting destiny ahead of her Arima must learn to wield her new powers as a Lady and begin her search to find her element sisters in order to unite and defeat the evil king who killed their predecessors so many years ago. She represents hope for all. Can she fulfill her destiny when danger lurks down every path?

What I expected from a book with such a plot was an enchanting, whimsical adventure, but the writing seemed clumsy to me. Having read the ebook cover to cover, I think this might be the result of it being translated into English. For me the narrative seemed to lack a real sense of flow, feeling disjointed in some places, and the dialogue felt awkward and inauthentic. This appears to be Stephanie Beerden’s first novel translated into English and while it feels like a rocky start, I did feel that the writing got better as the book went on. I hope that when the second book in the series is translated, Beerden can can bring a magical flare to her books which I am sure she is capable of.

While the writing may feel a little uneven, the story and the world built by Beerden is impressive in how expansive it is. Although I never really felt the passage of time in this book, it is said that the characters must travel weeks and even months to their destination, which helps the reader get a sense of just how big the lands are. The quest on which Arima is on is long and gruelling, and she is also on a journey of self where she must discover her own powers and train them. She learns both from other characters, books and through her own practice. She is self motivated, but learns to accept the importance of help and advice of others, and I think this makes her a very strong and well rounded female character. 

Arima is also one of the few female characters in fiction worlds who does not fall in love - or even take a fancy to someone romantically. Her mind is consumed with her destiny - finding her sisters, training herself and staying alive. That is not to say she ever says or thinks explicitly that she does not have time to love, she clearly cares deeply for her friends and those who serve the Ladies, but in a purely platonic way. As the priestesses who served the previous Ladies took vows of celibacy, perhap the Ladies of Elements simply do not feel a romantic or passionate attraction for others? 

The characters which Beerden has created did not always resonant with me. Our grandmother figure who loved Arima as her own apparently could not think of a better time or way to tell Arima about her true identity, though she had sixteen years to consider it. Meanwhile, our powerful antagonist’s early dialogue appears a little juvenile due to style choices with capital letters and too much punctuation used to a comical and overblown effect.

I feel the exposition was not always interwoven in the rest of the text, and because of that I feel the story was sometimes interrupted to give the reader important details to help them understand the fantasy world. While I usually don’t mind the ‘learn as you go’ style in books, I feel that when the protagonist already knows all about magic and such, the narrative needs a little break to explain to the reader what the characters already know and this slows things down. I think a way around this would be to pluck out those snippets of information and make it into a prologue which explains the prophecy about the Ladies. It would make for a more epic opening and educate the reader on what things are before they encounter them. I think that would make for a really powerful and enchanting beginning to this fantasy series. 

While even now I’m not quite sure I have a firm grasp of everything within this story, I have to commend the imagination of Beerden who was unafraid to add magical unicorns and a fighting heroine in the same book. That said, the violence at the end feels much gritter than the rest of the book and the swearing seems completely out of sync with the rest of the dialogue. There are also a few references to hell, though within this book I get the impression that there is no hell, but there is a place called the chaos which serves a similar purpose.


Excerpt

Shortly before midnight Bryeia and Gideon called out to her and told her they would be going back home because they had something very important to tell her. The walk to Arima and Bryeia’s house was quiet and tense. It made Arima feel uneasy. Even Rowan was silent and wouldn’t even look at her. After a while, they arrived at the house. The house itself was made out of light brown wood and had a wooden roof with a layer of straw beneath it to insulate it during the winter months. The windows were a bit dirty and the door was worn, but it was home. Bryeia let everybody into the house before shutting the door securely behind her.

They entered the living room; it was cosy with a rectangular table and two chairs. A coloured carpet decorated the floor for a small coffee table, and a rocking chair stood near the window close to the broad window-sill, which had a few small pillows on it because it was Arima’s favourite spot to sit. There were several cabinets and closets against the wall; one of them was a book-case, which held several books and parchment paper, and the other was a long cabinet with closed doors. Arima immediately went to her favourite spot on the window-sill and looked at the other three people in the room, confused as to what was going on.

“Why did we leave so early, Nana?” Arima asked, feeling a bit disappointed. Bryeia and Gideon looked at each other while Rowan pushed himself against a wall and kept his gaze away from hers.

Bryeia hesitantly stepped forward and said, “Arima, there is something I must tell you. Something I am not sure will be easy to accept, but you must know that it is the truth.”

“What is, Nana?” Arima asked, confused.

Bryeia sighed and looked at Gideon , who nodded encouragingly. “Arima, you weren’t abandoned on my doorstep as a baby,” Bryeia started. “I found you in the forest sixteen years ago on the first night of spring, like today … when you fell from the heavens like a falling star.”

“What?” Arima said, looking at Bryeia with wide, unbelieving eyes.

“Arima, you are not a White Witch. I made you that way with a spell I cast on you when you were a baby, to protect you from Ahriman. But I cannot protect you any longer. At midnight tonight, the spell will break, and Ahriman will be able to find you,” Bryeia said. She took a deep breath, while taking Arima’s hands in her own and looked at the hurt and disbelief in the girl’s light-green eyes . “Arima … you … you are Lady Spirit.”


Stephanie Beerden

Stephanie Beerden was born on Friday the 13th (no joke, she really was) in a small city called Genk and has always been fascinated with the occult, magic and books.

Her childhood and teen years were filled with reading lots and lots of books and imagining what life would be like as a vampire. Until one day she decided that she wanted to try her hand at writing her own books and that was the beginning of her writing adventure.

Her first book is a YA Fantasy called De Elementen – Het Verloren Koninkrijk and after many, many trials and tribulations, one small Dutch publisher decided “Hey, let’s give this girl a shot”. Her second book De Elementen – Archandir was published in July 2013 and in April 2014, she indie-published The Lost Kingdom (The Elements Series #1), the English edition of her book.

Stephanie hopes to keep writing for as long as she can and already has several writing projects in the works for the future.



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Thursday, 24 July 2014

Review Tour: Boulton Quest Series — N. D. Richman

I have two reviews today - for Brothers, Bullies and Bad Guys and Sinners, Survivors and Saints which are book one and two in the Boulton Quest series. This series is aimed at young adults (/middle graders) with 'the reluctant reader in mind'. If you're an adult reader looking to delve into a young adult book full of action, adventure and mystery then you should check this book out as well!


Official Synopsis for Brothers, Bullies and Bad Guys

Their parents are kidnapped in a home invasion and Christopher and Michael must unite or die in their quest to find them. Adventure turns to mystery when the brothers follow a hunch leading them over the Pacific Coast Mountains, across the ocean, and to a fortified island where they fight for their lives with tragic results.

Official Synopsis for Sinners, Survivors and Saints

Christopher and Michael become multi-millionaires and their greed endangers Katherine's life. While Christopher, Michael and Thomas are racing to rescue her, Robert Cain’s army steals the mysterious machine and his frightening intentions become clear.

Can Michael beat his inner demons?

Will Katherine lose the will to survive?

In this exciting sequel to Brothers, Bullies and Bad the future becomes clear, and it seems things can only get worse.


Review for Brothers, Bullies and Bad Guys

Packed full of action suitable for younger audiences, Richman does a great job at painting a vivid picture while remaining engaging.

As an older reader I feel I’m a bit better equipped to guess plots and twists because of the amount of stories I have been exposed to. The family reveal towards the end of the book was something I guessed right in the beginning, but I don’t feel it was explored that well in terms of changing family dynamics or emotions. I’m not sure this book was really concerned with exploring friendship, family and feelings. Sure, those themes arise, but they aren’t greatly elaborated or developed. I think for reluctant readers, which is the target audience for this book, that might a good thing. Some reluctant readers may consider books a place for emotions and other touchy-feely topics they are not interested in, whereas television and films offer action packed explosions, car races and fights.

This book did not contain as much action as your typical Transformer movie, but I feel there was still a lot going on. There was an explosion, cars and guns, among other things. However, Richman did a great job of not glorifying that sort of behaviour or situation. Younger readers who are more prone to action packed television might find themselves enjoy this series.

While the ages of the achievements of the characters given their young age and upbringing seem pretty unlikely (okay, it’s a story, but I still like things that seem plausible), I feel younger readers will be able to relate to the main characters based on their age and roles. Of the four children/teenagers within the book, there is only one female who serves as a light love interest and defender of her young brother. The males are more varied with one playing the role of responsible older brother, younger boy genius slash trouble maker and bullied ‘runt’. I think most people could probably place themselves into one of those categories.

The language is varied and Richman paints scenes with great detail. For readers lacking confidence, this could feel a little challenging, but that is not a bad thing. Richman does a great job of making sure every reader is pulled into the world s/he has created.

This book probably meets most, if not all, of the requirements for its target audience. There are some parts which seem completely disjointed from the rest of the story, for example the visions of the future and seeing a ghost for no apparent reason. This made me question what the purpose of those elements was. It seems to provide an easy explanation for some of the actions performed by characters, and perhaps that is the only reason they exist within the story. Or perhaps something will be revealed later on in the series which explains these occurrences. Regardless of this and the lack of exploration of a few themes I think could have been capitalised on, this book was engaging and pleasant.



Review for Sinners, Survivors and Saints



I feel that the majority of my review from book one applies to book two. Richman adds such detail that even those who claim not to have an imagination will be picturing the scenes within the book. 

Again, the potential to explore family dynamics and the changes in relationships is not used. There is a few off handed mentions, but no real development or exploration. This makes the characters feel a little stiff, but I think this book is really written with action in mind rather than anything else.

In each book the adults, who are meant to be protecting their children, seem to get weaker and more powerless. Maybe this is just taking advantage of young people’s desires to save themselves and others without the help of adults. It is not really the kind of thing I appreciate within a story, but in this context it works and is explained. 

We have the ghost popping up again for no reason that I can see, besides to service as a frail reason why some things happened as they did. I feel like this doesn’t fit with the rest of the story which seems based in the real-ish, non-paranormal and non-fantasy world. You could say there is a bit of sci-fi given the mention of a time machine, but there still isn’t an explanation for single ghost. Given the ghost is question did not receive a whole lot of attention, development or explicit connection to the characters she is visiting; I feel it’s even more odd. But, that is a very minor issue I have with the book. Perhaps younger readers are more accepting of ghosts popping up unexplained in their books.

While I like that Katherine had some chapters to herself to demonstrate some girl-power, I feel in comparison to other sections of the book it was a little dull. I did appreciate the reveal of her character background, however and maybe it was a little cliché to have her reflecting on her past when she might soon die, it was nice to know she had some depth to her character.

I think this book is as good as the first and provides a brilliant set up to a face-off with the ultimate villain. 
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Monday, 7 July 2014

Trailer Reveal: Restraint — Randi Cooley Wilson


I usually try to post book trailers on Tuesday, but today I'm taking part in a reveal so you get a trailer a day earlier! This trailer will not be winning any awards for being the most engaging, it is atmospheric thanks to the use of slow transitions, dark colours and music. 

Restraint



Author: Randi Cooley Wilson
Series: The Revelation Series, Book 2
Genre: New Adult, Paranormal, Romance
Published: August 2014


Official Synopsis

A FORBIDDEN LOVE WILL BECOME DEEPER.
A LOYALTY WILL BE TESTED.
AND ONLY DARKNESS WILL REMAIN.

One revelation changed everything, turning Eve Collin’s world upside down with grief and questions of identity and allegiance. Now as she flees enemies that refuse to give up, Eve must also face the mounting attraction between herself and her gargoyle protector. Will she ever truly be safe? How much will she sacrifice to survive and who will she become?

Restraint is an addictive pleasure a spellbinding continuation of Eve’s journey of self-discovery, love and sacrifice.

Readers captivated by Revelation will eagerly devour Restraint.
Restraint is volume two in The Revelation Series.


The Author

Randi was born and raised in Massachusetts where she attended Bridgewater State University and graduated with a degree in Communication Studies. After graduation she moved to California where she lived happily bathed in sunshine and warm weather for fifteen years.

Randi and her husband recently moved back to Massachusetts with their daughter where she was encouraged to begin writing again.

Revelation is her first novel and The Revelations Series is her first New Adult Paranormal Romance book series.

“I’ve had a love affair with books, writing and storytelling since childhood. It has been a dream of mine to introduce this world and these characters to you. I hope I’ve done them justice.”

Randi loves to hear from readers, you can reach out to her via Twitter: R_CooleyWilson and/or Facebook: authorrandicooleywilson
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Thursday, 24 April 2014

Review: PODS — Michelle K. Pickett

I think that young adults may like this book, along with people who like romance and rosy novels. The latter type of readers probably won’t dip into dystopian novels often, or at all, but this could be a nice way to introduce them to elements of the genre. For fans of emotionally powerful dystopian stories or sci-fi, this book might be underwhelming.


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Sunday, 9 March 2014

Book Blast & Giveaway: The Boxcar Baby — J.L. Mulvihill


Today I present to you... another giveaway! I have read the blurb of this book quite a few times, and I think it sounds like a fabulous book. It is already on my to read list!

Synopsis: Born in a boxcar on a train bound for Georgia. At least that is what Papa Steel always told AB'Gale. But now, fifteen years later, the man who adopted and raised her as his own is missing and it's up to AB'Gale to find him. Aided only by a motley gang of friends, AB'Gale train hops her way across the United States in a desperate attempt to find her papa and put her life and family back the way it was. Her only guide is a map given to her by a mysterious hobo, with hand written clues she found hidden in her papa's spyglass. Here is the Great American Adventure in an alternate steampunk dystopian world, where fifteen-year-old AB'Gale Steel learns that nothing is as it seems, but instead is shrouded in secrets and mysteries ... and that monsters come in all shapes and forms.


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Monday, 24 February 2014

Cover Reveal: Retribution (Chronicles of the Irin, 1) — T.G. Ayer


Evie belongs to the Brotherhood of Irin and together with the other Nephilim of the world; she is a protector to humanity, protector against evil. But evil has found its way into the Brotherhood. Someone has murdered her guardian and Marcellus, the new Master makes demands of the warriors that go against all they stand for. Demands Evie just can’t carry out.

Evie uncovers Marcellus’ plot to collect a set of special seals, but when a high-level demon reveals the truth behind the Seals of Hades, Evie knows there is no way she can allow the Master of the Irin to get his hands on them. But will keeping the Seals from Marcellus cause her to sacrifice more that she should? Will vengeance for her guardian’s death be enough or will she need more to satisfy her Immortal soul?

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Monday, 17 February 2014

Book Tour, Review & Giveaway: Indigo Incite — Jacinda Buchmann

This book is definitely young reader friendly because it is easy to read. It has some action, a bit of romance and a happy ending. Normally that would make it my kind of book, however there were a few things I didn’t like. Instant love is always an instant turn off for me and I felt it existed in this novel.


Read more to enter a $50 giveaway! Also, Indigo Incite will be free to download from 20th February to 22nd February. So grab your copy while it's hot!

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Thursday, 6 February 2014

Review & Giveaway: The Enchantress of Lynniah — A.L. Bawden


Bawden constructs a vivid world which leaves both the characters and reader in wonder. In such a rich world, Bawden manages to balance several characters and gives them all a unique sense of personality and life. Family is clearly an important element in this story which is refreshing and separates it from a lot of other fantasy works where teenagers often venture by themselves without much considering their family bonds. I think this would suit younger readers because it is both enjoyable and easy to read and occasionally challenging with longer sentences and vocabulary choices.

    


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Thursday, 16 January 2014

Book Tour: Excerpt from Arcadia Series

Today I'm featuring an excerpt from the Arcadia series! This series focuses on sixteen year old Arcadia who turns out to be an empath. So far there are two books in this series, and from the blurbs, it seems like they are emotionally deep. I hope to read them at some point this year as they look pretty intrigue.

Click 'read more' to read an excerpt!

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Monday, 6 January 2014

Review: Second Life — R J Crayton

Second Life is the sequel to First Life. The setting of Life First was intriguing, though its plot focused on the struggles, family and romance in relation to one woman – Kelsey. The book was enjoyable overall, but I found the main character irritated me somewhat because the choices she made were often poor. The whole bad situation could have been avoided if Kelsey had simply left the country when she realised that she did not agree with Life First policies. Instead she stayed until she was marked for donation and then attempted to run away. Pretty poor decision making there, don’t you think? Especially given the number of people who were drawn into and effected by that affair. The side characters seemed to be more interesting and less 2D than Kelsey. (You can read my full review of the first book here.) Needless to say I was very excited to find that the second book was focusing on Kelsey’s more logical friend – Susan.




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