Monday, 29 November 2010

Review: The Prophet of Yonwood (Ember #3) by Jeanne DuPrau

Synopsis from Goodreads:


It’s 50 years before the settlement of the city of Ember, and the world is in crisis. War looms on the horizon as 11-year-old Nickie and her aunt travel to the small town of Yonwood, North Carolina. There, one of the town’s respected citizens has had a terrible vision of fire and destruction. Her garbled words are taken as prophetic instruction on how to avoid the coming disaster. If only they can be interpreted correctly. . . .

As the people of Yonwood scramble to make sense of the woman’s mysterious utterances, Nickie explores the oddities she finds around town—her great-grandfather’s peculiar journals and papers, a reclusive neighbor who studies the heavens, a strange boy who is fascinated with snakes—all while keeping an eye out for ways to help the world. Is this vision her chance? Or is it already too late to avoid a devastating war?

In this prequel to the acclaimed The City of Ember and The People of Sparks, Jeanne DuPrau investigates how, in a world that seems out of control, hope and comfort can be found in the strangest of places.

Review:
I was highly excited to read The Prophet of Yonwood after having loved both The City of Ember and The People of Sparks. I didn't hesitate in purchasing a copy. However, to put it plainly, the third book of Ember was one of the most disappointing books that I have read in my life.  

I started reading the novel; the 'prequel' to the two previous books, expecting an explanation of how The City of Ember came about and that I would learn more about the disaster that had lead to the city of Ember being created. What I got instead was the life story of an eleven year old girl. 

There's nothing wrong with that. DuPrau could have made her into a phenomenal character and akin to the protagonists from The City of Ember, Lina and Doon. However, what I read instead was the trivial, boring and random happenings of the small, nosy neighbourhood Nickie moves to with her aunt Crystal for some months.


Unbelievably, Nickie's aunt leaves her, an eleven year old girl who doesn't know anything about her new surroundings, to her own devices, while she goes gallivanting around town nearly every day. I was seriously worried for Nickie's safety.

What would happen if a stranger knocked on the door and kidnapped her? What if the house was unsafe and she injured herself? More worryingly, this continued to happen throughout the entirety of the novel and therefore I didn't learn anything about Nickie's aunt, except that she gets married at the end of the book and I couldn't even care by that point.


So many aspects of this book continue to irritate me and I shall list some of them here. Her aunt didn't know of any of the random events that were taking place in the town and Nickie had to explain everything to her at the end which was rather exasperating to read as everything was repeated.


Nickie and her aunt always ate soup or drank herbal tea. This may seem like a little gripe, but it's not. How unrealistic is it that this would be the only things they would eat? I think you would get sick of eating the same thing after the second or third day.


This book was called 'The Prophet of Yonwood' and therefore one would assume that we would see a lot of this person and discover the meaning behind their prophetic messages. That was not the case. The 'Prophet', Althea, has a vision of a future apocalyptic world (something the reader figures out for themselves) and loses conciousness for the majority of the book. Her incoherent words are interpreted by Mrs Beeson, the local busybody. For some unstated reason, the whole town and even the police, take her word for what Althea might be saying and follow her laws, however silly they may be.


Nickie wasn't the curious minded, clever heroine I wanted and I found her lacking in every way. All in all, she was childish, bratty and annoying. She never sought out the 'Prophet' for herself to uncover the true meaning of her words and she never went against Mrs Beeson's strict rules (unless you count her hiding the dog).

It's not until very end-I literally mean the last five pages or so- that you see any connection whatsoever to The City of Ember and its sequel and that connection was rather frail and insignifant to me as I'd realised these obvious epiphanies from the beginning of the book.


Other random events include but are not limited to:


1) Nickie discovering a journal in which ghosts and siamese twins are mentioned. She would read about two sentences from the journal and then become bored, tired or have something else to do, sometimes it was all three. This added nothing to the plot and I'm still wondering why on earth it was included in the book.


2) A strange astronomer who reveals nothing and therefore adds nothing to the plot.


3) A boy named Grover who liked snakes.


The major problem was that Nickie was so, so far away from anything to do with The City of Ember. I would much rather have preferred the story to be from her father's point of view as he had much more to do with Ember. He sent her postcards about the building work he was doing. It was very obvious what his connection to the City of Ember was.


I really could go on as there were so many ways in which this book failed me. I would not recommend this 'prequel' to anyone at all. It added nothing at all to the plot or background information of The City of Ember.


The characters were dull, one-dimensional and cardboad cutouts with exactly one boring agenda each. It felt like DuPrau had just flung together random bits of material to create something that resembled a book. I'm sorry that I ever read this and will never read this again. In comparison, The City of Ember and its sequel were very good. I'm still hesitant to read the last book, The Diamond of Darkhold because it may turn out to be major letdown similar to The Prophet of Yonwood.


Book Rating: 1/5
Cover: 3/5
Concept: 0/5
Author: Jeanne DuPrau

Friday, 26 November 2010

Alex Rider: Scorpia Rising Cover Reveal!


Click on the link below to see the real cover.
 So the people at Walker Books have finally revealed the cover of the last book in the Alex Rider series by Anthony Horowitz (barring the one about Yassen!!!). Here's the super secret footage of it being locked away, safe from prying eyes. If only they knew! Muahaha!

I think it's very, very cool! The red and the black are the perfect colours. I can't wait for March to read it :D I'll be really sad when it's all over because I grew up with this series but obviously he could only stay fourteen for so long...

Horowitz has previously said that we'll know that it's the end when we read it. I can only hope he doesn't kill him off!

:'(
Click here to see the cover.

Wednesday, 24 November 2010

and the winner is...

Thanks for entering everyone!

random.org did its work and the winner is....

*drumroll*

....

David!!!


I'll email you soon for your information. You'll have 48 hours to respond before a new winner is chosen. 

Monday, 22 November 2010

Review: Matched by Ally Condie (Matched #1) Spoilers Included

Synopsis from Goodreads:

Cassia has always trusted the Society to make the right choices for her: what to read, what to watch, what to believe. So when Xander's face appears on-screen at her Matching ceremony, Cassia knows with complete certainty that he is her ideal mate . . . until she sees Ky Markham's face flash for an instant before the screen fades to black.

 

The Society tells her it's a glitch, a rare malfunction, and that she should focus on the happy life she's destined to lead with Xander. But Cassia can't stop thinking about Ky, and as they slowly fall in love, Cassia begins to doubt the Society's infallibility and is faced with an impossible choice: between Xander and Ky, between the only life she's known and a path that no one else has dared to follow.

Review (Spoilers included):

I was really excited to read Matched as I'd heard so many great things about it and it seemed like it was going to be a fantastic addition to the dystopian genre. All in all, it was. Cassia was a likeable and relatable character who begins to question the Society that she lives in and can't quite decide between her best friend Xander and the boy whose face appears on the screen for an instant; Ky. Matched has a strong focus on Cassia's feelings for her two love interests, but this is closely followed by her conflicting opinions of the Society.
 
Matched was an emotionally powerful book. The most emotional point for me was Cassia's grandfather's last day. It was sickening that the Society could accept this form of quick death without blinking. Furthermore, I loved the way in which new poetry and literature (apart from the 100 songs, poems, stories etc) were so valued by Cassia that she cherished them.
 
The love triangle between Cassia, Xander and Ky was interesting as I liked both love interests. Xander was a perfect gentleman. At the beginning, Cassia mentions him a lot, however, once Ky, the outsider, enters the story, it's as if Xander has been pushed out of the novel through no fault of his own. He's left with no chance for Cassia's love and I could not help but feel slightly put off by Cassia's behaviour. I am interested to learn how Cassia's feelings will change in the sequels, but I really wish it's not the main focus of the trilogy, but rather, I hope the Society is.
 
I welcomed the fact that Cassia got on with her family; she respected her parents, protected her brother and loved and remembered her grandfather. Cassia has the perfect, sensitive family who get on really well. One aspect that I found unrealistic was how understanding her parents were at some points and how quickly they, more specifically her mother (who previously always obeyed the Society's rules) accepts Cassia's choice to find Ky even though she has a perfectly good and devoted Match and their whole family has to be uprooted and perhaps in danger due to her actions. This could have been realistic to me if I'd seen more of Cassia's mother and learnt the reasons for her change in behaviour, because what I did observe, wasn't enough.
 
Whilst reading Matched, it was easy to notice the rigid structure of Cassia's life- she went to the same places over and over again and there wasn't much of a change in scenery throughout the book. In regards to Cassia's grandfather, I was left with some questions on how the process of preservation would occur. Taking a sample of a person and trying to recreate them would only lead to a clone surely?
 
This clone, while looking exactly the same as the person the sample came from, would not have any of the memories of the original person. This means that the word preservation is only utilised in the sense that the person's DNA would carry on into future generations, and not their memories. I really did need some more details about this in Matched to come to a solid conclusion about what really happens.
 
The only way to describe Matched in terms of its genre is that it is a quiet, dystopian novel. That does not mean that Matched wasn't powerful as it did have an impact on me and it was highly memorable. It is quiet in the way of action and adventure. For me, Matched felt like a prequel to the rest of the story. It is not possible to read a book without comparing it to similar books in its genre and thus I compared Matched to the Hunger Games and Uglies.
 
These are dystopian novels with female protagonists. However, whilst Katniss in the Hunger Games travelled away from her district, travelled through the rest of Panem and entered the Hunger Games in the first book alone and Tally in Uglies not only questioned the City where she lived but also travelled to The Smoke, Cassia's story focusses solely on the small area in which she lives for the whole novel (barring the final chapter). 
 
For this reason, I believe Matched could have incorporated more action and adventure, rather than just questioning the Society and Cassia's romantic feelings for it to be at its optimum. Cassia's perspective was therefore narrow due to the reasons stated above. Though I wanted to know about what was going on in the wider Society and more about the rebels, I didn't learn this information. In the end, Cassia decides to find Ky who has been taken to become a soldier. However, her lead of the 'Sisyphus River' is surely not enough to go on and I felt it was unrealistic that she would venture out into a war zone of which she knows nothing about based on a hunch.
 
I would have been interested to learn more of what was going on in the Society as I have some vague impressions and have been left with questions such as:
 
When Cassia's father was burning the books and the data was saved, where did that data end up?
 
What is the exact process for food to be delivered to every house?
 
What event was Xander talking about when he said they used the red pill once before?
 
What disaster happened that caused the world of Matched to occur?
 
Who is the leader of the Society?
 
Is it really possible for the world to be like this within such a short space of time?
 
Overall, I really enjoyed Matched as it was a powerful, emotional and compelling novel that makes the reader reconsider what is valuable to them. The romance aspect was important to the novel and interesting to read about. I would recommend this book to everyone. I look forward to the next book in the trilogy to discover what happens to Cassia, Xander and Ky and the Society in general.
 
Book Rating: 4/5
 
Cover: 5/5
 
Concept: 5/5
 
Author: Ally Condie

Saturday, 13 November 2010

Review: If I Stay by Gayle Forman

Synopsis from Goodreads:

In a single moment, everything changes. Seventeen-year-old Mia has no memory of the accident; she can only recall riding along the snow-wet Oregon road with her family. Then, in a blink, she finds herself watching as her own damaged body is taken from the wreck...


A sophisticated, layered, and heartachingly beautiful story about the power of family and friends, the choices we all make—and the ultimate choice Mia commands.

Review:

If I Stay was a beautiful and heart-renching story in which our main character, Mia, has to make the biggest decision of her life; whether she should stay or go. At the start of the story, we are introduced to Mia and her family. They are a lovely, ordinary family- it could've been anyone's family- that is until they fall victim to a car accident.

It was at this point that the book really caught my attention. The detail that Forman gives in describing the destruction in all its gory graphicness means that those images are forever engraved into my mind. The story continues to be told from Mia's point of view, except her body is injured and she is not conscious. Therefore, the point of view is whatever left Mia's body at the time of the accident; either her consciousness, her soul/spirit or something much more abstract.
 
As Mia's body begins to fail, she recounts memories she has of her family, her friends and her boyfriend. Music is also an integral part of If I Stay as Mia plays the cello and music is what brought her and her boyfriend, Adam, together. Though there is some romance in If I Stay, it does not overshadow Mia's recounting of her life, her love for her family and friends  and of course the dire decision she has to make. Her memories felt very realistic and I wouldn't have a problem believing that Mia exists in reality.
 
The writing flows gracefully and seamlessly, almost like a ghost floating past and of course, this suited the story exceptionally well. If I Stay is a serious and emotional book which you have to sit down and think about to really digest and to appreciate it. It asks some life changing questions. What would we stay on this earth for? What would we go for? Could we choose if we were ever in that position and is it right to?

The main theme, as the title suggests, is choosing. Though Mia is exposed as a vulnerable character due to the accident, she still has the strength to choose her path. Mia somehow knows that the choice is hers and not up to someone or something else.
 
The actual story-from the time of the car accident to the end-spans a day, however, by this time and through Mia, we learn about everything important to Mia and are privy to her memories. I appreciated the fact that If I Stay came to a sound conclusion and didn't have me pulling my hair out, but I'm happy to learn that there will be a sequel. Without revealing too much, I will say that I was pleased with the ending.
 
In conclusion, If I Stay was a highly-charged, emotional story which made a great impression on me. There were some moments that I felt were repetitive and extraneous. Also, I did think the story could have moved along just slightly faster and I don't believe that this would have affected the high quality that the story is currently at. I would recommend If I Stay to other people, but warn them to have a tissue box at hand as this book did make me emotional at certain points. I look forward to reading the sequel of If I Stay which is entitled Where She Went.
 
Book Rating: 4.5/5
 
Cover: 5/5
 
Concept: 5/5
 
Author: Gayle Forman

Sunday, 7 November 2010

Harry Potter Contest

Hello lovely people.

In celebration of the US release of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1 go to the:

Hufflepuff House

movie countdown - virtual party

Nov 13-18


I'm going to give away Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone (Harry Potter Signature Edition)


To enter leave a comment with your email address.

Rules:

You DO NOT have to be a follower to enter but please remember to leave your email address in case you win!

INTERNATIONAL- I'll be shipping it out once it arrives.

One comment per person.

Contest ends on Monday 22nd November, midnight GMT.
Winner will be chosen randomly.

Extra Entries: (Put everything in one comment please)

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Good luck:) I'm rooting for you!

Tuesday, 2 November 2010

RSVP: Pemberley Ball Invitation 2010


Lady Vee,

I am delighted to accept your invitation to attend the Pemberley Ball. My mother and father will travel with me to Derbyshire; my father has business in the area and my mother shall be acting as chaperone. I feel that it shall be a most pleasant and auspicious occasion where I shall be able to showcase the numerous talents I have acquired in front of polite society.

I shall be very happy to see you there and to learn of what you think of my gowns, especially this one. I am both nervous and excited. Oh, I shall need Mother's smelling salts if I continue in this way. I cannot contain my excitement at the thought of meeting Mr Darcy once more! Mrs Darcy is a very lucky lady indeed.

Yours affectionately,
Araminta Lovelace

Postscript: Click here to learn more details on how you can go to the Pemberley Ball as well! Join the fun!