Archive for the ‘action’ Category

Where Oh Where Has Laura Been?

Thursday, September 9th, 2010

Sorry folks (if there are any folks who read this blog!), I’ve been off having the busiest summer of my life. It’s been a few months of moving, getting married, traveling, and moving some more.  Despite the fact that I’ve been living out of a backpack for the past few months, I have been reading.  Here is my summer, in books:

This World We Live In

This World We Live In


This World We Live In by Susan Beth Pfeffer

The end of the world continues in the final (?) book of the Last Survivors trilogy.  The two companion books, Life As We Knew It and The Dead and the Gone, told the harrowing sagas of two, unrelated teens and their experiences of survival through catastrophic environmental changes after the moon is knocked off balance by an asteroid.  While I found the suburban story of 15-year-old Miranda in Life As We Knew It to be riveting, I was less than thrilled with the darker, more macho-fueled story of Alex leading his sisters through starvation in New York City in The Dead and the Gone.

As life becomes more and more complicated, both in terms of survival and emotions, our two leading characters finally meet in This World We Live In.  Love, chaos, and more disaster (as if these guys haven’t seen enough!) ensue.  The result is an entertaining, albeit slightly melodramatic, story that was worth reading, though maybe not worth putting at the top of the pile…

It’s Not Summer Without You by Jenny Han

Jenny Han returns with a sequel that’s as breezy, romantic and summery as The Summer I Turned Pretty.  Like its predecessor, this is a beach book with plenty of depth that promises to keep the tears flowing.  The characters, places, and emotions are as realistic and lovely as ever.  Highly recommended!

Chosen, Untamed & Tempted

Chosen, Untamed & Tempted

House of Night #3 Chosen, House of Night #4 Untamed & House of Night #5 Tempted by P.C. Cast and Kristen Cast

Perhaps it’s reflective of the chaotic past few months of my life, but I feel like the House of Night books are starting to blend together for me.  While they are just as addictive and readable as ever, I admit that the story is nothing we haven’t seen before.  It doesn’t matter though.  This is junk food for readers and I like it!

The Beach

The Beach

The Beach by Alex Garland

I picked this up, appropriately, in a cheaply bond photocopy format from a vendor on the street in Vietnam.  A sort of Lord of the Flies for international backpackers, The Beach is the suspenseful tale of Richard, a British traveler who stumbles upon a map to a secret community of travelers hidden on a perfect beach in Thailand.  Of course, paradise comes at a price and this is an incredibly suspenseful psychological thriller–a heart stopping, stay up all night read!  Highly recommended for travelers and non-travlers alike!

Sidenote:
I have to stop and admit here that the 2000 film starring Leonardo DiCaprio was my first introduction to The Beach.  I saw the movie while I was in college, before I’d ever traveled anywhere outside of the US and I was captivated, even though the movie was quite poorly done.  Still, I think that movie might have helped spark the travel bug inside of me and certainly the scenery was somewhat responsible for my undying need to see Thailand for myself, a few years later. Stumbling into reading the book, years after seeing the movie, was wonderful!  The characters and the story are just so much richer and the suspense is downright harrowing in written form.

The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo

The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo

The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo & The Girl Who Played With Fire by Stieg Larsson

I’m not much into mystery/crime novels, however, with the entire world frantically reading this series, it’s hard to avoid.  I finally turned through these while on vacation and, while I enjoyed them well enough, I’m not sure that I’ll pick up the final book.  I do see the appeal.  You’ve got your quirky, yet familiar, characters, your tightly written mystery

The Girl Who Played with Fire

The Girl Who Played with Fire

drama, and, of course, your exotic Swedish local.  The result is an entertaining series with a memorable cast of characters and enough suspense to keep you turning pages to find out whodunit in the end.

I can’t say why, exactly, I’m not dying to read the final book…but I am perhaps the only person in the world who has the problem of falling asleep, almost instantaneously, upon opening these books.  Let’s just say that it takes me a long, long time to get through these.  Perhaps I’ve been feeding my brain too much chicklit teen junkfood to keep up with books for grownups anymore?


Mockingjay

Mockingjay

Mockingjay by Suzanne Collins

Finally, finally, finally the much anticipated final book to the Hunger Games Trilogy is here!  Mockingjay may not be as action packed as the first two books of the series, but it packs an emotional punch that cannot be denied.  Katniss Everdeen continues in her strugle for survival in the dreary, now war torn, near future.  With open war between the rebels and the Capitol, the love triangle between Katniss, Gale and Peeta grows more complicated and Katniss must once again face danger and drama to save herself, her family and her friends from certain doom.
I loved this book!  It’s slower, darker, and more bleak than the rest of the series and I wouldn’t have wanted to see things end any other way.  I don’t want to babble too much and give away the ending, but I am so amazed at the way Collins ended her series…I feel like Mockingjay wrapped up in such a pitch perfect ending, the pieces and emotional fallout that has been building through the series just fell so perfectly into place.  Loved it!

Tithe:  A Modern Faerie Tale by Holly Black

Tithe

Tithe

Kaye is just your average goth teenage girl with a bad, rocker mother.  She skips school to work and support herself and her mother, she wears steel toed boots and, of yeah, she discovers that she has connections to the faerie world.  As she discovers her real place in the world, Kaye becomes involved in a struggle for power after an unbalace in the faerie courts.  There’s lots of complicated faerie world building, a hot faerie knight, and, of course, a human sidekick.  Not the best book that I ever read, but I certainly felt compelled to finish it.  My main annoyance with Tithe:  A Modern Faerie Tale is that it’s faerie world and characters just got too complicated for my tastes.  Dedicated urban fantasy readers might enjoy this one though.

Betrayed

Saturday, June 19th, 2010

Betrayed by P.C. Cast
St. Martin’s Griffin, 2007.

Something dark and mysterious is brewing at the House of Night while Zoe attempts to establish herself in her new role as leader of the Dark Daughters.  We have mystery, drama, and more magical vampire powers revealed in this quick read.  Once again, the plot and characters follow predictably cliched patterns, but I’m not complaining because the books remain very fun to read!

Recommended to older teen and adult fans of Twilight and supernatural series books in general.

The Dead Tossed Waves

Friday, May 7th, 2010

The Dead Tossed Waves by Carrie Ryan
Delacorte Books for Young Readers, 2010

I was very excited about this sequel to last year’s chilling Forest of Hands and Teeth and was even more thrilled to see the audiobook version out so quickly.  Contrary to the buzz surrounding this book, I found it to be a slight disappointment.

Almost nothing like her mother, Mary (the protagonist of Forest of Hands and Teeth), Gabry lives happily within the barriers of her small, seaside town of Vista.  The barriers around Vista keep out the mudo–hordes of undead zombies that have overrun most of the world. Everything about Gabry’s life changes one night when she and her friends sneak over the barrier and are attacked by mudo.  Death, adventure, infection, love triangles and revelations of Gabry’s past follow in this muddled sequel.

I was bothered by the abundance of melodrama in this book.  The romance plot lines, in particular, were overly dramatic and felt forced.  I think the audio format enhanced this…it was almost unbearable at parts!  When there was action was where The Dead Tossed Waves shined.  Although I’d still highly recommend this book to fans of the Forest of Hands and Teeth (as well as other books in the genre), Dead Tossed Waves lacks the mystery, pacing and strong characters of Forest that made it so appealing.

Gone

Monday, April 5th, 2010

Gone by Michael Grant
Harper Teen, 2008

One day in a small coastal Californian town, everyone over the age of 14 disappears.  One second, they’re there and the next…gone.  It’s an interesting premise and the book completely delivers enough movie-like thrills to keep even a reluctant reader turning the 500+ pages.  As the children and teens left fend for themselves and start to form their own society, some fight for survival while others fight for power.  Add to the mix a rise of superhero-like mutant powers that start springing up amongst the people (and animals!) and you have yourself a very fun, very action packed read.   It may be simple and a bit formulaic, but the plot moves along at television/movie paces, delivering consistent action and dramatic highs.

The start of a series with two other books now out, Gone is a great book for boys (though it has a diverse enough cast to appeal to action/scifi seeking girls as well) and would work pretty well for the middle school set.

A Farewell to Arms

Thursday, February 18th, 2010
Farewell to Arms

Farewell to Arms

Farewell to Arms by Ernest Hemingway
1929
First off, let me just say that I have absolutely loved all the Hemingway that I have encountered thus far.  He makes me want to go camping and hunt with my bare hands or fight a bull or something.  This was no exception, even though the ending left me furious and frustrated (and sad, sad, sad, sad, sad!).

A Farewell to Arms is a love and war story with some of the most interesting characters I’ve ever met on the page.  Lieutenant Henry, the main character, is serving in World War I in the Italian army, despite the fact that he is an American.  Complicated, yet oh so macho much?  Check.  He falls in love with Catherine Barkley, a British nurse who is stationed in Italy.  Catherine starts off crazy and soon becomes, well, interesting.  I’ve read some comments that describe Catherine as a sexist portrayal of a woman, but I found to be much more intriguing and complicated than that.  She and Lieutenant Henry embark on an intense, war hospital-based courtship that is all fairytale and no reality.  There’s love, there’s sexy banter, there’s some tough guy war stuffs (it is Hemingway, after all), a bit of adventure and them, of course, some tragedy.  It’s all very good and I think this is one of those classics for everyone.

Also, I should add that I listened to this in audio format.  How did this come to be?  I desperately needed a new audiobook for my commute home and my holds for the latest teen werewolf love story hadn’t come through yet, so I found myself browsing until I picked this one up.  I usually avoid the classics or anything really that could be defined as “literature” when it comes to audio format, but I figured that Hemingway is so short and blunt and downright uncomplicated that I could follow in audio format…and I was right!

Absolutely Maybe

Wednesday, January 13th, 2010

Absolutely Maybe by Lisa Yee
Arthur A. Levine Books, 2009

Maybelline “Maybe” Chesnut is nothing like her former beauty pageant queen mother, Chessy, who constantly brings in a stream of new husbands.  Hiding in her baggy clothes and rainbow colored hair, Maybe doesn’t really fit in at school or at home.  After Chessy’s latest fiancé attacks Maybe, she sets off, running away to Los Angeles to find her biological father with her two best friends, Ted and Hollywood (aka Daniel).  As her friends find their places in the glitzy world of Hollywood, Maybe struggles to find her own place and discover who she really is.

This was a decent book.  It’s one of those books that was fun to read-the characters, including Maybe, are all larger than life, charming, and lovable.  Although the plot (and, to a degree, the characters) are somewhat unrealistic, the sweet charm and light heartedness of everything here will win over the non-cynical reader.  This was an okay, fluffy read for people who just want something a little bit quirky, a little bit sugary and a lot happy ending.  Reader seeking anything deep or twisty, go elsewhere!

Maze Runner

Saturday, December 19th, 2009

Maze Runner by James Dashner
Delacorte Books, 2009

The first in a soon to be trilogy, Maze Runner is a YA science fiction book about a colony of boys living in a strange, isolated environment surrounded by a giant maze.  While their general memories are in tact, mysteriously enough, the specifics of their memories (who they are, how they came to be there, etc.) are gone.  When 16-year-old Thomas arrives to the colony, slowly, things begin to fall apart.  The writing is basic, but it gets the job done with an efficiency that works.  With enough fast-paced action and psychological mystery to keep most readers turning the pages, Maze Runner is a fun and intriguing read.  Although the ending leaves a little to be desires, I’m pretty sure I’ll still be excited to read the sequel when it comes out.  While there’s an inevitable comparison to The Hunger Games, Maze Runner is different, with much less character development and internal drama.  It’s a fun, fast paced book that sets up a trilogy.  Recommended to reluctant readers!

North of Beautiful

Saturday, December 19th, 2009

North of Beautiful by Justina Chen Headley
Little, Brown Books for Young Readers, 2009

Sixteen year old Terra would be drop dead gorgeous, if not for the port wine stain birthmark on her left cheek.  Years of surgery after surgery have failed to remove it and years of living under the thumb of her psychologically abusive father have left Terra feeling imperfect and damaged.  When a new family, including a strangely attractive goth boy, befriends Terra and her mother, everything changes for both of them.

This was a decent book, though I found the writing to be a bit long and meandering.  There is a mapmaker theme to the story as well, which is taken, in my opinion, a too far with a wealth of map/journey metaphors.  Still, I’d recommend this book to girls who want long, heart

Lockdown: Escape From Furnace

Tuesday, November 10th, 2009

Lockdown:  Escape From Furnace by Alexander Gordon Smith
Farrar, Straus and Giroux (BYR), 2009

When fourteen-year-old Alex is framed for a murder, he is sent to the Furnace, a new, state of the art prison for juvenile offenders.  The Furnace is a brutal place, built deep in the bowels of the earth, offering tortures far worse than death.  Facing violent gangs, hard labor, mutated evil monsters, and more, Alex must try to do what has never been done before–escape.

A roller coaster from the very beginning, Lockdown is definitely a page turner.  While the writing feels a bit simple and the plot and characters are a little predictable (though it’s easy to identify with them), the book remains fun and exciting from cover to cover.  It’s violent, dark, and brutal, yet never really pushes the gore or language too far for younger readers.  Complete with cliff hanger ending, this is thriller that will leave readers hanging for the next installment.

I’d recommend this book to reluctant readers (boys, mostly!) who want to move onto something a little bit darker than the Alex Rider books.  Although I can see those readers crossing over and enjoying this too, I think readers who enjoyed books like The Compound will be satisfied with Lockdown.  Definitely not for readers seeking melodrama, sophistication or lyrical language though.

Leviathan

Monday, November 9th, 2009

Leviathan by Scott Westerfeld
Simon Pulse, 2009

In Leviathan, a steampunk alternate history of World War I, Scott Westerfeld has created a wonderfully imaginative world with characters as likable as they come.  Telling the stories of Deryn Sharp, a spunky and tough girl posing as a boy soldier in the British army and Aleksander Ferdinand, son of the Archduke and on the run from his own country of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.  In Westerfeld’s world, the British, known as The Dawinists, have followed Charles Darwin’s evolutionary theories with a twist of genetic engineering to create animals for battle and transport.  The Germans, known as the Clankers, use engine powered iron machines (think steampunk meets mecha) to do their bidding.  The result is a spectacular adventure–fun, imaginative, and meticulously detailed (yet never dry).

If you can tell already, I loved this book.  I’m a fan of Westerfeld’s previous work with the Uglies series and Leviathan has surpassed my expectations.  I should also mention that the illustrations, by Keith Thompson, are excellent and really contributed to the feel of the story.  I guess the thing that I was most impressed with in Leviathan, was Westerfeld’s ability to create a world with so many details, both historical and fantastic, yet still have lifelike characters and an exciting plot with much drama.  Go Scott!

I’d recommend this book to, uhh, everyone.  But seriously, this book is timely in that it is decidedly steampunk, which is currently exploding on the hipster front (has anyone picked up Make magazine lately?).  I can see this book working for a lot of different audiences (the fantasy readers, the scifi readers, the nostalgic adventure readers).  I think this is be a great book for adults, teens, and tweens who want adventure, a little imagination, and a lot of fun.