Tag: Mystery (Page 19 of 19)

BOOK REVIEW – Destined for an Early Grave (Night Huntress #4) by Jeaniene Frost

BOOK REVIEW – Destined for an Early Grave (Night Huntress #4) by Jeaniene FrostDestined for an Early Grave (Night Huntress #4)
by Jeaniene Frost
Purchase on: AmazoniBooks
Add to: Goodreads

“I know you do,” he whispered. “And I love you. Always.”

Ooooooh boy, did this one ever piss me off. By far the most emotions pulled from me yet in this installment, I was seething for at least 20% of this book.
I’ll admit it-I get so engrossed in a story that if, say, something terrible happens to the heroine, it happens to me as well. So when a certain something happened, I wanted to rip everyone apart in the story.

“Kitten.” His voice was thick with something I couldn’t name. “This is the part…where you don’t have a choice.”

I think it goes without saying that each review I’ve written and rating I’ve dubbed for each story in this series has been a 4 or above. This series is completely consistent, and with each new installment, there’s a new hurdle that Bones and Cat must face together-and they are hardly ever cliche.

“All I’ve got is how I live. How I’ll die? That’s the problem of the guy who kills me.” -Tate (I LOVED that line ha)

The writing remains consistent and takes me to another world where I am happy to escape reality-that’s by far my favorite thing about this series. There are no typos. There is consistency in the character development. There is no changing for the sake of the other person-they are who they are and they remain a constant in their ever changing world. I know when I pick up a Night Huntress book, I’m going to get a very loyal male lead. I know Cat is going to be sarastic, fierce, LOYAL, and protective of those she loves, and I know she would do anything for Bones no matter the cost. And finally, I know there are going to be loyal family members and friends backing both Cat and Bones, and that in any situation, they will all come out of it together if at all possible.

“Never let it be said that you’re predictable, Cat.”

I absolutely love this series, and while I’m taking a break so it doesn’t lose the magic, I know it won’t be a mere month before I find myself picking up the next book and falling helplessly back into this perilous world again. I love each character for their uncanny ability to make me laugh, and that in itself is priceless.

BOOK REVIEW – We Were Liars by E. Lockhart

BOOK REVIEW – We Were Liars by E. LockhartWe Were Liars by E. Lockhart
Purchase on: AmazoniBooks
Add to: Goodreads


The four of us Liars, we have always been. We always will be.

I really don’t even know what to say when it comes to this book. In so many ways it had everything I have grown to adore in storytelling-a mysterious, not-as-it-seems story line, characters you never know if you can trust, beautiful, poetic writing, and overall just a vastly different way of delivering inevitable blows: slow, one-two punches to the gut. But with all this being said, there is one truth I can tell you about this story:
Everything I hate in a book, is this book.
Weird, isn’t it? How there can be so many things I love about a book, but more that I hate? I do so love a turn of phrase. 😉

It doesn’t matter if one of us is desperately, desperately in love.
So much
in love
that equally desperate measures
must be taken.

See, I have this fatal flaw where I literally feel guilty for rating a book low. Even now as I type out my reasons for rating this thusly, I feel guilty. But one thing I can say with absolute certainty is that when I clicked the 2 stars, it felt right. I have rated a few books that are written poorly with a shitty story-line 2 stars and in other books rated them 3 even though my feelings merited a 2 star rating. I feel that if a book is written well and I just didn’t love, it doesn’t deserve to be so low as a two: But I’ve found the exception. I can’t give this more than a two. I’m known to overrate for books that most likely don’t deserve it and STILL can’t give this more than two stars. The writing was beautiful and spectacular and the story was masterfully woven…but I felt like shit for every minute of it. I felt horrible and sad and depressed and, sure, I was so excited to see what the end was and, yes, I had been right in some of my assumptions, but I feel that while the end was awesome, this is a case where the end doesn’t justify the means.

“Do not accept an evil you can change.”

I wasn’t satisfied. I felt even more deflated, in fact. And more than that, the liars weren’t such bad liars. Whatever the fuck that means. View Spoiler »

One day I looked at Gat, lying in the Clairmont hammock with a book, and he seemed, well, like he was mine. Like he was my particular person.

I’m sorry to bring other books into this, but I am just so damn anal about what people think of me and my rating system. Ultimately, I want you, my GR friends, to see my reviews and be like, ‘Yeah, I trust what she’s saying and I can relate-she’s not being a total bitch for no reason.’ And I think if people can put into perspective my crazy method of thinking, it will help them to understand that while this one didn’t work for me, it might possibly work for them. So, here is a comparison where the reviews are mixed and I was entirely fair in my rating-View Spoiler » is the book I’ll compare. Now, I knew something horrific was coming in the aforementioned book, and, Hell, I was very damn depressed as I read, but I loved and enjoyed the story and the beautiful and vivid writing. It worked for me because, in my mind, the end did justify the means. Like….it was all built up and nobody wanted anything bad to happen, but you just knew deep in your bones something bad was coming, but at the end of it all…..did you or didn’t you enjoy the story? Did you enjoy the ride? Were there also enjoyable parts, or MORE enjoyable than disdainful ones? Did the story as a whole work for you?? It did. And that, my friends, is where WWL lost me. I don’t like to pay for depression-we get enough of that with the news, thank you.

She made me act normal. Because I was. Because I could.

I can’t really talk about this book. There isn’t a way to do so. But what I will say is, I bet this will be a spectacular movie. Honestly. And, most assuredly, I will likely be first in line to go see it. How does this make sense, you ask? Well…lemme explain. Look, it’s awesome that this book was all twisty and suspenseful and we didn’t know what was going on, but reading it was like stabbing my gut with knives at every twist and turn-in a movie, it plays out quicker and I won’t have to read all her inner depressing thoughts and instead it will be played out on-screen much more dramatically and….I don’t know. That hardly makes sense-but to me, it makes all the sense in the world-I’d rather watch the horrid truth that is this book on screen than ever have to lay eyes on this book again. In this case-the movie will be far superior to the book, in my humble opinion. And no, I didn’t rate this so lowly to make a statement-sometimes, you just don’t gel with books. I completely missed the boat on this one.

Maybe, maybe.
If only, if only.

And most importantly, why would I try to explain what this book is about?
It’s all a lie, isn’t it??

BOOK REVIEW – The Dream Thieves (The Raven Cycle #2) by Maggie Stiefvater

BOOK REVIEW – The Dream Thieves (The Raven Cycle #2) by Maggie StiefvaterThe Dream Thieves (The Raven Cycle #2)
by Maggie Stiefvater
Purchase on: AmazoniBooks
Add to: Goodreads


In that moment, Blue was a little in love with all of them. Their magic. Their quest. Their awfulness and strangeness. Her raven boys.

Wow. There are so few words to express how I feel about this stunning and brilliant series. When I first picked up The Raven Boys I knew it was going to be a toss-up on whether I would enjoy it or not. What I didn’t know was that I was going to get swept into a world where magic is real and anything is possible. I didn’t know I was going to fall in love with the oh-so-proper Richard Gansey III. And I didn’t know just how great it could possibly get.

This book focused a little more on our mercurial and mysterious bad boy Ronan. At the end of book one we discovered that our beloved Chainsaw, the raven, came from Ronan’s dreams. Yes, Ronan can quite literally bring things back from his dreams.

It was a fascinating way to end book one and it continued into book two with maximum force. More than once his nightmares made me look around the dark room and stare pointedly at shadows in the corner. That is correct-while it’s amazing to bring fun things back, his nightmarish creatures can also be brought back to the real world-and they want nothing more than to destroy Ronan.

Secrets and cockroaches-that’s what will be left at the end of it all.

While I did find being in Ronan’s head to be a bit refreshing after being stuck in Adam’s morose mind (I STILL don’t like him-he was even whinier in this one!), I still think that being in Gansey’s and Blue’s heads made me by far the happiest. I love how Gansey and Blue have come full circle since Gansey’s astronomically horrific first encounter with Blue at Nino’s. We are starting to see how they are fascinated by each other and have subtle jealous or longing tendancies for one another. I also love Gansey’s subtle protectiveness of Blue, er, Jane. (He calls her Jane because he likes the name Jane lol). What I am both looking forward to, though, and dreading….is what will come of their blossoming love for one another. It will most likely end in heartbreak and sorrow, because if you remember Neeve’s cryptic words, once blue saw Gansey’s spirit on St. Marks Eve, he was doomed to the fate of death before next St. Marks Eve. He has one year to live, and because Blue saw his spirit that night, he is either her true love, or she kills him.

If you never saw the stars, candles were enough.

And let’s not forget….since Blue was a child, she’s been told that if she kisses her true love, he will die.
Her first kiss, will be his last.
There’s an adorable prelude of what’s to come for Blue and Gansey in this installment, and it rendered me breathless and anxious for more. I can’t wait for more stolen moments between them, because I am kind of living for them at the moment.

When she blinked, two tears appeared like magic on her cheeks. The fast tears. The ones that were in your eyes and down your chin before you realized you were crying.

Beautiful, heartbreaking, addicting, and brilliant, Stiefvater has created a world that I am happy to come back to after being away. She’s made it so I can’t stand to put the book down and when I do, I think about it constantly and wonder what will come next and how it can all possibly end. I absolutely adore this series and I am so sad I have to wait until (maybe-it’s an estimate and with no blurb) September to read the next installment! But until then I will hold what I’ve read dearly to my heart, because it’s an absolutely breathtaking series with so much to offer.

BOOK REVIEW – The Raven Boys (The Raven Cycle #1) by Maggie Stiefvater

BOOK REVIEW – The Raven Boys (The Raven Cycle #1) by Maggie StiefvaterThe Raven Boys (The Raven Cycle #1)
by Maggie Stiefvater
Purchase on: AmazoniBooks
Add to: Goodreads

*5 Stars* I changed my mind…..


I’m leaning toward 4.5 stars….


“There are only two reasons a non-seer would see a spirit on St. Mark’s Eve,” Neeve said. “Either you’re his true love . . . or you killed him.”

Ever since the day she was born, Blue has been told that if when she kisses her true love, he will die. If you were to ask me, I’d say this premise is intriguing, alluring, and altogether a heartbreaking reality. When you actually begin to read, though, you begin to see that the synopsis is not completely forthcoming. Now, this may turn a few readers off, but what I found was that while it wasn’t exactly as the blurb had described, it was both unique and alluring in a totally different way. I think that’s why I enjoyed it so much-it wasn’t any one thing….it just was.

I don’t quite know how to describe this story. On the one hand we have Blue, who is in a family of psychics without the ability herself to see anything. On the other hand, we have the Raven boys-privileged, without a worry, attending an elite school, thus dubbing them ‘The Raven Boys’.

I think the hardest thing to do in a story is to get your readers to care about every single character. It’s especially hard to get me to care about every single character. I have this way of being very narrow minded when it comes to books-I love romance. There is absolutely no question that without even the premise or idea of romance, I most likely won’t be as drawn to the story. Even if there isn’t supposed to be, I catch myself romanticising even the slightest of gestures, making the story work for me. Yes, I’m that sad. But more to the point, the basis of this story, in fact, did not revolve around the romance and really, didn’t have much to speak of. No, the story told was of all these Raven Boys and the non-psychic, Blue, who saw the ghost of either the boy she will fall in love with, or who she has (or will) killed.


Gansey. That’s all there is.

As I mentioned earlier, it’s hard to make you like all characters in a story-even harder is to make that the deciding factor on whether or not you’ll enjoy or love the book. That’s how I look at TRB. You either liked it because you liked Gansey, Ronan, Adam, Noah, and Blue and the mystery behind the entire story, or you got a certain percent in and realized it’s not exactly as you had thought and put it down out of sheer frustration.

I loved the writing. It was intricate and had deeper layers and meaning behind it, all the while keeping you interested and grasping for straws. I loved how all the characters came together and the mystery they worked together to solve. I loved the break down of each character and how, as the story progressed, we began to see who they really were instead of just scratching the surface. Namely-Gansey and Adam. Gansey was such a fun character to unravel and Adam, while not my favorite person in the story, started to break out of his boring shell about halfway through. It was fun to see what they could be and what they were truly like after all the time we had invested, and it became fun to discover the possibilities of what could come in the next installment. And of course-the visions of romance. They hooked me and had me begging for those moments. They were beautiful and promising, making me giddy like a little girl.

It’s as simple as that. You liked it-or you didn’t. I don’t feel there’s a ton of room for in between on this one. If you just thought it was okay, most likely you won’t remember any of the story and therefore can’t say you liked it much. If your nose was pushed to the screen like mine was, then you loved it and can most likely say you remember at least 90% of the content despite the confusing aspects that might have had you scratching your head and struggling to put the pieces together. It is playing at a heartbreaking end for Blue and her true love, but inexplicably, I am drawn and obsessed with getting to the point where I get to see the hope or heartbreak first-hand.

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