Category: Book Review

The Color of Rain by Cori McCarthy

The Color of Rain by Cori McCarthy(Cover picture courtesy of Goodreads.)

If there is one thing that seventeen-year-old Rain knows and knows well, it is survival. Caring for her little brother, Walker, who is “Touched,” and losing the rest of her family to the same disease, Rain has long had to fend for herself on the bleak, dangerous streets of Earth City. When she looks to the stars, Rain sees escape and the only possible cure for Walker. And when a darkly handsome and mysterious captain named Johnny offers her passage to the Edge, Rain immediately boards his spaceship. Her only price: her “willingness.”

The Void cloaks many secrets, and Rain quickly discovers that Johnny’s ship serves as host for an underground slave trade for the Touched . . . and a prostitution ring for Johnny’s girls. With hair as red as the bracelet that indicates her status on the ship, the feeling of being a marked target is not helpful in Rain’s quest to escape. Even worse, Rain is unsure if she will be able to pay the costs of love, family, hope, and self-preservation.

With intergalactic twists and turns, Cori McCarthy’s debut space thriller exists in an orbit of its own.

I found The Color of Rain on one of the blogs I read regularly, Books Without Any Pictures.  Grace’s description along with the cover interested me so much that I went out and bought the book.  Would it live up to my expectations?

Yes!  In fact, Cori McCarthy’s novel actually surpassed my expectations.  For a YA novel (albeit strongly recommended for older young adults) it tackles some pretty heavy issues including rape, abuse, prostitution and trauma.  Many authors have found their banes in these issues, but Cori McCarthy tackled them head on without really preaching to her audience.  No, she presents these issues within the story and allows readers to infer a lot of the effects on poor Rain through her thoughts and actions.

Rain is an interesting character to say the least.  She will do anything, literally anything, to save the life of her brother, who is “Touched” and likely to die without treatment.  This anything includes prostitution aboard the ship of Johnny Vale, who has taken a personal interest in Rain because she is a natural redhead.  Every girl on the ship has a bracelet and their colour denotes their position (yellow for all crew members, green for higher ups, etc.), but Rain is given a red bracelet as part of her being Johnny’s favourite, a dubious honour.

Johnny is quite the villain, doing everything from playing mind games to literally torturing Rain and those she loves.  He’s callous and ambitious, a dangerous combination for those around him, especially Rain and his assistant, Ben the Mec (a human with mechanical enhancements).  It’s a testament to Cori McCarthy’s writing talent that the decisions Johnny forces Rain to make don’t make readers hate her but rather send home the message about abuse.

I wouldn’t call The Color of Rain fast-paced in terms of action, but there was a lot of character development and inner conflict that I had to keep going to find out what happened.  And just when I thought I knew what the ending was going to be, Cori McCarthy threw in a huge, horrifying twist.  Obviously she’s not one of these writers that babies her characters, which made me love her debut novel even more.

I give this book 5/5 stars.

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The End of the World Playlist by Dan O’Brien

The End of the World Playlist by Dan O'Brien(Cover picture courtesy of The Dan O’Brien Project.)

The world as we knew it had ended. Deep in the mountains of the west coast, six men survived. In the town of River’s Bend, these six friends continued on with their lives as zombies inherited the Earth. As they navigated the world that had been left behind, the soundtrack of life played on.

[Full disclosure: I received a free book copy from Dan O’Brien in exchange for an honest review as part of his blog tour.]

I’ll just say right off the bat that there is a lot of cursing in this short story.  This is seriously recommended for mature audiences only.  Let’s just say there are a lot of cluster f-bombs and generally mature content leave it at that, shall we?

Well, I don’t really know what to say besides that there is some really interesting and scarily believable psychological themes at play here.  From the fact that the survivors have chained zombies into their stores and call them all variations of Bob (Bob the Blind Zombie, Bob the Sports Authority Zombie, Bob the Gun Store Zombie, etc.) to their general disregard for social taboos it’s clear that five years after the apocalypse the survivors aren’t doing so well.  There was an especially disturbing scene involving a Ms. Pacman arcade game, but I’m not going to go into anymore detail in regards to that incident.

Dan O’Brien certainly intended for this to be disturbing and believe me it was.  It really makes you wonder about those people that wish for a zombie apocalypse when the reality would actually suck.  So thank goodness this is just a novella because it’s incredibly depressing and sadly realistic.  I’m not going to say much more on that topic because then I’d be getting into spoiler territory.  Sometimes it goes a little overboard with the whole Crapsack World trope, but that could be just a matter of personal taste.

I can’t use the world ‘enjoyable’ to describe such a depressing novella, but it was well-written and interesting.  It’s not science fiction because Dan O’Brien never cares to go into detail about the apocalypse, but that’s not the point.  The point is that zombies are essentially ruling the world while the last semi-insane vestiges of humanity survive.  If you’re interested in psychology you’ll like The End of the World Playlist, but other than that it’s definitely a specialized sort of novella.

I give this novella 4/5 stars.

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The Scourge by A. G. Henley

The Scourge by A. G. Henley(Cover picture courtesy of A. G. Henley’s site.)

Seventeen-year-old Groundling, Fennel, is Sightless. She’s never been able to see her lush forest home, but she knows its secrets.

She knows how the shadows shift when she passes under a canopy of trees. She knows how to hide in the cool, damp caves when the Scourge comes. She knows how devious and arrogant the Groundlings’ tree-dwelling neighbors, the Lofties, can be. And she’s always known this day would come—the day she faces the Scourge alone.

A tale of star-crossed lovers, strange creatures, and secretive, feuding factions, THE SCOURGE introduces readers to a rich and exciting new world where nothing is as it seems.

[Full disclosure: I received a free ebook copy through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.]

I thought I’d seen it all when it comes to zombie books.  Zombies are religious retribution, a virus, a parasite, etc.  But nothing prepared me for A. G. Henley’s zombies.

You see, what was different about these zombies is that Fennel, who is blind, can walk among them while no one else can.  She’s part of the Groundlings, people who hide in caves when the Scourge comes around because the Scourge doesn’t like the dark.  The Groundlings are kind of in an uneasy alliance with the Lofties, people who stay up in the safety of the trees to avoid the Scourge.  But the problem with the Groundlings and the Lofties is that they need water to survive, especially in their hot, humid climate.  So the Sightless like Fennel and her adoptive mother must walk among the Scourge with the protection of a Lofty called a Keeper, who uses his bow to protect her while she gets water.  Although the Scourge often avoids the Sightless, they can be dangerous and Keepers like Peree (Fennel’s Keeper) are tasked with keeping Fennel safe.

So why will the zombies not approach someone who’s blind but will devour anyone else?  Why do they fear the dark?  I don’t want to give away the big twist, but I’ll say this: it’s horrifying.  It’s terrifying in that it could really happen but also because of the implications of it that completely change how you view Fennel’s world in the first half of the book.  Really, when I learned the secret of the Scourge it hit me like the proverbial ton of bricks.  But I’ll let you discover that feeling for yourself when you read it.

Having a blind protagonist is definitely new to me and I feared it would severely limit A. G. Henley’s descriptions of Fennel’s world.  I was wrong to worry because instead of using sight, Henley used impressions of colour (blue is like cold, red is like heat), sounds and even taste to give us a vivid picture of a terrifying and beautiful world.  In the wrong hands a blind protagonist could result in absolutely no description at all, but I like how in The Scourge it probably resulted in more description.

Since being Sightless is a huge part of Fennel’s life I feared other aspects of her characterization would be affected.  Again, I was wrong to doubt.  Fennel is reasonably content with her world until the Scourge and her Keeper Peree turn it upside down.  Following a punishment for being a good person, she begins to doubt whether the Groundlings are necessarily better than the Lofties, challenging a belief she’s held on to for years.  I expected the romance between Fennel and Peree from the first chapter, but how it developed was gradual and satisfying.  They go through so much together it would be hard for them not to fall in love so it doesn’t seem like A. G. Henley threw in the romance for extra tension.

I loved everything about The Scourge: its characters, the zombies, the plot and A. G. Henley’s writing style.  I even loved the cliffhanger at the end.  Seriously, if you love traditional zombie books try out The Scourge and I guarantee you’ll never look at zombies the same way again.  I can’t wait for the next book!

I give this book 5/5 stars.

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Vanish by Sophie Jordan

Vanish by Sophie Jordan(Cover picture courtesy of Goodreads.)

An impossible romance.
Bitter rivalries.
Deadly choices.

To save the life of the boy she loves, Jacinda did the unthinkable: She betrayed the most closely-guarded secret of her kind. Now she must return to the protection of her pride knowing she might never see Will again—and worse, that because his mind has been shaded, Will’s memories of that fateful night and why she had to flee are gone.

Back home, Jacinda is greeted with hostility and must work to prove her loyalty for both her sake and her family’s. Among the few who will even talk to her are Cassian, the pride’s heir apparent who has always wanted her, and her sister, Tamra, who has been forever changed by a twist of fate. Jacinda knows that she should forget Will and move on—that if he managed to remember and keep his promise to find her, it would only endanger them both. Yet she clings to the hope that someday they will be together again. When the chance arrives to follow her heart, will she risk everything for love?

Unfortunately, Vanish by Sophie Jordan suffers from Book 2 Syndrome: it does nothing but set up the third book.  Seriously despite my love of Firelight all that happens in this book could have essentially been told over 100 pages, not nearly three hundred.  Of course there’s a lot of pressure on YA writers to write trilogies these days, but in all honesty Sophie Jordan probably could have just cut down on the fluff and made a longer sequel that concludes Jacinda’s story.

You can’t in all honesty call the plot of Vanish fast paced, but I suppose you could call it consistent.  Consistently boring, that is.  There is a little character development to make up for the complete lack of action, but the disastrous attempts at a bizarre sort of love triangle as well as Jacinda’s general moping around make it a painful 294 pages.  All that happens in this is that Miram gets kidnapped and Will shows up again to learn that something mildly terrible has happened to Jacinda because of Cassian.  Did I mention that there’s a lot of moping about Will?  It’s like one big pity part here: all Jacinda does is pine after Will, give Cassian horrible mixed signals and get jealous about her sister’s new powers.

We do learn a lot more about the draki and their primitive attitudes and tribal structure, but that’s about it.  Sure, Jacinda’s life in the pride does genuinely suck at some points (the ostracism, Tamra’s new celebrity, etc.) but the angst does get tiring after a while.  Even though Sophie Jordan is awesome at writing highly emotional prose, there can only be so much angst in one book before I feel like throwing it at the wall.  At least by the end Jacinda is starting to almost accept her life back in the pride and sees Cassian is maybe not all that bad, Tamra deserves a bit of celebrity and maybe she should stop moping.  Of course with such a cliffhanger at the end of the novel I’ll still read Hidden, the last book in the trilogy.  I’m just hoping that Sophie Jordan pulls it together for the concluding book.

I give this book 2/5 stars.

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Solar, Defeated by Diantha Jones

Solar, Defeated by Diantha Jones(Cover picture courtesy of Goodreads.)

From the moment Strafford Law saw Chloe Clever, he knew he was destined to love her forever. But a dishonorable past and a bleak future threaten to destroy him before he gets the chance.

Looking back, he recalls his life before it came crashing down around him…a time when the one he now loathes most of all was the one he adored more than anything.

SPOILER ALERT: Read as Oracle of Delphi #2.5! YOU’VE BEEN WARNED.

[Full disclosure: I received a free ebook copy from Diantha Jones as part of her blog tour in exchange for an honest review.]

Ooh, we finally get to learn more about our tortured, broody Sun Prince!  I won’t call myself a fangirl, but the fact that Strafford has changed so much by being in love with Chloe makes him one of my favourite love interests ever.  I mean, in pretty much every YA book out there the dark, tortured love interest is still a jerk by the end of the book/series.  That’s definitely not the case and Solar, Defeated provides a lot more insight into how Strafford fell into disgrace amongst other demigods and became said tortured, broody Sun Prince.

A lot of novellas that connect to series are boring and don’t really provide much of an addition to the story, but Diantha Jones has stayed away from that trap.  We learn things we otherwise probably wouldn’t in the series and seeing things strictly from Strafford’s point of view is great.  His decisions make sense from his point of view and his emotions feel more…real.  It’s much easier to connect with him after reading Solar, Defeated because we get to see more of his flaws.  (His main one being hubris, something we all suffer from occasionally.)

If you’re enjoying the Oracle of Delphi series and just can’t get enough of the moody, protective and incredibly attractive Strafford Law, I’d highly recommend this tie-in.  It’s definitely worth your time.

I give this book 5/5 stars.

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