Category: Book Review

“The Infinity Ring: The Trap Door” by Lisa McMann

Dak, Sera, and Riq return to the United States in the year 1850 when the nation is divided over the issue of slavery. The Underground Railroad provides a light of hope, helping runaway slaves escape to freedom. But the SQ has taken control of the Underground Railroad from within. Now Dak and Sera are left wondering who to trust…

the-trap-doorIt’s been a few months since the last time I had a book from The Infinity Ring series to plow through and share my thoughts about, so if you need a refresher as to what has been going on in the two books previous you can refer to my comments about book one and book two respectively if you need.

The release of The Infinity Ring: The Trap Door, the third book in the series took me a little by surprise to be honest. I knew it was probably coming out soon, but didn’t know how soon until it randomly showed up on Amazon as a recommended read that had just been released. A pleasant surprise to say the least as I quite enjoy these books even though the target audience is for kids less than half my actual age…

After meeting Christopher Columbus and then taking on a horde of vikings, Dak, Sera, and Riq get to come home to the United States in the year 1850 and see what they can do about the fact that the SQ has taken over the Underground Railroad. I’ll honestly say that I was quite impressed that whomever is planning out the historical events that are being used as plot devices for these books decided to go with the Underground Railroad theme. It’s something we all learn about in school, but then we don’t get a lot of exposure to later in life. I’m guessing that given the target audience is children ages 8-12 that this historical event was chosen on purpose because its one that you learn about when you are that age. Excellent foresight by the editors and authors in my opinion.

While the first two books were mainly about Dak and Sera, this book is almost exclusively about Riq. His ancestors were involved with the Underground Railroad and so the things the three kids are doing are going to have a direct impact on him specifically, possibly even erase his existence. When Riq figures all of this out he has a very serious and impressive moment of growth about who he is, what he stands for, and what he’s willing to give up for the ultimate safety of mankind. I liked that as a reader I finally had the chance to be inside of Riq’s head for a little bit instead of hearing once more about how Dak’s impetuousness dropped the group into a heap of uncalled for trouble.

There is also some pretty important foreshadowing about where things might be going several books down the line in a small scene with Sera that I’m not going to reveal because it will be fun for you to find it on your own. Oh, and Dak finally calms down and seems to understand he can’t just do whatever he wants. Finally.

Next up in the series is The Infinity Ring: Curse of the Ancients, due to be released on June 4, 2013. So, it will be a little while before I get to revisit these books, but if previous evidence can be trusted, it will be worth the wait.

Grade: B
Length: 192 pages

Amazon   |   Barnes & Noble   |   Goodreads   |   Audible

Nzingha: Warrior Queen of Matamba by Patricia McKissack

Nzingha Warrior Queen of Matamba by Patricia McKissack(Cover picture courtesy of The Flying Librarian’s Hideout.)

First Month of Mbangala:

The Season When the Grass is Burned

So here I am in the garden, writing…if these words have magic, then I will use them to plot and plan a way to drive the Portugese from our land.  And maybe one day my pages will tell others that I, Nzingha, First Daughter of Kiluanji, was a Mbundu, one of a powerful people who are free and unafraid to fight for our beloved homeland of Ndongo in the Kwanza River Valley.

Later the Same Evening

My sisters found me.  Kifunji cannot resist teasing.  She gives a big laugh.  “Writing is good for you, sister.  To see you sitting quietly is such a rare pleasure.  Isn’t it better than hurling a spear, or wrestling some boy to the ground?”…I am accused of being independent.  It is true, I suppose, for I would rather be kept in an open basket than a lukata—a box.

Now here is a woman who absolutely deserves a book in The Royal Diaries!  And the sad part?  I had no idea she even existed until I read it a few weeks ago.

By all accounts, Nzingha was a very strong leader in her later life and we see hints of that in her ‘diary’ as a girl of thirteen.  She’s also not perfect, something everyone can relate to, making a false accusation in front of the whole court, which turns out to be baseless.  Unlike a lot of the princesses in The Royal Diaries, Nzingha grows wiser as she grows older and we see believable flashes of the woman she would become.  Her mistrust of the Portugese, but also her prowess as a warrior make her an enjoyable, believable character.

The plot is fairly fast-paced, but I was dismayed that Patricia McKissack changed some history to make things more dramatic.  When Nzingha went to meet with the Portugese, she sat on one of her warriors so as to be equal with the leader at age 13.  However, in the Historical Note we learn that this did not happen until way later in her life.  Sometimes history doesn’t need to be changed to be more exciting and this is one of the cases.  There’s nothing wrong with telling it as it really was!  I think part of it was that McKissack had to add not just more exciting events, but more events period because it is a very short book.

I give this book 4/5 stars.

Amazon*     Barnes and Noble*

*Only available used.

End of Days by Eric Walters

End of Days by Eric Walters(Cover picture courtesy of Goodreads.)

The world’s most important astrophysicists, astronomers, and mathematicians have all died within the same twelve-month period.  Or so their families and friends think.  What very few know is that the countdown to doomsday has begun: an asteroid is racing towards the planet, threatening to extinguish humanity as we know it.  The world’s brightest minds are actually huddled together in a secret location, desperately plotting to avert a catastrophe.  But it’s only when Billy, a teenage boy with rare gifts, is recruited to the cause that they can hope to prevail over evil and return themselves—and the Earth—to safety.

There are many books that deal with an end of the world scenario, be it zombies, pollution/climate change, new global powers or asteroids.  Pretty much everything has been done before, including the asteroid-about-to-hit-Earth scenario presented in End of Days.  But what distinguishes Eric Walters’ pre-apocalyptic novel from the rest is not only his incredible writing talent, but also the way he handles the premise.

This is not an uplifting book by any stretch of the imagination and as I was reading it, I began to picture Eric Walters as a cynic like myself.  You see, when it is revealed that an asteroid will hit and likely destroy the Earth, society does not band together to save itself.  It falls apart as people quit their jobs to spend time with their families and basically do whatever they want.  Society is chaos.  And you know what?  It’s a plausible scenario that is presented well by Eric Walters.

The characters are memorable.  Joshua Fitchett, Billy, Dr. Sheppard…they’re all based on archetypes we’re familiar with, but Eric Walters puts his own spin on his characters.  It makes them unique, but sympathetic as well and their completely different perspectives offer an interesting look at the end of the world.  Really, what else could you ask for?  The plot is fast and will keep you reading into the early morning hours and I don’t want to give anything away, but the ending is classic, really.  A lot of despair and a little bit of hope make the perfect apocalyptic novel.

I give this book 5/5 stars.

Amazon*     Barnes and Noble**

*Only available as Kindle or used.

**Not available at all.  What the heck, Barnes and Noble?

The Clan of the Cave Bear by Jean M. Auel

The Clan of the Cave Bear by Jean M. Auel

(Cover picture courtesy of Bookworld.)

This novel of awesome beauty and power is a moving saga about people, relationships, and the boundaries of love.  Through Jean M. Auel’s magnificent storytelling we are taken back to the dawn of modern humans, and with a girl named Ayla we are swept up in the harsh and beautiful Ice Age world they shared with the ones who called themselves the Clan of the Cave Bear.

A natural disaster leaves the young girl wandering alone in an unfamiliar and dangerous land until she is found by a woman of the Clan, people very different from her own kind.  To them, blond, blue-eyed Ayla looks peculiar and ugly—she is one of the Others, those who have moved intot their ancient homeland; but Iza cannot leave the girl to die and takes her with them.

Iza and Creb, the old Mog-ur, grow to love her, and as Ayla learns the ways of the Clan and Iza’s way of healing, most come to accept her.  But the brutal and proud youth who is destined to become their next leader sees her differences as a threat to his authority.  He develops a deep and abiding hatred for the strange girl of the Others who lives in their midst, and is determined to get his revenge.

It’s often difficult to sum up one’s feelings for a book in one sentence, but I’ll try:

The Clan of the Cave Bear is a decent enough book that tried too hard to jump into the category of ‘epic novel’.

What I mean by that is that I enjoyed learning about a wildly different time in history than I’m accustomed to, but some of Jean M. Auel’s writing was distracting.  The whole purpose of her Earth’s Children series is tell the story of humankind from its earliest days when the Neanderthals began to die out or breed with Cro-Magnons, modern humans.  The main character, Ayla, is adopted into the Neanderthal Clan after being orphaned in an earthquake, creating the perfect situation to show readers the decline of Neanderthals and the rise of modern man.

In The Clan of the Cave Bear we get marvelous insight into the culture and day to day activities of our ancestors, which makes for a fascinating historical novel.  However, sometimes Auel veers into what I call Professor Mode and starts explaining things instead of showing them from the characters’ points of view and letting the reader figure things out.  Here is one such passage:

“Wooden bowls were used in similar ways.  Rib bones were stirrers, large flat pelvic bones were plate and platters along with thin sections of logs.  Birch-bark glued together with balsam gum, some reinforced with a well-placed knot of sinew, were folded into shapes for many uses.” (Pg. 81)

I don’t know about you, but that sounds a heck of a lot like my fourth-grade history textbook’s description of how the parts of buffalo were used.  In historical fiction there is a fine line between giving enough information so your readers can understand what the story is about and giving a lecture.  There are times when Jean M. Auel shows us what life in the Clan is like, but there are others similar to the above passage that lecture us.

With that said, for the most part I enjoyed The Clan of the Cave Bear.  It’s well written and although Ayla is an interesting character, the book is more about the changing times than the characters.  Fair enough; it comes close to an ‘epic saga’, but I don’t think it ever really achieves that.  But what it does accomplish quite well is to show why the Neanderthals as a separate species died out: they could not change.  Their culture and traditions were so ingrained that they resisted change; their brains were larger but not as readily adaptable as the brains of our ancestors.  And for that alone, I’ll be continuing the Earth’s Children® series.  (Yes, Ms. Auel actually trademarked the name of her series.)

I give this book 3.5/5 stars.

Amazon     Barnes and Noble

The Journey by John Heldt

The Journey by John Heldt(Cover picture courtesy of Literary Inklings.)

Seattle, 2010. When her entrepreneur husband dies in an accident, Michelle Preston Richardson, 48, finds herself childless and directionless. She yearns for the simpler days of her youth, before she followed her high school sweetheart down a road that led to limitless riches but little fulfillment, and jumps at a chance to reconnect with her past at a class reunion. But when Michelle returns to Unionville, Oregon, and joins three classmates on a spur-of-the-moment tour of an abandoned mansion, she gets more than she asked for. She enters a mysterious room and is thrown back to 1979.

Distraught and destitute, Michelle finds a job as a secretary at Unionville High, where she guides her spirited younger self, Shelly Preston, and childhood friends through their tumultuous senior year. Along the way, she meets widowed teacher Robert Land and finds the love and happiness she had always sought. But that happiness is threatened when history intervenes and Michelle must act quickly to save those she loves from deadly fates. Filled with humor and heartbreak, THE JOURNEY gives new meaning to friendship, courage, and commitment as it follows an unfulfilled soul through her second shot at life.

[Full disclosure: John Heldt sent me a free ebook of The Journey in return for an honest review.]

First, let me say how dare he!  How dare John Heldt make me cry again!

Okay, that was a little bit melodramatic.  Yes, The Journey made me cry just like the first book in his Northwest Passage trilogy, The Mine.  I won’t tell you whether they were tears of happiness or sadness, but let me just say that it’s a very good sign when I’m so emotionally involved in a book that I show emotion reading it.  The best part about The Journey?  If you want to cry as well, you don’t have to read The Mine for it to make sense because the two stories are only connected by their time travel premises (so far).

In the beginning when Michelle travelled back in time to 1979 in the town where her younger self is a teenager, I kept thinking John Heldt had gotten himself into a mess.  Would Michelle reach out to her younger self and try to change the past?  What about the grandfather paradox?  (If I kill grandpa before he has my father/mother, will I cease to exist?  It’s the same principle with any manipulation of the past.)  But the ending, oh the ending!  John Heldt wrapped everything up brilliantly in a way that makes you both sad and hopeful.

Michelle as a character takes some warming up to, but you’ll absolutely love her by the end of the novel.  As for Shelly Preston, Michelle’s younger self, you’ll love her immediately.  The Journey is told from both of their points of view, which I absolutely love because you get to see the effect on has on the other and vice versa.  I can’t tell you much about their relationship otherwise it would spoil things, but they make each other better people.

With a fast plot that made me hog the computer for nearly two hours, amazing characters and a tear-jerker ending, you can’t go wrong with The Journey.  And at 99 cents at the Kindle Store, it’s a complete steal.  It’s worth twenty times that, trust me.

I give this book 5/5 stars.

Amazon