Book Blast: Inscription by H. H. Miller

H.H. Miller’s Book Blast for Inscription will be featured around the blogopshere from March 31-April 13.

Inscription_CoverPublication: January 9, 2014

H.H Miller

Paperback; 278p

ISBN-10: 0615944418

eBook; 700kb

ASIN: B00HSBNW5Y

The year is 1851 and the Grand Guard is ravaging Mainland. Arrests. Floggings. Swift executions. Twenty-year-old Caris McKay, the beautiful heiress of Oakside Manor, is sent to live with distant relations until the danger has passed. It’s no refuge, however, as Lady Granville and her scheming son plot to get their hands on Caris’s inheritance with treachery and deceit.

Soon, alarming news arrives that the ruthless Captain James Maldoro has seized Oakside and imprisoned Caris’s beloved uncle. And now he’s after her.

Caris escapes with the help of Tom Granville, the enigmatic silver-eyed heir of Thornbridge. But when a cryptic note about a hidden fortune launches them on a perilous journey across Mainland, Caris and Tom must rely on wits, courage, and their growing love for each other if they hope to survive.

Filled with adventure, intrigue, and romance, Inscription will transport you to a historically fictional world you’ll never want to leave. Continue reading

Words Once Spoken by Carly Drake

Words Once Spoken by Carly Drake(Cover picture courtesy of Goodreads.)

YA meets high fantasy in this lush series debut about a girl who never quite fit in — and the reason why…

Evelyn might not love the confines of her village life, but she takes her small freedoms where she can get them. But everything changes when her parents decide it’s time for her to wed. Suddenly she loses her tunic and breeches, her bow, her horse, and gains rigid gowns, restrictive manners, and carriage rides.

The best way to escape is through her dreams, but as they become more and more real, Evelyn begins to worry that she is losing her grasp on reality. It is only when she makes two new friends that the truth is revealed: she is destined for far, far more than even she could imagine.

[Full disclosure: I requested and received a free ebook copy from the publisher in exchange for an honest review.]

For a debut novel this isn’t a terrible book, but it is by no means a great book.  There are some good elements and some bad elements but I think the main problem that kept me from truly enjoying this book was the pacing.

The pacing was bad, if I’m honest.  It was nice to start with a gentle beginning but the beginning dragged on and on and on while the plot went nowhere in the beginning.  Then, when things finally started getting interesting Carly Drake just rushed through them without much explanation.  I really wanted to know more about Evelyn’s fairy powers and the world she is suddenly thrust into but it’s just so confusing.  There simply was not enough backstory to make me emotionally invested in Evelyn’s struggle to stabilize her new realm.

Evelyn is an okay character I suppose.  She’s brave but eventually learns to admit when she needs help.  She can be incredibly self-sufficient and even though she’s a stereotypical sort of girl empowerment character there’s a legitimate reason for it.  The only problem I really had with her was her lack of emotions.  She didn’t really seem fazed when her parents abandoned her, when she learned the life she was living was a lie, etc.  Even during that rather disturbing scene at the very end of the novel I couldn’t feel her panic.  As for the love triangle, well there was nothing unique about it.  It’s pretty much the same old love triangle you’ve seen in every other YA book today.

The writing itself was not bad, however.  Carly Drake has some potential here with her style of writing; she just needs to work a little bit more on the plot elements.  If the plot had not been so poorly paced and the world had been fleshed out a little more this could have made it into the ‘good’ category but as it stands, this one was a solid ‘meh’.  I don’t feel particularly strongly about it one way or the other so I can’t in all honesty either recommend it or warn people away from it.

I give this book 2/5 stars.

Amazon     Barnes and Noble     Goodreads

A Girl Named Disaster by Nancy Farmer

A Girl Named Disaster by Nancy Farmer(Cover picture courtesy of this wiki.)

Nhamo’s mother is dead, and her father is gone.  When she learns that she must marry a cruel man with three wives—before her twelfth birthday—she runs away.  Alone on the river, in a stolen boat, Nhamo is swept into the uncharted heart of a great lake.  There, she battles drowning, starvation, and wild animals, and comes to know Africa’s mystical, luminous spirits.  Nhamo’s journey will transport readers into her world, in a story that is poignant, humorous, dramatic and extraordinary.

This isn’t actually the first time I’ve read this book but I hadn’t read it for several years so when I saw it in the library the other day I decided to give it another try.  I remember loving it, but how was it this time around?  Well, it was okay.  It’s nothing really all that special, despite the fact it was a Newberry honor book in 1997.

It’s an interesting look at life in remote Africa that’s both interesting and unsettling.  On one hand, it was fascinating to see the spirituality of a different culture.  On the other hand, there were definitely some practices like the ngozi marriage Nhamo was going to be forced into that really are terrible.  Nancy Farmer manages to balance out these ‘good’ and ‘bad’ elements in a non-biased way that tells a good story.  I obviously can’t speak as to how accurate things are portrayed but Nancy Farmer included a bibliography and some further explanations for things she alluded to in the book.

Nhamo is an excellent character.  Sometimes she’s surprisingly mature, surviving out in the bush on her own for months at a time.  Other times she’s very immature, throwing temper tantrums that you would expect from pretty much any preteen girl.  This is definitely aimed at more of a middle grade audience so I think readers of this age will be able to identify well with Nhamo, despite the cultural differences.

The only thing that stops this book from being a great book is the pacing.  When things are interesting Nancy Farmer’s pacing was way too fast.  And when things were more boring the pacing became uneven and the plot slowed down to a crawl.  It reflects the actual time Nhamo spends in certain places but it doesn’t make for the most interesting read, believe me.

So was A Girl Named Disaster as good as I remember?  No, but it was still a pretty good story and if you have a preteen or young teen that likes to read I’d definitely recommend this book.

I give this book 3.5/5 stars.

Amazon     Barnes and Noble     Goodreads

The Best and Worst of March 2014

It’s been one heck of a month here at The Mad Reviewer.  For 30 days straight I’ve had over 200 views per day, a personal record.  Which also means that I beat my previous page views per month record of 8,228 in January 2014!  The final tally is 8,941 views in all of March, which shatters the previous record.  Far more important to me are the 58 new followers I gained during this traffic surge.  That brings the total number of followers of this blog to 788, meaning that if my traffic stays high I’ll be having a very special 1,000 follower giveaway soon!

When I looked at the 5 best posts this month I had to laugh.  Before I explain, here they are:

1.  Why Girls Hate Game of Thrones—A Rebuttal

2.  The Hunger Games and Ancient Rome

3.  How to Read 100 Pages in an Hour

4.  The Outsiders by S. E. Hinton

5.  Some Thoughts About Book Blogging & Statistics

I honestly had to laugh at the Game of Thrones rant article being number one because it was number one by such a large margin.  Of the 8,876 views I received this month 2,962 views were from that article alone.  That’s insane and hilarious!  I guess it might have something to do with the fact Game of Thrones Season 4 premieres on April 6 (yay!).  The other ones are pretty easy to guess why they’re #1.  They’re all popular books, articles kids use for school or semi-controversial ones that garnered lots of comments.

Okay, so which articles were the worst during this record-breaking month?

1.  Emperor: The Death of Kings by Conn Iggulden

2.  Jessica’s Guide to Dating on the Dark Side by Beth Fantaskey

3.  Desired by Shadow by Cynthia Luhrs

4.  Artemis Fowl: The Opal Deception by Eoin Colfer

5.  Lost in Shadow by Cynthia Luhrs

As usual I’m not too concerned about these reviews being the lowest ranked in terms of hits.  They’re all either older books or books that aren’t exactly the most popular, even if they were excellent.  Next month we’ll see different books on the bottom 5 and life will go on.  It’s just interesting to see how the ‘worst’ posts rotate every month.

April Kindle Fire Giveaway

Didn’t win last month’s Kindle Fire giveaway?  Neither did I!  So below is your chance to try again for April.  And, as always, have fun!

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Enter to win 1 of 2 great prizes. Winner’s choice of a Kindle Fire HDX or $229 Amazon Gift Card or $229 Paypal Cash!

The first prize is available via the rafflecopter below. The 2nd is available only to bloggers who post about this giveaway. You can find info on how to enter the 2nd giveaway in the rafflecopter.

Kindle Fire April

Win a Kindle Fire HDX, Amazon Gift Card or Paypal Cash ($229 value)


The winner will have the option of receiving a 7″ Kindle Fire HDX (US Only – $229 Value) Continue reading