The Darkest Minds by Alexandra Bracken

The Darkest Minds by Alexandra Bracken(Cover picture courtesy of Goodreads.)

When Ruby woke up on her tenth birthday, something about her had changed. Something alarming enough to make her parents lock her in the garage and call the police. Something that gets her sent to Thurmond, a brutal government “rehabilitation camp.” She might have survived the mysterious disease that’s killed most of America’s children, but she and the others have emerged with something far worse: frightening abilities they cannot control.

Now sixteen, Ruby is one of the dangerous ones.

When the truth comes out, Ruby barely escapes Thurmond with her life. Now she’s on the run, desperate to find the one safe haven left for kids like her-East River. She joins a group of kids who escaped their own camp. Liam, their brave leader, is falling hard for Ruby. But no matter how much she aches for him, Ruby can’t risk getting close. Not after what happened to her parents.

When they arrive at East River, nothing is as it seems, least of all its mysterious leader. But there are other forces at work, people who will stop at nothing to use Ruby in their fight against the government. Ruby will be faced with a terrible choice, one that may mean giving up her only chance at a life worth living.

There are very few books out there that I would say insulted my intelligence, but this is absolutely one of them.

First off, let me start with the premise.  Some disease mysteriously kills pretty much all children and teenagers but those that survive get mind powers ranging from math skills to erasing memories.  I could live with that somewhat unbelievable premise if not for what happened next: all the kids in the country that survived were rounded up and taken to internment camps.  Sure, some parents would be terrified by their kids but honestly?  I very much doubt that the majority of parents would willingly give up their surviving children to the government as Alexandra Bracken imagines.  Also, the sheer cruelty all of the guards in the camp show toward the low-risk children (blues and greens) is ridiculous.  There would be some displays of even a little bit of human compassion but Bracken just made a total caricature out of the guards.

I could ignore the premise if the writing wasn’t so awful.  But it was awful, truly awful.  There are big long scenes where absolutely nothing happens then action appears out of nowhere and suddenly we’re back to a boring scene with no transition in between.  When the skip tracer appears and Ruby hits her head (or something like that) I flipped to the next chapter and went ‘huh?’.  She was suddenly back in the van with no explanation as to what happened.  Transitions are important, people!

You’d have to go through The Darkest Minds with a fine tooth comb to actually find anything vaguely resembling a plot.  It’s basically a futuristic road trip with talking heads in a dark room!  Alexandra Bracken doesn’t feel the need to describe pretty much any of the characters Ruby meets when she runs away from her captors until at least 300 pages in or so.  It was like listening to a bunch of people talk in a pitch black room.  People that all sounded the same.  There was really no difference in the patterns of speech of Suzume, Chubs and Liam.  They all sounded like the same character.

As for Ruby, don’t get me started.  She hates herself and feels like she can’t trust anyone, which is completely understandable because she lived in what turned out to be a concentration camp for children.  Yet Liam waltzes in and in no time at all she trusts him completely!  I don’t trust people that quickly and I haven’t experienced anything anywhere near the level of what Ruby has experienced.  It’s just not believable.  And when they finally meet the Slip Kid and Ruby learns who she is, she immediately trusts him.  As if someone with his background could be trusted!  Does she remember who his father is?  Ugh, just kill me now.

I can’t recommend this book to anyone.  It’s a waste of paper and ink and is an insult to the intelligence of its target audience.

I give this book 0.5/5 stars.

Amazon     Barnes and Noble     Goodreads

Captivate by Vanessa Garden

Captivate by Vanessa Garden(Cover picture courtesy of Goodreads.)

In a glittering underwater world, nothing is as it seems…

For the past twelve months since her parents’ death, seventeen-year-old Miranda Sun has harboured a dark secret — a secret that has strained the close relationship she once shared with her older sister, Lauren. In an effort to repair this broken bond, Miranda’s grandparents whisk the siblings away on a secluded beach holiday. Except before Miranda gets a chance to confess her life-changing secret, she’s dragged underwater by a mysterious stranger while taking a midnight swim.

Awakening days later, Miranda discovers that she’s being held captive in a glittering underwater city by an arrogant young man named Marko…the King of this underwater civilisation.

Nineteen-year-old Marko intends to marry Miranda in order to keep his crown from falling into the sinister clutches of his half-brother, Damir. There’s only one problem. Miranda is desperate to return home to right things with her sister and she wants nothing to do with Marko. Trying to secure her freedom, Miranda quickly forms an alliance with Robbie — Marko’s personal guard. However, she soon discovers that even underwater, people are hiding dangerous secrets…

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

You know what?  I didn’t expect to like Captivate as much as I did.  The only reason I really took a chance on it was the fantastic cover.  Sometimes, as I’ve found out, you can judge a book by its cover.

At first I thought this would be a mermaid book.  In hindsight I’m not quite sure why I thought that but it turns out that this book is more science fiction than fantasy.  I don’t want to give the big reveal away but it turns out mermaids and science intertwine in the history of the city, even if it’s not in the way you expect.  The history of it is fascinating and I like how they maintain some customs from the surface while at the same time their culture evolves to suit their environment.  It makes it a lot more realistic, believe me.

The one thing I was surprised to like was the characters.  I know it sounds so much like your typical love triangle but it isn’t.  The actions of Miranda make sense given her situation and her guilt over her parents’ death but the reactions of Robbie and Marko surprised me the most.  They aren’t solely motivated by love, like a lot of love interests are.  They are also motivated by family, duty and honour and it’s much more complicated (and believable) than your traditional oh-no-I-like-two-boys-and-they-like-me love triangle.  There’s more to Robbie and Marko than meets the eye and Miranda has quite a few surprises up her sleeves as well.

There were some plot twists that I had no idea were coming.  Vanessa Garden seems to have almost totally departed from traditional YA formula when it comes to plot twists.  It’s shocking.  I completely did not see the ending coming and I was pleasantly surprised with Miranda.  She stayed true to herself throughout the novel but at the same time was able to admit when she was wrong.  And most importantly of all, she learns to slowly forgive herself for her parents’ deaths.

It’s a fascinating story and I can’t wait for the rest of the Submerged Sun series to come out, even though Captivate was just published this year.  We can expect big things from Vanessa Garden in the future, that’s for sure!  If you’re looking for some interesting science fiction, a little bit of romance and a fast plot look no further than Captivate.

I give this book 5/5 stars.

Amazon     Barnes and Noble*     Goodreads

*Unavailable

My 2014 Blogging Goals

I’m a little late on the blogging goals band wagon, seeing as most bloggers posted their goals early this month, but better late than never.  One advantage of posting later is that I’ve had time to reflect on other peoples’ blogging goals and to see if I want to adopt some of them.  So what exactly are my blogging goals this year?

1.  Reach 1,000 followers.  (WordPress and email combined.)

I started out the year with 633 followers and at the time of writing this post I have 687 followers.  In 2013 I acquired 455 new followers so I’ll just have to stay on pace with my average of about a follower per day.  So why do I want 1,000 followers?  Why not 900 or some other high number?

Well, the answer is that on NetGalley most of the large publishers like Penguin are only accepting review requests from blogs with 1,000+ followers.  Some of my favourite books are published through Penguin, so by reaching the 1,000 follower milestone I’ll be able to request them.  It’s not guaranteed that I’ll be accepted, but with my really high reviews to requests accepted ratio it’s not going to hurt my chances.

2.  Publish one well-researched article per month.

I’m not talking about my rants here.  I’m talking about articles like The Portrayal of Cleopatra in Historical Fiction.  In other words, articles that take a little more research and a little more thought than rants do.  Besides, rants are spur-of-the-moment sorts of things and I rarely schedule them more than a couple of days ahead of time.  I want my research-intensive articles to be a little more thorough and I want to schedule them a couple of weeks in advance to give me more time to reflect on them as well as make corrections.

3.  Reach 650 reviews total.

Right now I’ve written 464 reviews, meaning I’ll have to read and review 186 more books, short stories and novellas this year.  That means I’ll be writing a little over 16 reviews per month, which is doable for me.  It’s about 4 reviews per week for the rest of the year, which is also quite doable.  I read a lot and review pretty much everything I read.  Besides, I like hitting big milestones like this.

I figure that if I reach my goal of 650 here in 2014 I can hit 800 in 2015 and (if I’m still around the blogosphere) reach 900 in 2016 and 1000 in 2017.  My review production is going to slow down in 2016 and 2017 due to general life stuff but I’m hoping to at least hit 1,000 reviews in total for The Mad Reviewer.  I don’t want to quit anytime soon, so I don’t have any plans for shutting down my blog for a long time yet.

4.  Control my review requests!

I will clear my waiting list.  No ifs, ands or buts.  There is no excuse for me to still have the books authors requested I review on my list here in 2014.  After I clear all of the pending requests, I will be initiating an open submission call for no more than a month, close down requests until I clear them again and then doing the same thing.  This will be far more manageable and I’ll also have a new form for authors to fill out so I can weed out those books that really don’t interest me.

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These are my blogging goals for 2014.  What are some of yours?  What do you think of mine?

Look What Just Arrived! (#16)

Carrie Pictures 2013 075This is not the best of pictures but I did have to fit ten different books into it.  Here are the names if you can’t read the titles:

  • Stork by Wendy Delsol
  • Frost by Wendy Delsol
  • Flock by Wendy Delsol
  • Evermore by Alyson Noël
  • Blue Moon by Alyson Noël
  • Caesar’s Women by Colleen McCullough
  • The Wise Woman’s Tale by Phillipa Bowers
  • Daughters of the Nile by Stephanie Dray
  • Crewel by Gennifer Albin
  • Altered by Gennifer Albin

As I mentioned before, my local bookstore is going out of business.  So I’ve been stocking up and you may notice that I bought way more books than I usually do.  This is because my last trip was likely the last time I’ll set foot in the store so I dropped around a $100 on books.  I wanted to get the full series of books as much as possible because I know I won’t be buying books for a long time.

Anyway, I read Daughters of the Nile pretty much on the same day I went shopping.  It’s much longer than the other books in the series but I absolutely loved it.  Caesar’s Women is the fourth book in Colleen McCullough’s First Man in Rome series and I can’t wait to start it!  Crewel is the first book in Gennifer Albin’s Crewel World trilogy and I was thoroughly impressed with it.  It was so different from most YA with an entirely unique premise that you can’t help but love it.  I’m now reading Altered and have a hard time putting it down.

As for the Stork trilogy I can honestly just say I picked them up for the covers.  They’re beautiful and interesting but the blurbs intrigued me.  It sounds like Wendy Delsol has a great premise on her hands and I want to see how she carries it out.  Evermore is yet another book that’s floated around in the blogosphere forever and I never got around to it.  So when I saw it and Blue Moon in the used section I couldn’t resist.  I have some high hopes for this one!  The same goes for The Wise Woman’s Tale.

Well, these are some of the things I’m reading.  What are you guys reading lately?  See anything you like here?

Discussion: Things That Make You Happy

Carrie Pictures 2012 281

After learning that yesterday (Friday) at noon, the nineteen year old family cat died I think I need some cheering up.  He died peacefully in his sleep and of course I’m sad but it’s also a relief as well.  He wasn’t doing very well these past few weeks and I’m glad he’s no longer in any pain.  And in a way, I sort of had a feeling the end was coming on Friday.  Call it intuition but I wasn’t all that surprised to hear the news.  I know he was just a cat, but Tommy was with the family for pretty much as long as I can remember and I’ll miss him.

That’s why the discussion for this week is entirely selfish.  I want to know this: what makes you happy?  Music?  Family?  Pets?  Friends?  Simple things, like sleeping in on a Sunday or re-reading your favourite book?