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Feb
25

Title: Song in the Dark
Author: Christine Howe
Publication: February 21, 2013 by Penguin Australia
Format, pages: Paperback, 216
Age Group: Young Adult
Genre: Contemporary
My Rating: ★★½☆☆ 

From Goodreads:

Where do you end up when you have nowhere to go, and no one to turn to?

Paul isn’t thinking clearly. After destroying a series of relationships – with his friends, his flatmates, his mum – he finally hurts the one person he cares about most of all. And then he runs away.

An extraordinary and heartrending story of love, betrayal, addiction and hope.

Christine Howe’s debut novel Song in the Dark is a book of tough and mature themes definitely written for a mature young adult audience. It’s nice to know that some authors write to not squeeze into what’s popular within the age group such as young protagonists, cliched romances, and genre trends, but write matters that have meaning and levels of emotionality that you wouldn’t see elsewhere. Song in the Dark is one of those, but sadly for me, I didn’t quite connect with the book. I mean, it was good. But as it was written in third perspective it was hard to connect with our main character Paul as he hurts people he loves, family and friends, and runs away to recover at a rehab treatment centre for his marijuana addiction. I felt incredibly distant from him because of it; maybe it’s because I’m the polar opposite. If it were written in first there might’ve been a difference in the way I felt about this book. Despite it being short and a quick read I had skimmed about 30% of it and that’s really a shame.

Thanks to Penguin Australia via NetGalley for the egalley to review.

• • •

Title: Shadow Kiss, Vampire Academy #3
Author: Richelle Mead
Publication: November 13th, 2008 by Razorbill
Format, pages: Paperback, 348
Age Group: Young Adult
Genre: Paranormal, Romance
My Rating: ★★★★½ 

From Goodreads:

It’s springtime at St. Vladimir’s Academy, and Rose Hathaway is this close to graduation. Since making her first Strigoi kills, Rose hasn’t been feeling quite right. She’s having dark thoughts, behaving erratically, and worst of all… might be seeing ghosts.

As Rose questions her sanity, new complications arise. Lissa has begun experimenting with her magic once more, their enemy Victor Dashkov might be set free, and Rose’s forbidden relationship with Dimitri is starting to heat up again. But when a deadly threat no one saw coming changes their entire world, Rose must put her own life on the line – and choose between the two people she loves most.

Richelle Mead has soooo many passionate fans the world over for her Vampire Academy series and I think I slowly am becoming one. I’ve taken my time – even if poorly – with this series and it’s a goal to finish the series this year. Shadow Kiss, the third instalment in the series, was packed with thrilling if not emotional moments, especially the ending between Lissa and Rose. It’s such a genuinely complex relationship between friends and one of the best I’ve read; there’s a lot of depth and history to their friendship that you don’t see anywhere else. It’s at that ending that it explodes and Rose and Lissa ricochet their own ways, and it’s funny how it’s both their faults. I look forward to reading the next three in this series following Rose and the path she takes to find Dimitri. This was a great instalment and the next books seem like they’re just going to cascade down on me.

• • •

Title: Pandemonium, Delirium #2
Author: Lauren Oliver
Publication: February 28th, 2012 by HarperCollins Children’s Books
Format, pages: Hardcover, 375
Age Group: Young Adult
Genre: Dystopia, Science Fiction, Romance
My Rating: ★★★★★ 

From Goodreads:
“So what was your name before?” I say, and she freezes, her back to me. “Before you came to the Wilds, I mean.”For a moment she stands there.

Then she turns around.

“You might as well get used to it now,” she says with quite intensity.

“Everything you were, the life you had, the people you knew… dust.”

She shakes her head and says, a little more firmly, “There is no before. There is only now, and what comes next.”

After falling in love, Lena and Alex flee their oppressive society where love is outlawed and everyone must receive the “cure” – an operation that makes them immune to the delirium of love – but Lena alone manages to find her way to a community of resistance fighters. Although she is bereft without the boy she loves, her struggles seem to be leading her toward a new love.

“Don’t believer her.” *heart attack*It was two years since I read Delirium and I had purposely put off Pandemonium until around this time before Requiem releases. I’m so happy I did. Now, I only have to wait two weeks or something like that for Requiem and to find out how this trilogy ends instead of a whole year I would have had. I had loved Lena in Delirium and I continued to love her in Pandemonium, both seeing her ‘then’, what happened after the end of Delirium and her time in the Wilds, and ‘now’, which was her time after the Wilds, disguised as a Cured, and trying to get to Julian, the DFA leader’s son, to bring him to the Resistance. I also grew a liking for Julian because of his raw life story and his real transition throughout Pandemonium. I need to read Requiem now! Pandemonium was a formidable middle book.

I also do see the reason why they decided to adapt this into a tv show, which I believe is a great choice for these books. The ‘then’ and ‘now’ gives the writers for the tv show a timeline to work with, and although there’ll be many changes, I’m excited to see what they bring to the original source. I’m always like that with adaptations.


6 Responses to this Post
  • Flash reviews! Hehe. I’ve already read these but yay they’re on the blog now. :)

    I like your little page divider text-y thing. (• • •) It’s so simple but it works! I’m sure I’ve already talked about Pandemonium to you. Song in the Dark, a shame but I understand.

    [Reply]

  • YES, join the Vampire Academy fandom. And ohmygoodness, Pandemonium. I should have waited until now to read it because the long wait is torturous.
    Love the mini-reviews!

    [Reply]

  • Erin W. says:

    You’re becoming another VA passionate fan? *fist pump* Welcome to the club! Hehe. Great mini reviews!

    [Reply]

  • Stormi says:

    Great reviews. The Song book didn’t catch my attention when I read about it and I wasn’t a real fan of Delirium as I am one of those who has a hard time with Dystopian novels. :)

    I must give Vampire Academy another try though as everyone says it gets better as you go along but I wasn’t a huge fan of the first novel so it’s hard for me to press on. :)

    Happy Reading!

    [Reply]

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