Monday, June 4, 2018

Extra Blog


You better believe it, a bonus blog post despite the fact that the school year has ended! Oh, yeah!
To my credit though, I had this idea for a couple months (maybe since last year, I don’t remember) to take all the books I’ve read this year, even the one’s I didn’t review on this blog and put it into a top X list. Top X because I’m not 100% sure how many books I’ve read this school year but I’m pretty sure it’s over 35. It’s a fun way to reflect on what I’ve read and analyze my favorite type of books really quick (I say really quick but have you been paying attention to the length of these reviews?).
A few things about this top X: I will only be including novels in this (I read waaaaay too many manga to remember and add to this list), I will not include Julius Caesar because I didn’t really read this whole thing and, yeah I’m just not counting that. With all that out of the way, here’s some mood music and let’s get on with the list!
 

The characters sucked, the plot was slow and I had to force myself to keep reading this book. Absolutely atrocious, hence why it’s at the bottom of the list.

            The horrid conclusion to a slowly falling trilogy. Also there weren’t that many horrible books I read so this has to go pretty low with its bland characters, ridiculous jumping around, and lack of Wonderland. Sorry Beddor, you should have stopped at book one.

            Speaking of horrid conclusions, the Dorothy Must Die series should have ended on book 3! Seriously, why does this exist? It’s too derivative from the first three getting rid of OZ and all people OZ during their most epic battle to go to a dead land with dead characters and a dead plot.

            Wow Beddor, you got more than one book in the bottom five. But this book was the pitfall that ArcheEnemy amplified and I struggled to read it when my favorite characters were doing boring junk. Sorry Beddor, but again, book one was enough.

31: Atonement by Ian McEwan
            Ay, a book I didn’t review because I read it after the end, but I still read the book and am here to throw it some shade. Essentially I enjoyed the very, very, very, beginning of the book where it explained how stuff worked, but that going boring really quickly. The plot was slow as heck and then when things stared to speed up I ended up hating the main character with a passion because she was such a liar. Don’t get me wrong, sometimes I lie myself, but liars who know they’re liars and don’t seek atonement are some of my least favorite people. Trust is a two way street: one path is one we walk together and the other is where I dump you in Hell because you’re such a snake. Then parts 2 and 3 chose to focus on one person after all that switching perspective craziness in part 1, but by then I had lost interest in most of the characters from that slow beginning and my stance on Briony was set in stone. I’ll admit it was handled well with all the perspective and tone, but I still hated the character and found that it failed to interest me and the beginning and everything after that. So that’s why it’s all the way down here.

            AP reading list books can be so dull, but actual reason this is on the bottom is because this is something I didn’t 100% understand and found hard to read. Other books weren’t like this and while I did find lots worthwhile out of the book it’s down pretty low.

Awesome writing style, unique topics/characters, absorbing content. I was still disturbed by lots of the stuff in this book and won’t read it again if I can help it (and I can) so it’s down kinda low here.

            Stereotypes, flat characters, low development, oh my! Get down here SBD, you failed a lot but still had a minute of potential (and a really cool cover).

            Again, low character development because of the circumstances of the plot, but still low character development. The idea was pretty original though, not many people write about the inner workings of such a tragedy (a shame I’m rather jaded and felt practically no emotional attachment to anyone who died except Thomas).

            Wasted potential and too much romance. There was some redemption, but will someone please explain to me why most young adult novels are centered around romance? There’s more to life than just one romance and an opportunity to really comment on the qualifications of humanity (also there’s a sequel).

            You get some you lose some, and if you want to get my reasons for this you’ll just have to click on the link to the original review so you can see my thoughts on all the stories.

            Romance took over the novel again. The beginning was okay/interesting, but once the romance was in full bloom I was like “are we seriously doing this again?” There are still worse books than this was though as I seemed to find it inspiring enough to draw a picture based on two characters.

            I forgot I read this book after a while, but when I did remember I remember how good a book it was. For being forgotten it’s down here pretty low, but for having good memories it’s up pretty high. What really got it down here though was the world building which was beautiful.

            I was losing interest in the series at this point because of the Nome King and the first half (or so) taking place in our world; then there was that nasty ending that made me go, “Why isn’t this over? This should be over by now!!” so it’s not too hot but not too bad either.

21: Night by Elie Wiesel
            I don’t have found memories of my experience reading the book, but the writing was phenomenal as was the message. Still low on the list because I don’t have fond memories of reading this. Also, you won’t find a review for this book because it was class required, but I still read the whole book dang it!

            Unique and interesting over the Thanksgiving break, but there were some parts that were just slightly above average and this wasn’t one of the books that really stood out. Still a great book though.

            The last of The Looking Glass Wars series I read, it falls low due to wasted potential and way too much time spent on Alyss’ mundane life in our world rather than world building Wonderland and that wonderful war we miss a lot of. This book was my favorite out of the three though.

            I loved the fantasy in this one but it’s ending was like a kick to the shin. I actually appreciated the romance in this novel, even if it was only hinted at and never came true *enraged/delighted screaming in the distance,* but some parts felt trite (like leaving your family to escape marriage and save your father in secrete). Awesome book still, some were just better….

            Isn’t it nice how I liked all the books in this series less and less as it progressed? But yeah, this book fell short in the series from the first one in terms of villain’s page time and action. Pete was great here though and it was nice to see that Nox wasn’t in there to be the love interest.

            Romance in a bad way, Kai Sen was fun alone but he should have been with Skybright, and Kai Sen dies. I can’t get over that ending killing of, not just a love interest, but a strong unique character with his own dreams and goals. Also, Zhen Ni’s parts were mostly drag as well as Skybright’s (though less drag than Zhen Ni) putting it about midway.

            And that my reader(s?) concludes my list! Why you ask? Because everything else is ranked number 1! Yes, I’m serious (and indecisive) that number one spot belongs to (in no particular order):





·         Forge by Laurie Halse Anderson



·         Hatter Madigan Book 1: Ghost in the H.A.T.B.O.X. by Frank Beddor and Adrienne Kress

·         Ashes by Laurie Halse Anderson

·         Serpentine by Cindy Pon






 
There’s a simple explanation for this: I can’t chose a number one book. Each one of these books has a strong sense of identity and craft; they know their purpose in the world. I shouldn’t have to compare a young adult fantasy like Dorothy Must Die to a juvenile realistic fiction such as Red Butterfly; I shouldn’t have to compare a nonfiction book like Escape from Camp 14 to a science fiction novel like Invasive Procedures; I shouldn’t have to compare a (young adult) realistic fiction novel like Eliza and Her Monsters to a historical fiction novel like Memoirs of a Geisha. There needs to be absolute decision on this list, and there doesn’t need to absolute decisions on this list, I love all these books and would love to read them again when the time is right (meaning I’ve forgotten lots of the plot and have nothing else to read), heck if my wallet allowed it I would buy all these books for my collection! But my point is, these books have all stood out to me this year and to single some out would be a challenge because I take (at least I think so) a wide arrange of factors into consideration before making a verdict, and looking over the list there isn’t any one that screams “I’M THE BEST BOOK!!” it’s a bunch of books screaming, “WE’RE NUMBER ONE!!”
So there you have it folks, thanks for taking the time to read this silly little list I have that’s only a real list halfway through. If anything, it’s nice to see that I have a variety of favorites in terms of genres (though most are fantasy and historical fiction) and that I’m a rather strong reader in terms of how much I read. I hope this trend continues in the future so that I’m able to expose myself to all sorts of new concepts and inspirations.
….
Well this is kinda an awkward ending.
….
Ah, best not waste this opportunity!

I’d like to thank my English teacher for the 2017-2018 school year who gave my class this assignment and challenged us to read at least two books back then. I remember be honestly scared I wouldn’t meet the minimum two books each quarter, but that obviously wasn’t a problem in the long run. This list, this blog, this person *point to myself* wouldn’t exist if it weren’t for this assignment you gave us that first week of school and for that I’m very grateful. One of my biggest grievances with this school year was how standard most of the work was and the fact that it didn’t push most students towards further exploration of knowledge to use in their daily lives, yet your classes was not one of those with that problem. I may have sounded like English was the bane of my existence a couple months ago, but I didn’t truly mean that and deep down knew that this would leave a positive impact once it was all and done and I should just bite the bullet for the time being. Seeing that this has indeed come to pass I’d like to take the chance (because I don’t know if you’re reading this or not) to thank my English teacher from the bottom of my heart for making English fun again, as someone made me hate it some time ago, and it is my weakest subject. With that all said and done, I bid you the final and true, fair well from this blog as it’s time for me to move on.
Until next blog!

Tuesday, May 22, 2018

Last Blog


Yep, school years ending so this is the last blog we've been assigned in class.
*Sigh*

Sunday, May 13, 2018

The Hate U Give by Angie Thomas (Review)


Date Finished: May 11, 2018
Page Count: 444
Genre: Realistic Fiction 

            Surprise, surprise, I was pleasantly surprised with this book. I must admit, I was a bit unsure about the content of this book and the only reason I picked it up was because my English teacher recommended it, but dang, was this ever good! In a sense it didn’t feel like realistic fiction but rather fiction set in our world. I know that’s the definition of realistic fiction but trust me, it’s something else as I’ve never described a realistic fiction book that way before now have I?
            Before diving into the review, yes this is still going to be short (at least I hope so, last time I said that it was still over one thousand words) as I’m in the home stretch right now and still have tons of projects dumped onto me. This is also not going to be as explicit as my normal reviews in case you were wondering. No, I will not tell you that Kai Sen dies in the very first sentence and make a big deal about it (but his death was a big deal in the book), I’ll just go over the big concepts I enjoyed and why so I can get this over with and go back to spending time doing homework (or with my mother if I can find where she is right now).
            First off, Chris was a godsend. I’ve been reading these things for a whole year and the only already established relationships so far have been married couples and minor characters. Giving the main character a boyfriend at first, and one she not 1000% happy with is great, and I wish more authors would do that. Watching Starr and Chris interact was just wonderful, and I hate to admit it, some of my favorite parts in the book. The romance wasn’t a big portion of the plot nor a small portion; it was just the right amount you’d expect in a book centered around a sixteen-year-old and contributed to the story in all the right ways. Thank you Thomas for giving me a Chris in my life (the world needs more like him).
            In addition, Starr had a strong, clear, colorful voice. You could get a strong sense of her character from reading the story and it was consistent, changing in the right situations around the right people. As for my opinion on her voice, yeah I don’t like it when people cuss (its trite and often makes people seem like their vocabulary is severely limited), but other than that it was very entertaining and a joy to read. It even felt like the diction a sixteen-year-old black girl would make in this decade, full of sass and passion. Part of the reason I like the book so much just has to do with the energetic and lively diction that helped to give this book some feeling.
            The final thing I’ll mention here is the world building. See I was expecting the character to be bland, the plot mediocre, the world super predictable and not worth caring about. Surprise, surprise, the plot takes some time for things to heat up with the disagreement on the results of the court case and stuff, but man, was there a whole lot of world building that happened in all that time. See, Thomas would drop these little pieces of information as the story progressed that didn’t make sense but as more piece were dropped the puzzle started to make sense. You learn about how Starr’s family functions, how her neighborhood functions, how her school functions, how her friends functions, how her family functions, and how the universe functions. Okay, that last one is a joke, but it may as well be true. Thomas does such a good job of explain Starr’s world down to the electrons, protons and neutrons that I couldn’t help but fall in love with it all. It didn’t help that she would bring things up at just the right time so that the story wasn’t conflicted nor did Starr’s character get compromised. The world building was what won me over essentially, just fabulous, fabulous, fabulous. I’m just amazed at all the world building was done in just 444 pages without being straight up exposition, high level stuff Thomas.
            And there you have it, a clean review that goes over everything I enjoyed about the book in less than a thousand words. You should totally go read the book by the way; it has great characters, great relationships, and great world building. I also loved the themes of community and identity which are highly prominent in the book and make it deep and a real rollercoaster for the emotions. Forgive me for thinking this book was going to be garbage if you read my last review as this book is far from garbage. It’s well thought out, has deep messages, strong characters and knows exactly what it’s going (not wants, going) to do on this earth. A book that has a goal is one of the best books you can find so if that doesn’t make you want to read it, then you must not be in high school or not like realistic fiction or even not like how some people act as though there are problems in the world pertaining to racisms and stuff (people are like that, sometimes I’m like that). If so then don’t read the book but everyone else go for it! Peace out y’all and happy mother’s day mothers!

Tuesday, May 8, 2018

The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian by Sherman Alexie (Review)


Date Finished: May 8, 2018
Page Count: 230
Genre: Realistic Fiction 

            This book is relatable. This book is funny. This book is honest (from what I can tell). This book has got to be one of my favorites that I’ve read this entire school year. It has a great message with a great story and great literature devices and I’ll be *insert appropriate cuss word* if I can think of anything negative to say about it.
            Before I begin the review however, just know my English teacher (that may be you if you’re reading this) gave us a choice in some allegories to read and I chose Dante’s Inferno, which is one heck of a complicated book. There are also other assignments, exams coming up, theater related stuff (still salty with my theater teacher right now) I need to do/prepare for, and yeah, this review is going to have to be short sadly. On the bright side, my thoughts about this are pretty simple surprisingly.
            So in a nutshell, this book is a glance in the life of Arnold Spirit Junior as a high school freshman when he decides to go to an all-white school (being an Indian on a reservation with a colorful medical history). Automatically you can see that this book takes up the mantel of “the struggle of being a minority” which I actually try to stray from for some reason. Maybe I feel like they content will be too jarring with its stereotypes and the main character’s struggle (or whoever) will be unbelievable or offensive in some manner. This is a rather touchy subject for me as I’m a minority in a class full of the majority and constantly feel like I need to prove something to my classmates. I kid you not, I walk into my class with the mindset that I’m going to war and have to represent all the black people in my school since I’m one of the few (like less than ten) black people in pre-AP/AP/any type of advanced classes in my school. So depressing.
            Any who, I already had an established connection to the main character that gave me some reason to like him, but what I really like about Jr. was the fact that he had drive. People with drive are my kind of people, and 90% of the time I meet someone without drive I have it in my mind that they’re a waste of resources and would be better off not existing. Yeah I know it’s harsh, but overpopulation is a problem and I can’t stand it when people who don’t try complain. So before I go on a tangent that comes back to haunt me if I try to run for any political office, I found Jr. a great respectable character as he came from humble origins, wanted to do something big with his life, and was willing to take the steps to make that happen. Even if that meant leaving the reservation. Even if that meant seeming like a traitor to his people. Even if it meant losing his best friend. That is some serious drive guys.
            Jr. even was a better person than me as he wasn’t bent on proving his worth to the white kids a Reardan (the school he went to). He was relaxed, had his faults, and failed at lots of things, and wasn’t about to let things stop him from getting a good education. Did things come close to stopping him? Heck yeah. At one point his grandma died (a hilarious chapter by the way, not the fact that someone died but the way he handled the subject was humorous) and his dad’s best friend too. He became (slightly) depressed thanks to that, but it’d didn’t stop him from going to school. After that, his older sister died too, (she eloped early on in the book by the way) and although that was another strong blow to him it didn’t stop Jr. from working hard. Needless to say, Jr. wasn’t a quitter and I loved that about his character, super inspiring and nice to know that other minorities struggle in life as fight uphill know as tradition and expectations.

            Other cool things I liked about the book include:

·         Drawings Jr. was a budding artist and he included lots of pictures to go along with the text (also another reason I can relate to him).

·         Pacing The story as well paced and featured the right amount of time in Jr.’s life instead of rambling or focusing on pointless chapters that didn’t develop his character.

·         Diction Such lovely, casual, teenager diction. You shouldn’t expect anything less from someone of Jr.’s character and it’s nice that Alexie could keep with the times on this.

·         Struggles Yes, Jr. struggled with lots of things from the excess amount of cerebral spinal fluid in his brain, to his acromegaly later on in life, to his trouble keeping up with all the fancy “rich” kids at Reardan, and all sorts of things. Character in poverty appear in books pretty often, but if you ask me it can be hard to find a book where the economic situation of a character is written as well as it is here.

·         Rowdy The best friend of Jr. for a brief point in the book, I must say I loved the way Jr. and his relationship progressed through the book. They were the best of friends, they were the worst of enemies, and when they made up at the end of the book it wasn’t too much feels to be unrealistic or rushed too quickly to be unbelievable. While things may not be 100% patched up between them, I loved reading about the evolution of their relationship as it gives me comfort to see two friends not agree on everything and be forced to go through some challenging times. I wish some of my friendships were as durable as this (or maybe they are and I’m just unaware of this).

There you have it folks, nothing but good stuff to say about this book. I don’t know if you can feel the soullessness of this review (I can kinda sense it since I didn’t explain things too much), but I do apologize for that again, these next few weeks of school are going to be tough (they’re the last few weeks of school, they’re always a challenge). I recommend this book to all people middle school and up, as it will give them a good laugh here and there, has cool pictures (who doesn’t love pictures?), and give some deep insight to the life of a minority that struggles to get some quality education when he faces discrimination. Having experience this myself, I resonate strongly with the content of the book and find its message of perseverance and taking the high road to be quite touching. With the way America is screaming for people to embrace their diversities while at the same time creating clear boundaries for different communities it can be rather hard for people in my generation to feel like they belong to anything. I find it hard belonging to the African American community even though both my parents are clearly black, as I’m more of a golden-brown and I don’t act black or dress black if you know what I mean. I don’t want to “betray my people,” but at the same time I don’t necessarily want to associate with every aspect of “my people.” Funny thing is, there’s this one picture in the book that sums up my feeling about all this pretty well:
 
            All that aside, perhaps I’ll get to go into depth about my feelings over America’s black community in my next book review as I’m reading The Hate U Give by Angie Thomas. If you’ve heard anything about that book, then you know I’ll probably have a lot to say (and over 50 pages in already I already got some beef with the book). For real my dudes, read The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian, it portrays a lively account of a freshman that struggles to find his identity and I feel that’s something we (Americans) could all use in this day. At the end of the day (book) one has to realize that while similarities group us together they also isolate us from others, and deep down there’s no reason for these boundaries as we’re all human and we shouldn’t divide ourselves this way. Such a wonderful message shouldn’t be conveyed to you just through my book review, go pick up a copy of the book and discover the masterpiece Alexie has created. Until next time!

Monday, April 30, 2018

The Diabolic by S. J. Kincaid (Review)


Date Finished: April 30, 2018
Page Count: 403
Genre: Science Fiction

            Hey. This here is a continuation of my disgusted rant about the book from Saturday so instead of me repeating myself and stuff go read that blog post for me. If you want, you can even consider it a part one as I can guarantee you I’m going to expand on my hatred for Sidonia.
 

            Okay, I am disappointed. I knew Sidonia was coming back but Jesus Christ, why did Kincaid have to bring her beck the way she did? It was all:
“Sup, Nemesis” and the Nemesis was all,
“S***! Donia is that you?”
“Yeah, let’s have some tea while we get reacquainted.”
“Donia!!!” and Nemesis lovingly jumped into her arms.
What? That’s it? I mean it would seem unfitting to bring Donia back in a fancy way that had lots of bells a tassels but just her suddenly appearing like a wrapped up present to Nemesis was stupid beyond stupid. It was like Kincaid was all,
“Gosh darn it, I don’t know how to progress the plot along. Hey why not bring Donia back to make Nemesis get more character development and learn that she cares for Tyrus? I can even kill her off less than a hundred pages later to make Nemesis go through so deep trauma and stop trusting Tyrus. Then I can make my masterpiece another one of the hundreds of trilogies where society has screwed up and people somehow still manage to romance. Absolute genius me.”
Again, why?!? This was meant to be a single. Humanity still likes it’s one-shots, and if the characters from a one-shot come back to another story that is set in the same world but isn’t super plot wise connected/a sequel that’s okay too! Just why did you bring back Donia in a sudden way Kincaid? Was it for a plot twist? Did you think it would make things interesting? Make us care about Nemesis more? Because I sure started caring about Nemesis less once Donia came back.
Honestly I just haaaaaated Donia so much, she spoiled the fun of the whole book and almost made me skim the last few hundred pages. You know you hate someone when they make you want to quit or cause you to experience eternal suffering and seeing how one of these is true, I was satisfied seeing Donia get her flat donkey out of the plot. That’s right, just satisfied. I couldn’t even revel in her demise since I was just so done with her by the point after screwing up Nemesis and complicating the plot way more than it had to be.
Aside from Donia sucking and finally, finally, kicking the bucket we had Tyrusarus rex who was an awesome character in his own right, despite being Nemesis’ love intrest. Honestly, I though the guy was insane and I would have loved him for that, but when he revealed his true colors to Nemesis it just gave so much more depth to him to love (and he was the most indepth character to me, so lovable indeed). Shame the guy got upstage by Donia and was stuck in the role of love interest. The Matriarch was another awesome character if you ask me as I found her determined to do anything for what she loved a really appealing character trait. Sure Nemesis was the same thing, but the Matriarch was human and relatable, so sorry, not sorry Nemesis. The final awesome character was Cygna, the grandmother of all hell. I like a hate-able villain in my stories (not to say that’s the only type of villain I like) and Cygna was one to hate. She kept screwing things up for Tyrus and proving herself a formidable enemy. From her sci-fi backstory to her merciless nature I couldn’t help but be glad when this woman got shot into a sun at the end of the book. Only problem: she got overshadowed by Ragyō. Other who read the book be all, “who?” but it wasn’t even a character in the book at all *grins madly* see, yesterday I finished watching Kill la Kill (remember I mentioned that in my previous post) and I have never been more grateful for my mother (or father) and the way she treats me. Don’t get me wrong, Cygna is savage, ruling through her favorite son, but Ragyō, mmh, Ragyō got so much more over her. I could point out her actions of fusing her daughter with life fibers and then dropping her down a garbage chute when she “died,” her beating the crap out of both her daughters multiple times without mercy, or the fact that she took her “favorite daughter” and sliced her in half without a second though due to her standing against her plus inappropriate stuff she did with both of them, so I think you can see how Cygna pales in comparison to the blinding light of rainbow mom who would do anything to destroy the planet.
Moving on, I felt that the world building was half-baked here. I don’t care about the romance and all the details pertaining to the Chrysanthemum and the inflated Grandiloquy’s egos, tell me more about this space place humans have built since the Earth exploded. I want to know more about the tech and the social structure and all these genetics advancements and modified humans (I do wish to grow up to be a geneticist). For the longest time I though Nemesis was some type of robot, but nope, she a GMO meant to kill all who oppose her master. I don’t want to read a love story about her! I don’t want to read from her POV (it shows how she develops, but it’s still dull as heck)! Let’s go on an adventure where Nemesis’ old owner has been killed and Tyrus takes her in and the two make an awesome new superior-subordinate friendship in their quest to liberate humanity from ignorance before space gets corrupted beyond repair!! Seriously, why wasn’t this the plot? I would have loved to hear the detached POV of Nemesis as she watched humans and struggled to overcome her grief and learned about her own humanity as she realized the worth of Tyrus’ companionship. She could experience the world Kincaid created, taking us on a tour through the galaxy and becoming aware of all its beauty with her newly opened mind. But you know, maybe just I would want that. I think we all know this is an incognito jab at how much I hate romance and I’m probably one in a hundred thousand about this. The world doesn’t revolve around romance people so stop centering your YA novels around it! Or I could stop reading YA novels like a good friend keeps telling me. Only problem is that adult novels have adult romance in them sometimes and I’d hate to stumble across more of that. *Shudders.*
Last three things noteworthy. 1: page 177 got out of character when Nemesis randomly spat out, “‘I don’t give a damn about your uncle or politics.’” Like where did that come from Kincaid? If you’re going to use language use it consistently because that was one of 3 (I recall) cuss words that didn’t suit a sci-fi future story where the people worshiped the divine cosmos (even if Nemesis didn’t). What the heck would she know about damnation? 2: chapter 47 was an absolute cringe fest as Nemesis was freaking out since Donia was dead and her inner monologue sounded so wrong. I get it, she was in pain about watching her beloved mistress die in her arms, but it still came out all wrong if you ask me and I still didn’t care for Donia. 3: The Empress is the already published sequel. Need I elaborate on what was earlier stated about this book deserving to be a one-shot? My gosh, I bet some more upsetting painfully obvious plot twist will happen due to foreshadowing like Tyrus dying (by Nemesis’ hand maybe) or being the cause behind Donia’s murder. Whatever, I’m not reading it, I’m fine with this ending here and see no reason to go for the sequel.
The moral of the story is that I should have listened to my friend long ago that review this book when I read her review. It has too much unnecessary romance. It also doesn’t have enough world building. What is does have is a character I abhor with a passion that I haven’t felt in the longest time and the dull protagonist that can’t help herself so she hangs onto her love interest. Kincaid, don’t expect me to read any more of your books and consider this one a wasted potential in my eyes that deserves to be dumped into the abyss of pointless YA novels that were made to be forgotten. You like sci-fi? Read this. You like romance? Sure read this? You like cunning characters and tons of family betrayal? READ THIS. But please, don’t read this otherwise unless you’re out of options, it’s not good enough if you ask me. 10/10, I would not read again. It’s nothing personal, just a matter of preferences in my books.