All posts by skyebjenner

Tortall: A Spy’s Guide by Tamora Pierce

Overview

Tortall - A Spy's GuideTitle: Tortall: A Spys’s Guide
Author: Tamora Pierce
Series: Tortall Companion
Rating Out of 5: 5 (I will read this again and again and again)
My Bookshelves: Easy reading, Medieval fantasyStrong women
Pace: Fast
Format: Novel
Publisher: Random House
Year: 2017
5th sentence, 74th page: Two days later, before a crowd of citizens, she ascended the higest tower of the palace, spoke of the king’s inhumanity to his people, and leaped to her death.

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Synopsis

Dear Thom,
Do you remember the room next to my office? You told me it was a danger of fire with all the crates of old papers I stored in there. I’ve been cleaning it out – and reading wome of what’s in those crates. Strange to find so many reminders of how it was in those first days, when King Jonathon and Queen Thayet were deciding how they should rule and your grandfather Myles, Evin Larse, and I were thrashing out the beginnings of the Shadow Service. I’ve even found papers from Daine, Numair and Neal in the lot. Should I save the lessons you boys and your sister wrote, to show your children one day?
Your mother and I look forward to seeing you for the Midwinter Festival and hearing about your mage studies.
Your loving father,
George

Thoughts

I love the world of Tortall. I have done since my mum first gave me First Test when I was ten years old. So, finding out that the latest book on Tortall is just as good, if not better than expected…? Well, it was a fantastic way to spend the afternoon. And it was definitely over much too quickly. Starting with George’s letter to Thom to place the stories to follow into context. It also gives a tantalising hint as to what the future holds for these amazing characters.

Unlike the rest of the books that I’ve laid hands on by Tamora Pierce, this one isn’t really a story. Rather, it’s all of the little bits and pieces that have been used to create the world that many of us know and love. It features profiles, letters and snippets that give shape and form to what happens between the stories. Even the ways in which the royal family’s spouses were originally received at the outset of their reigns.

I loved the visually engaging way in which this book was set out. After all, it wasn’t just a  story, but rather a collection of snippets that make a world truly come to life. Different handwritings, backdrops to the words and images create a sense that this is a collection rather than a chronological storyline.

Something about this haphazard collection of tales and letters makes me think that every time I read it, I will find something else that adds an extra layer to the stories of Tortall. Something that I look forward to reading and experiencing again and again over many years.

 <- The Dragon’s Tale Review Terrier Review ->
Image source: Amazon

Rejected Princesses by Jason Porath

Overview

Rejected PrincessesTitle: Rejected Princesses
Author: Jason Porath
Rating Out of 5: 5 (I will read this again and again and again)
My Bookshelves: Biographies, Easy reading, FeminismHistory, Non-fiction
Pace: Slow
Format: Non-fiction
Publisher: Dey St.
Year: 2016
5th sentence, 74th page: Suddenly, Ka’ahumanu was running things on her own.

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Synopsis

100 women from the pages of history, literature, and folklore. Fearless, bold, fierce, these are the… Rejected Princesses.

Thoughts

I loved, loved, loved, loved, loved, loved, loved, loved, loved, loved, loved, loved, loved, loved, loved, loved, loved, loved, loved, loved, loved, loved, loved, loved, loved (okay, you get the point) this book! I even informed my partner that this is a perfect book from what to select (our entirely theoretical) future baby girls name from.

The things that I loved about this book:

  • The pictures – it was so pretty and beautifully laid out!
  • The entries were graded – I knew what sensitive topics / maturity levels I was getting into before I started the entry
  • It was short and pithy – every tale got to the point, but was engaging straight away
  • There was no sugar-coating it – these women were tough, and had some interesting stories, but they weren’t princessed up.
  • My mind is opened to the women of history

Not only was this book a great look at some of the amazing women of history (and even how they’ve shaped our futures), it was also just a really fun and beautiful read. The entire message behind this collection is that women are strong and can do anything. But it wasn’t preachy, it was fun, and delivered in such a way that you could give this to the younger generation of girls. Something that can allow us to see that we can all be whatever we want to be.

 <- Black Saturday Review Tough Mothers Review ->
Image source: Amazon

Nine-Tenths of the Law by Eric James Stone

Overview

Blood Lite IIITitle: Nine-tenths of the Law
Author: Eric James Stone
In: Blood Lite III (Kevin J. Andreson)
Rating Out of 5: 4 (Really good read!)
My Bookshelves: ComedyEasy reading, Fantasy
Pace: Fast
Format: Short story
Publisher: Gallery Books
Year: 2012
5th sentence, 74th page: Gordon frowned.

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Synopsis

How does a ghost find a way to keep his house from being haunted? Well, posession is nine-tenths of the law…

Thoughts

A ghost walks into a lawyers office. It honestly just sounds like the beginning of a really bad joke. And, honestly, with the tone of the Blood Lite III collection, I was kind of expecting a really, really bad joke. Something about how lawyers are zombies zapping the life (and money) out of the world. But, although this point is kind of hiding in the story, it’s more about the law of possession.

I also liked the twist at the end of the tale – possession, ghosts and zombies collide in a way that made me laugh and be constantly entertained. The conclusion left me smiling and giggling for at least five minutes after I turned the last page.

 <- Devil’s Contract Review Scrumptious Bone Bread Review ->
Image source: Goodreads

The Girl with the Windup Heart by Kady Cross

Overview

The Girl with the Windup HeartTitle: The Girl with the Windup Heart
Author: Kady Cross
Series: Steampunk Chronicles #4
Rating Out of 5: 4.5 (Amazing, but not quite perfect)
My Bookshelves: SteampunkStrong women
Pace: Fast
Format: Novel
Publisher: Harlequin Teen
Year: 2014
5th sentence, 74th page: Em likes to read, and she likes it when we can talk about a story.

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Synopsis

In 1897 London, a final showdown is about to begin.

London’s underworld is no place for a young woman, even one who is strong, smart and part automaton like Mila. But when master criminal Jack Dandy inadverently breaks her heart, she takes off, determined to find an independent life, one entirely her own. Her search takes her to the spangled shadows of the West End’s most dazzling circus.

Meanwhile, taken captive in the Aether, Griffin King is trapped in an inescapable prison and at the mercy of his archenemy, The Machinist. If he breaks, The Machinist will claim control of the Aether, and no one in either world will be safe.

To defeat The Machinist for good, Griffin will have to confront his greatest fear and finally come face-to-face with the destructive power he wields.

Thoughts

Although I loved this story, I did find it a little disappointing after all of the fantastic tales in this series. It almost felt like a rushed ending for the sake of writing the ending, with two very different storylines not quite intertwined. That’s not to say that I didn’t thoroughly enjoy and love this book, it was just quite a departure from the first three novels that I was a bit… confused.

Mila’s story is continued after her “birth” in The Girl with the Iron Touch. I really loved this character development, although she starts as an automaton, there is this beautiful, emotional creature that is created. The fact that she is the most innocent and vulnerable of the girls (yet, weirdly the most difficult to harm) just helps to further my love for this character. Her relationship with Jack (my favourite literary bad boy) also develops and the way that they are all forced to renegotiate their ties is quite enjoyable. Even Finley, who has chosen her man, has to figure out what Jack means to her and the best way to move forward with the new social dynamics.

The other storyline follows Griffin’s final battle with The Machinist – see what I mean about disjointed? Mila and Jack’s journey don’t really mesh overly well with Griffin’s battle. They just happen to be coinciding with each other. However, I liked the fact that this short series culminated in an epic battle between good and evil. It’s fairly typical and a reasonably common type of battle (dead parents and ancestors help, sacrifice everything in the name of love, etc.). But, the steampunk twist and the indication that all of the characters have their happily ever after, well, there is a reason why it is such a common theme…

 <- The Wild Adventure of Jasper Renn Review The Strange Case of Finley Jayne Review ->
Image source: Goodreads

The Sending by Isobelle Carmody

Overview

The SendingTitle: The Sending
Author: Isobelle Carmody
Series: The Obernewtyn Chronicles #6
Rating Out of 5: 4.5 (Amazing, but not quite perfect)
My Bookshelves: Australian author, Dystopia, High fantasy, Science fiction
Pace: Slow
Format: Novel
Publisher: Penguin Books
Year: 2011
5th sentence, 74th page: The futureteller nodded composedly and said there were other gifts.

Buy The Book Now at The Book Depository, Free Delivery World Wide

Synopsis

It came to me then, like a chilly draught from an unseen gap, that I had always known in my deepest heart that it would be like this, a slipping away froma life full of people I had come to love, in a place I had helped to shape, in a land I had helped to free.

The time has come at Elspeth Gordie to leave the Land on her quest to find and stop the computermachine Sentinel from unleashing the deadly Balance of Terror arsenal. But before she can embark on her journey, she must find a lost key. And although she has long prepared for this day, nothing is as she anticipated.

Elspeth’s search will take her where she never thought to go, and bestow upon her stranger companions than any she ever imagined. It will lead her far from her destination to those she believed lost forever.

And it will test her, as she has never been tested before…

Thoughts

Finishing this book has been a long time coming. I started rereading the series when The Red Queen came out, and I hadn’t ever quite gotten to The Sending. Over two years later, I finally managed to find the time to actually sit down and read this story. It is intense and quite a long haul, but it is most certainly worth the time and brain power that I put into it. It is going to take me quite a while to finish The Red Queen as well, over a month (much like The Sending), but it is an epic journey, and sometimes spending the time to take an epic journey is definitely worthwhile.

Up until this moment in the series, Elspeth’s journey has been about finding the clues, but also helping her fellow Misfits. She’s created a home, a life, and a reality in which she is proud to live and love. Yet, there is a constant looming cloud of her upcoming quest. Finally, the moment has arrived, and as with every moment in this series, there are some fantastic conflicting emotions throughout. Yet, that is only the start of the story, really. Although Elspeth slinks away in the  night, she still manages to find herself some unlikely companions. Ones that will make the rest of the battle throughout The Red Queen all the more interesting.

As much as I loved this story, I did find it quite long winded. I think that’s because it is almost a midway point between Elspeth’s life in the Land and the end of her epic quest. There is a lot of setting up throughout this story, and a lot of moving from one point to another. Yet, the actual action is quite light. Especially in comparison to the first five stories. Yet, although it means that I took a lot longer to read this (it was easier to put down), it was still a great tale. One that I truly can’t wait to read the conclusion to.

<- The Stone Key Review The Red Queen Review ->
Image source: Goodreads

I Was a Teenage Bigfoot by Jim Butcher

Overview

Blood Lite IIITitle: I Was a Teenage Bigfoot
Author: Jim Butcher
Series: The Dresden Files #6.5, Bigfoot Trilogy #2
In: Blood Lite III (Kevin J. Anderson)
Rating Out of 5: 4 (Really good read!)
My Bookshelves: CrimeParanormal fantasy, Urban fantasy, Wizards
Pace: Fast
Format: Short story
Publisher: Gallery Books
Year: 2012
5th sentence, 74th page: “Gentlemen,” Sinor said, impatiently.

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Synopsis

I Was a Teenage Bigfoot is a short story in The Dresden Files series by Jim Butcher. It is set around the time of Dead Beat.

Thoughts

Revisiting bigfoot and Harry Dresden is always a fun journey. Mostly, I love Butcher’s translation of who (and what) bigfoot is. The half-blood son of a bigfoot provides even more entertainment, last time Irwin appeared in Harry’s storyline, he was just a small child learning to handle bullies. Now, he’s a teenager, with pretty much the same problems. This time though, the consequences of other’s sapping his energy are a little more extreme and serious.

Harry’s ability to overcome any obstacle that he’s faced with and handle the outcomes of his meddling are admirable. The fact that sometimes he causes the worst of the explosions and troubles just add to the enjoyment of the storyline. His unsuccessful flirtations with the nurse? Well, they just make it far funnier.

<- B is for Bigfoot Review Bigfoot on Campus Review ->
Image source: Goodreads

Skin Deep Part One

With all of the family drama that has been happening lately, this short story I wrote last year has been lingering in my mind. It needs a little work, but here is Part One of Skin Deep.


The beginning is always the hardest part. After all, who is to say where the story begins? Sometimes there is an obvious, definitive eureka! moment, but more often than not you’re left feeling like I am right now… I know what my story is, I know how it ended, but where did it begin? At what point did I realise that this was a story that was worth telling? When did my tale begin?

I suppose you could say that it started when Grandfather got back from his adventure to faraway lands. Honestly, when he goes off on an adventure, none of us are sure exactly where he goes. But really, although he was sick when he returned, my story and experiences didn’t happen until much later. Although, it is incredibly hard to pinpoint the exact moment that I thought that something was wrong… that something was seriously different, and that nothing would ever go back to the way that it was… but, really, I should probably stop getting ahead of myself. I think that the beginning was the phone call. That moment when I first felt like the world was crashing around my ears, I just had no idea how truly horrible the following months would be. How much it would change everything in my life, from my everyday experience to the rose-coloured way in which I viewed the world. From blue and green landscapes to the red and black dreams capes that covered my canvases.

None of us were sure what had happened to him, in fact, we’re still in the shadows about what his adventures entailed. Yet, on his arrival home, instead of ringing Mum to organise his welcome-home-visit, a doctor from the local hospital was forced to make that call. Standing in the middle of my lounge room, phone dangling from my fingers, the idea that my infallible, supportive grandfather had succumbed to an illness was unimaginable. Rosco’s constant pressure against my thigh was all that kept me from falling over. The reverberating shock of my Mum’s distraught voice echoing through my sluggish brain. I was convinced that it was all just a horrible joke. But it wasn’t the 1st of April.

It was the not knowing, the not understanding just what had happened that was the worst. After all, it is impossible to create a plan of attack, a way to manage the situation if you’re not entirely sure what the situation even is. I’m honestly not sure if hours passed, or just seconds as I stood, absorbing the information in horror. Yet, eventually Rosco decided that I had stayed frozen for long enough, his insistence that it was time for his dinner finally broke through the reprieve and bought me crashing back to reality. It was his trusting love and ability to give me his unerring loyalty and love that helped to see me through the dusk that followed.

Finally, we started to get news from the doctors, I will never forget the moment that I walked into the hospital room. The towering giant was a feeble midget, unable to see, hear or experience anything that was happening around him. I could never understand how someone of so much mass could fit into such a small space. It took everything that I had to not burst into tears the moment I saw him prone in the middle of a sterile, unfeeling room. It wasn’t long after that afternoon that the anger started – no matter what the nursing staff did to help, nothing was ever good enough. I would come almost every day with my Mum, but I was never around enough. The only person he didn’t constantly berate was Mum.

As with everything in life, the more you do something, the more it feels like a routine. The appointments began to blur into one, the endless monotony of hospital hallways – normal. I spent the nights attempting to create the calming gauche landscapes that had always been my bread and butter. Yet, those beautiful moments that I had always captured so easily lingered at the tip of my brush – there was no way to transfer them onto the stretched material on the easel. Nights flashed by as I stared at my blank future.

Two weeks flashed past my eyes, Rosco continued to rouse me from my artistic frustration – eating became a chore, yet, we all plodded on. I made it my mission to force food down my mother’s throat – regardless of how hungry she felt. The kilos were just falling off of her, the haggard look of the unhealthy carving out the terror she was living with. Forcing colour into her cheeks was an obtainable goal and my focus quickly narrowed down to that very existence. Even my paintings start to take on elements of the necessity of food – starving creatures lingering amongst the trees of orchards, fields of food walled in by human degradation. Everything was illuminated by the presence of despair.

Even though we were constantly dealing with the shuck of a creature that had been left by his unknown accident, it wasn’t until the week after we finally got him home that I started to truly wonder when things would get back to normal. After all, it was six weeks to the day since he had returned. His pallor had returned. His ability to talk in complete sentences. Even his ability to get up and walk around everyday had increased so drastically that we weren’t even worried about leaving him alone for an hour or two (eventually). The temperature of the room seemed to drop whenever he entered – he was incapable of doing anything for himself.

Maybe that’s the true beginning of my story. It’s not about what came before, it’s not even about what happened over there. It’s about those weeks leading up to that one, final horrific event. That realisation that the truth was staring me in the face the entire time. And I did nothing to stop it.

Put on a Happy Face by Christopher Golden

Overview

Blood Lite IIITitle: Put on a Happy Face
Author: Christopher Golden
In: Blood Lite III (Kevin J. Anderson)
Rating Out of 5: 4 (Really good read!)
My Bookshelves: ComedyEasy reading, Fantasy
Pace: Fast
Format: Short story
Publisher: Gallery Books
Year: 2012
5th sentence, 74th page: He’d asked the demon Polichinelle for his heart’s desire – to be the funniest clown in the circus.

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Synopsis

Benny wants to be the funniest clown in the circus, but how far will he go to achieve his dreams?

Thoughts

We all know the quintessential class clown. Some people think they’re funny. Some think they’re irritating. Some just ignore them. But, regardless of our approach to such people, we all have a memory of someone who, at the very least, thought that they were funny (and in some cases, were).

Benny, the hero of this short story is one such person – a class clown. Who eventually becomes a clown. And then makes a deal with the devil…

As with all of the short stories that I love, there was a surprise ending. And, it left me laughing quietly, in a slightly sick, sadistic, twisted kind of way…

 <- V Plates Review Devil’s Contract Review ->
Image source: Goodreads

Iron Kissed by Patricia Briggs

Overview

Iron Kisse

Title: Iron Kissed
Author: Patricia Briggs
Series: Mercedes Thompson #3, Mercy-verse #12
Rating Out of 5: 5 (I will read this again and again and again)
My Bookshelves: Paranormal fantasy, Strong womenWerewolves
Pace: Medium
Format: Novel
Publisher: Ace fantasy
Year: 2008
5th sentence, 74th page: The magazines on the bottom shelf had given up any pretense of art – judging by the photos on the covers.

Synopsis

I could smell her fear, and it satisfied something deep inside me that had been writhing under her cool, superior gaze. I curled my upper lip so she could get a good look at my sharp teeth. I might only weigh thirty or so pounds in my coyote shape, but I was a predator…

Mechanic Mercy Thompson can shift her shape – but not her loyalty. When her former boss and mentor is arrested for murder and left to rot behind bars by his own kind, it’s up to Mercy to clear his name, whether he wants her to or not.

Mercy’s loyalty is under pressure from other directions, too. Werewolves are not known for their patience, and if Mercy can’t decide between the two she cares for, Sam and Adam may make the choice for her…

Thoughts

This is both one of my favourite, and least favourite books. Mostly because of the fact that it features sexual abuse. The very ending of the book makes me cry every single time. Not just because of the horrors that Mercy is forced to face, but also because of the fact that she has an amazing support system. And, that you finally find out what has happened in Ben’s past to make him such a dick.

Where Moon Called was about werewolves, Blood Bound about vampires, Iron Kissed delves deeper into the world of the fae. Zee’s calling in of a favour (much like Stefan’s) leads to a world of pain, and Mercy’s further discovery of the things that truly go bump in the night. I love that there is a lot of well-informed bases upon the lores of the fae. But, Briggs is able to bring it to a modern setting and in a way that makes it almost plausible to believe that the fae could be existing alongside us.

Iron Kissed forces Mercy to not only begin to face her past, but it also forces her to make a choice about her future. Sam and Adam have been vying for her attention since Moon Called, and she needs to make a choice before it all ends in bloodshed. Sometimes a good love triangle is fun in a story, but the fact that Mercy is so quickly forced into a decision in this series, actually is more enjoyable. I loved the fact that she is kind of indecisive, but there is also a lack of the back and forth that is present in a lot of series. Don’t get me wrong, that is fun. But it’s also nice for a romance to start quite early in a series.

<- Blood BoundBone Crossed ->

Image source: SF Reviews

Blood Bound by Patricia Briggs

Overview

Blood Bound

Title: Blood Bound
Author: Patricia Briggs
Series: Mercedes Thompson #2, Mercy-verse #11
Rating Out of 5: 5 (I will read this again and again and again)
My Bookshelves: Paranormal fantasy, Strong womenWerewolves
Pace: Medium
Format: Novel
Publisher: Ace fantasy
Year: 2007
5th sentence, 74th page: “I understand,” said Stefan.

Synopsis

Under the rule of science, there are no witch burnings allowed, no water trials or public lynchings. In return, the average law-abiding, solid citizen has little to worry about from the things that go bump in the night. Sometimes I wish I was an average citizen…

Mechanic Mercy Thompson has friends in low places – and in dark ones. And now she owes one of them a favor. Since she can shapeshift at will, she agrees to act as some extra muscle when her vampire friend Stefan goes to deliver a message to another of his kind.

But this new vampire is hardly ordinary – and neither is the demon inside of him…

Thoughts

The hits keep rolling for Mercedes Thompson. After asking for Stefan’s help in rescuing Adam, she has to return the favour. Which, since this is Mercy Thompson, means that things go wildly out of control. This might be the story in the entire series that gave me the most goosebumps actually. And I have, at some point or other, read most of them.

There is something about vampires that is kind of scary. Or at least, well written ones. Although Stefan drives a Mystery Van, and obviously cares for Mercy, he is kind of intimidating throughout this. There is a reminder that although he is “one of the good guys”, he’s still a vampire. He’s still evil and has to subsit on others’ deaths and blood. Mercy’s introduction into this world, of which she knows nothing, is intense and terrifying. The added complication of Samuel’s sudden return to her life, and Adam’s pledge of affection just help to raise the stakes higher and higher.

Where Moon Called was about Mercy’s interactions with the werewolves, and introduced Briggs’ hierarchy, Blood Bound is about the vampires. As Mercy slowly discovers more and more about the intricacies of vampire politics, so do we, and it is certainly an amazing journey. Her ability to somehow overcome dangers and predators far greater than herself and her willingness to do anything to save her friends is a testament to how amazing this heroine is.

<- Star of DavidIron Kissed ->

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