All posts by skyebjenner

Bones Season Four – Review

Bones Season Four4.5 out of 5 stars

Series: Bones
Season: 4
Creator: Hart Hanson
Cast: Emily Deschanel, David Boreanaz, Michaela Conlin
Genres:
Comedy, CrimeDrama
Year: 2008
Favourite Episode: 17 – The Doctor in the Den, 20 – Mayhem on a Cross

After the chilling season finale of season three, it was hard to see how the Bones cast would return for season four. But, the expansion of the ‘family’ was brilliantly done and actually made me love the series even more. Zack was gorgeous and easy to love, but having the flexibility of multiple interns gave the stories in each episode entirely different and unique flavours. The variety drew me in beautifully.

With the removal of Zack from the storyline and the introduction of the squinterns, this season was able to delve further into the complicated relationship between Booth and Brennan. Their cat and mouse game of love picks up pace and their ability to support and nurture one another is highlighted beautifully throughout the crimes that they investigate.

My least favourite episode of this season is the finale – I struggled to understand its importance and relevance to the rest of the story. It seemed a little contrived and as though the writers were just trying to shake things up.

 

<- Bones Season Three Review

Back to Film Reviews

Bones Season Five Review ->

Image source: Trespass Magazine

The Surgeon by Tess Gerritsen

Overview

The Surgeon

Title: The Surgeon
Author: Tess Gerritsen
Series: Rizzoli & Isles #1
Rating Out of 5: 4 (Really good read!)
My Bookshelves: Crime, Strong women
Pace: Fast
Format: Novel
Publisher: Transworld Publishing
Year: 2001
5th sentence, 74th page: Oh, she got along fine with Barry Frost, despite his irritatingly sunny disposition.

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Synopsis

A killer is targeting lone women, torturing and murdering them. The precision of his methods leads Detective Jane Rizzoli to suspect he is medically trained.

The Jane makes a terrifying discovery. Years ago a young woman was assaulted in a similar way. She escaped by shooting her attacker dead.

So why does it feel like he’s stalking her again?

Thoughts

As seems to be a recurring theme for me lately, I decided to read The Surgeon because I love the TV show Rizzoli & Isles. And, I really wasn’t disappointed. Like all good remakes of books, the storylines were recognisable, but still different enough that I had absolutely no idea what was about to happen. Needless to say, it was a great read and a total page turner.

It was obvious throughout the book that Gerritsen had a great grasp of medicine and criminal pathology. To the point that when reading from the point of view of the unsub, I would get goose bumps. It also led to some more terrifying dreams than I am used to. Which isn’t necessarily a bad thing.

I loved the character of Jane Rizzoli. She was tough and driven, but also a little vulnerable and struggling to keep her place in a “man’s world”. Her struggles and insecurities in this made her one of the most realistic heroines that I have read in a long time.

The pace of the story took a little while to get used to – flicking between four entirely different people’s points of view sometimes within a chapter is something that I am not used to. Although, this technique created a wonderfully rounded and detailed story that had me yearning for the next book in a matter of moments.

The combination of criminal pathology, and the resulting emotions of their victims was more powerful than I could have imagined. I’m fascinated by the ways in which socio- and psychopaths think and rationalise their actions, but, I had never given a huge amount of thought to the effect of their actions upon the victims’ mentality. Probably because it is all too easy to imagine myself in their shoes. But the tale of Cordell and her ability to survive was not only deeply moving, it was also inspiring. It reminded me that our lights can shine the brightest in the darkest of places.

<- More crime reviews The Apprentice Review ->
Image source: Amazon

The Apprentice by Tess Gerritsen

Overview

The Apprentice

Title: The Apprentice
Author: Tess Gerritsen
Series: Rizzoli & Isles #2
Rating Out of 5: 4 (Really good read!)
My Bookshelves: Crime, Strong women
Pace: Fast
Format: Novel
Publisher: Transworld Publishing
Year: 2002
5th sentence, 74th page: Kind of like a brush.

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Synopsis

He’s learned from the best

A series of horrific murders seem disturbingly familiar to Detective Jane Rizzoli. They remind her and Forensic Pathologist Maura Isles of those committed by a killer known as the Surgeon, who they recently put behind bars.

While they’re still trying to track down the new killer, the unthinkable happens: the Surgeon escapes. Suddenly, Jane is chasing not one but two brilliant and twisted minds, united by one goal…

To perfect their skills on the woman who’s hunting them.

Thoughts

I loved this follow-up to The Surgeon. For starters, the storyline followed flawlessly, and there were the first glimpses of the cracks in Rizzoli’s armour. Dr. Isles was also introduced in this book as an aloof and vague character, since the series is called Rizzoli and Isles, I assume that she will play a far larger role in books to come.

Agent Dean was the exact opposite to every male that Rizzoli has worked with. And I liked that his character was able to completely put her at odds and even question some of her own motives. I always love flawed heroines, and using another character to show some of the cracks in their self-assurance is a tactic that worked beautifully. It also helped that Agent Dean was Jane’s polar opposite, and a great reminder of how well opposites can work together.

Gerritsen has a masterful grasp of the victimisation and mentality of the men who prey upon women. Not only their psychology, but also the victims themselves – even those who don’t want to be a victim. I loved this aspect of her writing, and it was this that made her work truly spin tinglingly brilliant.

 <- The Surgeon Review The Sinner Review ->
Image source: Amazon

The Stone Key by Isobelle Carmody

Overview

The Stone Key

Title: The Stone Key
Author: Isobelle Carmody
Series: The Obernewtyn Chronicles #5
Rating Out of 5: 4.5 (Amazing, but not quite perfect)
My Bookshelves: Australian author, Dystopia, High fantasy, Science fiction
Pace: Medium
Format: Novel
Publisher: Penguin Books
Year: 2008
5th sentence, 74th page: He knew as well as I did that the delicious, sweet, brown powder was both scarce and violently expensive now that Sadorian ships no longer put in at Sutrium.

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Synopsis

There was a great crash and wood splintered… I had a brief glimpse of a group of Herder priests, bald and robed, peering at me, and then the sundered remnants of the locker door were torn aside and a rough hand reached in to haul me out by the hair. A Hedra captain stared into my face with eyes that burned with a fanatical fire above a thin nose and a lipless slash of a mouth…

‘You will die in great pain and very slowly, mutant,’ said the Hedra master.

When Farseeker Guildmistress Elspeth Gordie sets out from Obernewtyn to travel to Sutrium at the end of Wintertime, she quickly learns that not everyone welcomes the changes brought about by the rebellion. Captured by an old and vicious enemy, she is drawn deep into the heart of the Herder Faction, where she learns of a terrible plot to destroy the west coast.

To stop it, Elspeth must risk everything, knowing that if she dies, she will never complete her quest to find the weaponmachines that destroyed the Beforetime.

But is she succeeds, her journey will lead her to the last of the signs left for her by the seer Kasanda…

Thoughts

This is my least favourite of the Obernewtyn Chronicles – it is the slowest of the stories and very, very detail oriented. Not that this is a bad thing, but I like to be swept along with the story so that I forget that I’ve spent three hours reading instead of doing some responsible adult act. Having said that, this detail-oriented approach is so important to make sure that the rest of the story is understandable. When playing with fate and prophecies, it is incredibly important to set up the storyline – every single detail has a great significance that can only rear its head books after it has been set up.

There are two aspects of this story that I love though, the idea of tearing down a religious dogma and that of our potential for future medical treatment. The technology that Carmody describes when treating one of the sick characters is so plausible, that I’m kind of surprised we don’t have it already. It is so easy to imagine having that kind of technology within the next 10 years and using it in much the same way to cure infectious diseases. And then there’s destroying a harmful religious dogma. I’ve often believed that people take religions to twist the mass population to their own needs. And, bringing down such a group is possibly my favourite part of the whole story – tearing down this source of evil is fantastic.

Ariel returns to the forefront of the story in The Stone Key. The combination of his manipulative powers and inability to empathise with others creates a truly spine tingling antagonist. For me, he is the very embodiment of what it means to be malicious and evil. A lot of villains are the ‘bad guys’ because of some misguided urge, or inability to control their urges. But it is often possible to see how their past has shaped who they are, but Ariel? There is nothing in his past that highlights his need to intentionally harm others. Although, Carmody implies throughout her writing that he is actually defective and this is the cause of his wrongness.

<- The Keeping Place Review The Sending Review ->
Image source: Penguin

The Killing by Robert Muchamore

Overview

The Killing

Title: The Killing
Author: Robert Muchamore
Series: CHERUB #4
Rating Out of 5: 3.5 (Liked this)
My Bookshelves: CrimeEasy reading, Spy novels
Pace: Fast
Format: Novel
Publisher: Hachette Children’s Books
Year: 2005
5th sentence, 74th page: James flicked the sheet across to Kerry and slumped theatrically across her bed.

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Synopsis

Leon is a small-time crook who’s ridden his luck for three decades. When he starts splashing big money around, the cops are desperate to know where it came from.

They call it CHERUB, a secret organisation with one essential advantage: even experienced criminals never suspect that children are spying on them.

James’ latest mission looks routine: make friends with Leon’s kids, infiltrate his home, dig up some leads.

But the plot James begins to unravel isn’t what anyone expected. And the only person who might know the truth is a reclusive eighteen-year-old boy.

There’s just one problem.
The boy fell to his death thirteen months earlier.

Thoughts

I found James incredibly hard to love in The Killing. From the first CHERUB book, you understand that he is a rebel and not exactly completely moral, but by the fourth book, he is incredibly; well, douche. But, after moving on from James’ stupidity, this is, like all the other CHERUB books (thus far) a great read, and highly recommended.

My problems with James in this book stem from the way that he deals with his own issues. He has anger issues, blames everyone else for his own bad actions and temper, and really doesn’t treat his girlfriend or friends very well. I understand having anger, I’m pretty quick tempered, but it’s never okay to strike an innocent being, and then blame it on someone else. I suppose that Muchamore was using this as a lesson that violence, especially violent anger isn’t okay. But, I honestly almost put this book aside after the first chapter. It’s difficult reading about a protagonist who is selfish, and a little cruel. If it wasn’t for Lauren and the other CHERUBs, I quite frankly, probably would have stopped reading.

The other reason that this book is so wonderful is the way in which James’ amoral actions lead to his friends’ ostracizing from the social group. So much so, that he takes an assignment to escape his isolation. Not only was this a great example of consequences for one’s actions, but it also made me feel physically ill. Pain, both physical and mental is easy to deal with, but the idea of someone being completely isolated (regardless of their actions) actually made me feel physically ill. A fact that I’m sure says more about me than Muchamore’s writing, I’m sure.

Problems aside, this book was brilliant. It delved into the world of conspiracies and murder; a world where no one could be trusted, and everyone was liable to get hurt. Again, Muchamore chose a very real, and very terrifying topic as the focus of the crime – police corruption and brutality. The idea that those who are sworn to protect you could be the ones who actually hurt you is worrying and concerning.

<- Maximum Security Review Divine Madness Review ->
Image source: Amazon

Maximum Security by Robert Muchamore

Overview

Maximum Security

Title: Maximum Security
Author: Robert Muchamore
Series: CHERUB #3
Rating Out of 5: 4 (Really good read!)
My Bookshelves: CrimeEasy reading, Spy novels
Pace: Fast
Format: Novel
Publisher: Hachette Children’s Books
Year: 2005
5th sentence, 74th page: The rooms at the front of the building also had sliding glass doors and balconies that overlooked gardens, rather than the windows overlooking the muddy football pitches you got at the back.

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Synopsis

Over the years, CHERUB has put plenty of criminals behind bars. Now, for the first time ever, they’ve got to break one out…

Under American law, kids convicted of serious crimes can be sentenced as adults. Two hundred and eighty of these child criminals live in the sunbaked desert prison of Arizona Max.

In one of the most daring CHERUB missions every, James Adams has to go undercover inside Arizona Max, befriend an inmate and then bust him out.

CHERUB kids are trained professionals, working in everyday situations. Their essential advantage: adults never suspect that children are spying on them.

Thoughts

I loved this book. Not only did it talk about the prison system – something that actually slightly terrifies me, but it also showed Lauren in her own power and position. From her extra brutal experience of basic training (and the resultant shovel-incident) to her first assignment, Lauren shows her ability to hold her own and do right by others. The fact that James’ very masculine energy is contrasted against his sister’s highlights the ability for both genders to pursue the same tasks, albeit sometimes a little differently, but still effectively.

Reading a book based in a prison managed to enhance my feelings of discomfort surrounding this setting. Probably a good thing, as prison’s are not only designed to keep the guilty in, but also as a deterrent to others who are considering going against the mould. Being immersed in this criminal world through the eyes of a juvenile was terrifying – it is all too easy to imagine something going wrong in a child’s life and leading to their warped criminal reality in a place of violence and fear.

A lot of stories paint criminals and the ‘bad guys’ as very one-dimensional creatures – they have neither morals nor excuses. Muchamore doesn’t do this. By using kid spies, you are forced to understand how children can become monsters and how these monsters turn to men (or women if the case be). Curtis Key, the main antagonist in this story is horrifyingly vulnerable and disturbed – it is so easy to understand how his uncomfortable childhood could lead to the creation and proliferation of a suicidal murderer.

So far, my favourite of the Cherub books, Maximum Security had a high octane plot line with a terrifyingly relatable sociopath (or is it psychopath) acting as the chief antagonist. The stakes are raised, and you get the sense of danger and potential harm throughout the story. Yet another book that I got so hooked on that it was finished in less than a day.

<- Class A Review The Killing Review ->
Image source: Amazon

Class A by Robert Muchamore

Overview

Class A

Title: Class A
Author: Robert Muchamore
Series: CHERUB #2
Rating Out of 5: 4 (Really good read!)
My Bookshelves: CrimeEasy reading, Spy novels
Pace: Fast
Format: Novel
Publisher: Hachette Children’s Books
Year: 2004
5th sentence, 74th page: I can lend you a fiver, James.

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

Synopsis

When CHERUB kids go undercover, no one suspects that they are trained professionals, working to infiltrate criminal organisations that have eluded MI5  and the police for years.

James Adams is on his biggest mission yet, working to nail Europe’s most powerful cocaine dealer. He’ll need all his specialist training if he’s going to bring down the man at the top.

The reasons for CHERUB’s existence is simple: adults never suspect that children are spying on them.

Thoughts

The second book in the Cherub series is a great follow up to The Recruit. From terrorism, we are thrown into the world of drugs and drug dealing. Once again, Muchamore’s understanding of the criminal underworld was brilliantly rendered and masterfully executed. Understanding how such industries are run, and the ways in which they can be bought down was something that I didn’t know much about, and discovering more of the information was very appreciated.

Class A really drove home the fact that a lot of criminals have families of their own. They even have their own motivations and that the reasoning for their actions is not just black and white. Junior’s actions and interactions with James reminded me that even though a parent might think that they are supporting their family, their choices can severely affect their children and even endanger them. Once again, Muchamore’s ability to bring crimes down to my level of understanding really drove home the impacts of adult decisions, and the vulnerability of children to these forces.

This story also brings Lauren (James’ little sister) closer to the forefront. Her basic training experiences are told, and the possible inability of military training to successfully instruct some people is highlighted. Likewise, Lauren’s future potential is alluded to as she becomes the first to do a number of things in Basic Training. Lauren’s characterisation sits well with Kerry, giving a number of main characters from different ethnic backgrounds and genders, proving that anyone can do anything that they put their minds to.

<- The Recruit Review Maximum Security Review ->
Image source: Amazon

The Recruit by Robert Muchamore

Overview

The Recruit

Title: The Recruit
Author: Robert Muchamore
Series: CHERUB #1
Rating Out of 5: 4 (Really good read!)
My Bookshelves: CrimeEasy reading, Spy novels
Pace: Fast
Format: Novel
Publisher: Hachette Children’s Books
Year: 2004
5th sentence, 74th page: James knew he had no chance with blood running down his face and his right hand so painful he couldn’t even move it.

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

Synopsis

A terrorist doesn’t let strangers into her flat because they might be undercover police or intelligence agents, but her children bring their mates home and they run all over the place.

The terrorist doesn’t know that one of these kids has bugged every room in her house, made copies of all her computer files and stolen her address book. The kid works for CHERUB.

CHERUB agents are aged between ten and seventeen. They live in the real world, slipping under adult radar and getting information that sends criminals and terrorists to jail.

Thoughts

The fact that this is a spy story set in Britain just makes me ridiculously happy. There are so many stories that are based in America, so every time I read something that is so obviously not American. Combine this with the fact that it’s a story about kid spies – the series is a winning story. At least in my opinion.

Stories about orphaned youth are a big staple of the young adult genre. After all, it’s easier for a kid to be in charge of their own future when there is no parent to watch out for them and stop the bad things from happening. A fairytale about a child growing up in a nuclear family just isn’t very interesting. But taking those children who are a little damaged and not at all well-behaved, that was a little different. But, it worked. James Adams, is kind of a dick at times, he has anger issues and a tendency to get into trouble. But, ultimately, he has a good heart. And that shines through again and again in The Recruit.

Muchamore goes into a lot of depth about the basic training and military discipline that this unique brand of spy must go through. To me, it was so realistic that I am sure he has undergone his own form of military training. He also doesn’t create a male-dominated group of spies. Rather, the toughest fighter on campus is a small girl. This balance between males and females in the story and the realistic impact of terrorism and military training on a group of people has quickly made this one of my all-time favourite series of young adult books.

<- More Robert Muchamore reviews Class A Review ->
Image source: Amazon

The Bloody Chamber by Angela Carter

OverviewThe Bloody Chamber

Title: The Bloody Chamber
Author: Angela Carter
In: The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories by Angela Carter
Rating Out of 5: 3.5 (Liked this)
My Bookshelves: Classics, Romance
Pace: Slow
Format: Novella
Publisher: Vintage Publishing
Year: 1979
5th sentence, 74th page: ‘Oh God,’ he said.

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Synopsis

“The Bloody Chamber” is based on the legend of Bluebeard. The nameless heroine tells the story many years after the events in it happened. She narrates in present tense, going back to the age of seventeen, when she is married off to a Marquis.

Thoughts

It took me a little while to become enthralled with The Bloody Chamber. It was recommended to me by a lecturer, and, although it didn’t fascinate me in the first words, I decided to give it a go. And, in a round-about way, I’m glad that I did. This isn’t a story that I would read again and again and again. But, it is one that I would recommend to anyone who likes to read and wants to broaden their horizons.

Even a month after reading The Bloody Chamber, the story and its power sticks with me. The technicality of the writing gives you a bad feeling in the pit of your stomach from the first, opening words (or it could have just been the title). The innocence of the main character shrieks from the pages, and the words. The way that the words and prose flows, gives the entire story a musical flow that has left phrases and words spinning through my head since the moment I read the story.

<- The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories Review The Courtship of Mr Lyon Review ->
Image source: Angela Carter

Switched Mediums

Books to MoviesOriginally published by OnDit Issue 84.7 on Monday 4 July 2016.

There is nothing. I repeat. Nothing more frustrating than watching a book-turned-movie and finding that they have all of the facts wrong. Especially when it’s a story that you have loved and become emotionally tied to. Watching it get butchered on the big screen is possibly one of the worst pains of the twenty-first century.

Alright, that’s a major exaggeration. There are a lot of things more frustrating. And certainly a lot of things in life that are much more detrimental to our health. But, it can be frustrating when somebody takes a well-loved storyline, changes it’s medium and just manages to butcher it. So here are some books that I love that have been turned into movies. For better or for worse.

*Be warned. There are spoilers ahead.*

Harry PotterHarry Potter
This may not be the most popular opinion, but when I first saw the Harry Potter movies. I hated them. With a fiery, fiery passion. For starters, one of my favourite characters was left out – Peeves. Then as the stories went on, the Weasley Twins’ wit and humour was kind of lost in the movie dialogue, and Ginny’s pure spirit was so watered down. Yes, I understand why a lot of these changes were made. But it still meant that parts of the story that I thought were REALLY important were left out. The movies have slowly grown on me through the years, but I still think that the book is WAY better.


Percy JacksonPercy Jackson and the Lightning Thief
I actually watched the movie before I even realised that Percy Jackson was a character in a book. And, I liked the storyline. I just thought that it was way too American-central. It took reading the book to understand that there was a justifiable (in the world of fantasy) reason for this. The movie encouraged me to pursue the other stories and I am now a huge fan of Rick Riordan. Having said that, I still haven’t had the chance to sit down and watch the newest Percy Jackson move – The Sea of Monsters.

BonesBones
Kathy Reichs not only helps to write the script (and ensure the validity of the science), but she also wrote the book series that Bones is based on. Although, other than the led in both stories being a forensic anthropologist named Kathy Reichs, there really aren’t many similarities. I’m a huge fan of BOTH series. They keep to the science, but have great interpersonal relationships between the characters. The dry, slightly dark wit also appears to the slightly more macabre side of my humour.

BittenBitten
Like Bones, the creators of the TV series Bitten took a great idea from an author, and used it for an entirely different storyline. So much so, that the author of the original series doesn’t have much to do with the show and hasn’t actually watched most of it. The intertwining of the writers imagination and the original book series worked really well here – I was constantly recognising some of my favourite characters, but always wondering what was going to happen next. I also loved that Logan (who was killed off in the first book) survived the first season.

There are a lot more TV shows and movies that have been inspired by books, and even comics (think of the Marvel universe). The list of switched mediums is honestly endless. But these are some of my favourite (and least favourite) adaptations of books. And, since I’m a total bibliophile, I always think that the books are better than the film adaptations!

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