
So loved her other series, Tiger’s Saga. So I’m pretty excited about her new series. I have to admit the synopsis makes this sound like Tiger’s Saga but in Egypt instead of India. I guess I’m about to find out.

So loved her other series, Tiger’s Saga. So I’m pretty excited about her new series. I have to admit the synopsis makes this sound like Tiger’s Saga but in Egypt instead of India. I guess I’m about to find out.
In the second review of a retelling of Beauty and the Beast (Cruel Beauty, which I reviewed this week is another retelling) the beast is a Faerie. It’s a first book of a new series but I felt like I’ve read books one and two in this one. I read this book before I read Sarah J. Maas’ other series, Throne of Glass and I guess it’s for the best. I think I would have been more disappointed in this if I was more familiar with her work because I loved Throne of Glass books. This I just liked.
Feyre is 19 years old and even though she is the youngest, she is the one taking care of her family. Their family’s fortune is gone and her father and her two oldest sisters live in a small cottage. One day, while hunting, Feyre comes across a deer. Unfortunately a wolf has also spotted the deer. Is the a real wolf or a faerie from the other side of the wall? In a split second decision, she decides to kill the wolf first and then the deer. The next night a faerie named Tamlin comes to their cottage and tells Feyre she must uphold the treaty between humans and Faeries. She must either forfeit her life in the same manner she killed the wolf faerie or live the rest of her life as her guest.
The first part of the book is great. The cat and mouse game between Feyre and Tamlin is delightful. Feyre spends most of her time in his house trying to find ways out of the Treaty to go home to her family. Tamlin for his part tries to be polite and clearly his flirting skills are rusty. In the true vein of Beauty of the Beast they eventually start to understand each other and fall in love. Feyre doesn’t realize that Tamlin and his court are cursed and by the time she does it’s too late.
This would have been good place to end and where I felt the book should have ended but it went on. Which is a shame because it would have been a better cliffhanger ending than the one we got. The tempo of the book slowed down as Feyre has to complete three tasks to save Tamlin. It completely bogged down the narrative I appreciate the whole, girl must save the guy thing but it was too much. Though the ending seemed like a happily ever after, there are still some loose ends to keep the series going. They left me a little wary of what the next book be like. Will it be more like the first half or the second. I guess good news for Miss Maas, is that I can’t wait for Queen of Shadows, the next book in the Throne of Glass Series.
This is actually the second book I’ve read this year that is a retelling of Beauty and the Beast. This one is only okay. I liked the concept but I’m only meh on the result. Arcadia was once ruled by a line of wise Kings until about 900 years ago when the King died and the Prince was overtaken by the Gentle Lord, aka the Prince of Demons. The Gentle Lord cuts off Arcadia from the world, covering the sky and granting citizen’s bargains that never go as they hope. Nyx’s father was one of those who thought it he could bare the price. He asked for his wife to bear children. The Gentle Lord agreed to help and granted her with twin girls. For payment for granting him his wish, one girl would live happily ever after but the other girl, would have to become his bride on her 17th birthday. If he did not hold up his side of the bargain, the Gentle Lord would kill both girls. Nyx’s father, who is the leader of a group set out to destroy the Gentle Lord so for 17 years, Nyx has been groomed to a weapon to bring him down. In those years, she has become bitter and full of hatred for her father, her aunt and even her sister who loved her. So Nyx goes to the Gentle Lord’s castle as his wife, with the full intention of destroying him. Two things that Nyx was not prepared for is finding an ally in the Shade, a shadow of the Gentle Lord, and the Gentle Lord himself. For all the monstrous deeds, the Gentle Lord is nothing like she expects. He doesn’t force himself on her nor does he grant her freedom. He gives a choice every night. Guess her name and she will be free. Guess wrong and she will die. As time goes by, Nyx starts to realize that the Gentle Lord is not who everyone thinks he is and like in Beauty and the Beast falls in love with him.
I liked how Nyx isn’t an innocent. She’s angry and doesn’t try to shy away from her dark thoughts. All her life she has wanted to be loved. For someone to tell her that she doesn’t have to do what is planned. That her sacrifice is appreciated. To have the love of her father that her sister has. To love her for who she is and surprisingly she finds that in the Gentle Lord. I wanted to root for them as a couple but I never really felt connected with them. The introduction of the Shade was an attempt to create a love triangle into the story but Nyx was never really in love with him and all of their scenes felt forced. (Note to YA authors: not all books need a love triangle.)
I really wanted to like this book. It’s not that I didn’t like it but it wasn’t as great as I hoped and so I was disappointed. I guess not all books can be great.

Pretty excited that our book club picked this. I’ve been wanting to read it for a long time. I can’t believe it’s taken me this long.
Things are getting real for Calaena, Chaol, and Dorian and they have new friends too! Just like my review of the previous book, Crown of Midnight this review will contain spoilers! Spoilers from this book as well as Throne of Glass and Crown of Midnight. So if you haven’t read any of them and don’t want it spoiled for then don’t read any further.
(P.S. Usually Kate and I edit each others posts before they go live but since I want her to read this series I didn’t ask her to take a look. Please forgive any errors I might have made.)
Now that is out of the way, let’s get started.
A woman wakes up burned, shot, and with broken bones in a cave. She can’t remember who she is. She can’t remember how she got there. She can only remember the pain and some instinctual things like a need to eat. Slowly, she’s able to find food and put some things together. She finds the remains of a burned village. She hunts some deer. She wanders down a road and meets Wright and slowly starts to put the pieces together of who and what she is when she bites Wright and drinks his blood. She is part of a vampire race but she is special. She has been genetically engineered with a little human DNA so that she can be alert during the day and she has much more tolerance to the sun. She’s also dark-skinned, something that isn’t true about her people. Without knowing who she is or what happened to her (and the others? are the others like her?) she has to figure out what happened to her home. While trying to figure out what happened to her to make her have amnesia she meets her father who tells her that her name is Shori and explains why she is so special. Shori and her father begin the investigation into what happened to her and her family. Clearly there was a fire, but what caused it? Shori is put on the the path to solving the mystery of her destroyed community and bringing the perpetrators to justice.
This was a thrilling vampire novel, certainly the best one I’ve read since Sunshine by Robin McKinley. Since the main character has amnesia, we discover things about her species and her world as she does. You start to wonder pretty early on if what has happened to her is garden variety people hunting vampires, or garden variety people being racists asshats or something worse. When she is shocked and horrified by the behavior of humans and other vampires, we are, too. There is so much to say about this book but I don’t want to spoil anything (and I really want to do it justice if I’m going to analyze the themes of the book) so I won’t go into details. I will however say that this book could be a model for all of paranormal romance (even though it wasn’t a romance). I was so pleased with how it dealt with issues of consent that are so often missing from novels about vampires.
This book was so enjoyable and so wonderful and I can’t gush about it enough. Seriously. You should go read it. Now. You should read it now.

I bought this months ago because it was on sale but just now getting around to reading it. I hope it’s good.
I’m pretty sure this is the first time that I have read the Pulitzer Award winning book before it won the Pulitzer. So, that’s exciting. Since it’s probably the only book I read this year that was even close to consideration, I whole heartily agree with the choice. Both Kate and I read it for a book club. Here’s my review and Kate will post her review soon. Congrats Mr. Doerr!
…and then, because I think I’m funny, I checked out The First Twenty Minutes from the public library to listen to while I’m on the tread mill. Here are some things I learned:
The book starts and ends with the premise that people should work out and try to get more movement into their days. The people who benefit the most from exercise are those who are new to it. Then, to continue to get better you really have to go harder. Interval training will really help you up your fitness, but you have to do high intensity intervals. Like, really uncomfortable, push you to the max, intervals. You get the most benefits from the first twenty minutes but then you plateau. So, going longer won’t actually make you fitter (but, if you’re training for a race or something else involving endurance you definitely should consider going longer). The best way to avoid injury is listen to what your body is telling you: if it hurts, don’t do it. (But, if you’re just feeling fatigued, like after a first set of lifting weights, you’re doing something right). Motion control shoes might not help you from remaining uninjured (research done by the US Army!). And, working out more won’t really help you lose weight for many of the reasons outlined in this piece on Salon. Finally, I learned, or rather had confirmed for me, the idea that we’re not meant to sit for eight hours a day and that going to the gym doesn’t necessarily cancel out the hours and hours of sitting. Solution? Stand up every now and then. I set an alarm on my phone and I get up every twenty minutes while I’m working now. I just stand, stretch, maybe pace a little and then go back to work. I do actually feel better and am more alert throughout the day, so even if I’m not getting anything else from this new behavior I’m at least getting that. The book also covered some of the benefits of strength training. The headline: It’s a good idea. (I was already sold on the idea of resistance training because I like fitting into smaller pants and lifting weights has helped me achieve that goal in the past.) The other thing that I will take from this book is that I now get a chocolate milk juice box after every work out. My internal child is always thrilled to get that treat after my workout. The subject material was interesting; I did enjoy hearing about all of the research (interval training can really help your 5k time! Start incorporating sprints into your walk/run!). But, I hated both the (metaphorical) voice of the author and the (literal) voice of the woman they hired to read this audiobook. Reynolds inserts herself and her running practice into the narrative probably as a way to humanize all of the science she presents. I found these digressions boring and irritating. They were boring because there wasn’t enough of them to make me care about her and they were irritating because she came off as smug early on and this didn’t make me want to identify with her. Also, the way she presented some of the science, like it was a done deal and this is totally how human bodies work made me wonder how much the author really understood what she was presenting (it was particularly curious when they were rat studies). Although, the author did make sure to point out that many of these studies were only done on men and that health, fitness, and disease literature done in recent years just on women suggest that the take home message from research on men doesn’t actually generalize all that well to women. (No-So-Spoiler-Alert: Men and Women have different bodies! They behave differently and have different needs!) I’m happy Reynolds presented information about some of the studies done on women and pointed out when they studies only involved men. That being said, just because it is true for rat brains doesn’t mean it is true for human brains (even, possibly especially, if it is a positive result) and I expect more from New York Times writers than to present a study and leave it open for the reader to make the leap. (I really do hope that physical activity helps memory and emotions in humans as much as it does in rats. If physical activity can truly be found to help with degenerative brain diseases then that 5K for Alzheimer’s research is apt and doubly beneficial. But, promising research and definitive research are not the same thing. I know, I’m sad that its raining on a parade day, too.) All of these things may have been less bothersome if I had been reading and not listening to this book, though. The voice actor reading it won’t be making my faves list. Karen Saltus, the reader was fine. For most of the book she inoffensive and passable and probably unmemorable. But, she did voices for quotes from scientists and for the female scientists she used intonation patterns that made the scientists sound like airheads. That, my friends, is a sin that will not be forgiven. Scientists, all scientists deserve a hat tip and some respect. It’s a tough business, securing grants, doing research, teaching students. And, doing anything to make it seem like we should question validity of the work because the researcher is a woman will not be tolerated. If you don’t up-talk (rising at the end of sentences) for the dude scientists, don’t do it for the women scientists. Nope. Not okay. So, if you’re going to read this book, actually read it. The audiobook was awful. I give it the worst grade imaginable: A minus minus!. I checked this out from the Buffalo and Erie County Public Libraries.