Review: The Hammer of Thor by Rick Riordan

hammer-of-thor Rick Riordan has written another winner here. I think I liked this more then the first book, The Sword of Summer.  It was flowed a little bit better and Magnus’ sassiness really went up a notch in this one and I loved it!  He wouldn’t let the fact that he was dead and will be spending eternity preparing for Ragnarok get him down.  Nope. But really what I loved about this book more then anything else is the positive representation of diverse characters.  I have praised Riordan in the past for his diversity and willingness to tackle difficult situations in his books.  True, his main characters have been mainly white boys but his willingness to include characters of color and other sexuality is admirable for a kids author.  So far his books have featured a Latino and Latina, Chinese Canadian, Gay teenagers, Biracial siblings, Native American girl, Black boy and girl, and Muslim girl and made them all well rounded full characters without ever falling into old stereotypes.  In The Hammer of Thor he introduces us to Alex a gender fluid teen.  As queer rights is becoming more and more a discussion point in our society, characters like Alex are even more important.  She (I’m going to refer to her as She as Alex says that she mostly identifies as a She and spends most of a book as a female but at times Alex also identifies as Male too) is a person has been marginalized and misunderstood her whole life but has a strong conviction of who she is.  Gender fluid people are not often depicted in pop-culture and not with the sensitivity and strength that Riordan writes her. But not only that, Riordan draws on the fact that Gender fluid people or argr as they were referred to by the vikings had a place in ancient Norse society.  I think there are many people today who sort of think that LGBTQ community are the result of recent sins of the last hundred years or so.  Not true.  Just like how he wrote about Nico coming out and relating it to Cupid story  he does it here. So props to you Mr. Riordan.

So let’s get back to the book.  In the last book, we know that Thor has lost his famed hammer and now we know that some Earth Giants have it.  They must get the Hammer back and thwart Loki’s plan to marry off Sam to the Giant, which is problematic since 1. Sam is still a teenager and 2. Sam has already been promised to marry Amir.  They must traverse the seven realms to find another famed weapon and look for clues as to what Loki’s real objective is.  Let’s just say, it’s not just to make sure his daughter is taken care of in a good marriage. Along the way, they meet democratic zombies, abusive father elves and giants who love to bowl.  It all makes sense when you read the book. Riordan has always been good balancing the humor with the action.  The book never waves or drags   It was just keeps going and going and I can’t wait for the next one where they finally get act like vikings and hit the seas and PERCY!

Review: A Torch Against the Night by Sabaa Tahir

a-torch-against-the-light This may be one of the strongest sequels I have read in a long time.  There was no drag or filler.  It was non-stop from the very beginning.  The characters are smartly written and interesting to read.  You feel for all of them but for different reasons.  All of their decisions are explainable even if you don’t agree with them.  It is a very good book.  At the end of An Ember in the Ashes, Laia and Elias are escaping Blackcliff and Serra and Helena is now sworn to be the Blood Shrike to the new Empire, Marcus who won the trials.  We begin A Torch Against the Night begins right where it’s predecessor left off.  Laia and Elias on the run with Helena and her men right behind them.  After a run in with Elias’ Mom, the Commandant they finally escape but not without some causalities.  Eventually, they met by Keenan making it an awkward march to save Laia’s brother, Darin.  Who is locked up in the infamous prison named Kauf.  Meanwhile, Helena feels betrayed that Elias didn’t complete the trials forcing her to work for Marcus.  Marcus is cruel and knows exactly what will hurt Helena the most.  Have her track down Elias and bring him back to be executed.  No one knows Elias like Helena does but she is torn between her loyalty to the Empire and her love for Elias.  In the previous book the point of view switched back and forth between Laia and Elias. In this one we also get Helena’s and it’s a welcome view.  We know how Laia and Elias feel but Helena is still loyal and believes in the Empire.  She can see it’s not perfect but she understands how it is structured to keep them safe.  Slowly, she starts to see a little bit of of what they see about they have been saying all along.  Her view gives us a more rounded view of the Empire.  Now it wouldn’t be a YA novel without a romantic intrigue.  The love triangle was already introduced in the last book between Laia, Elias and Keenan.  To me it was pretty obvious who was Laia’s choice but I guess there had to be some mystery.  Elias was always talking Laia up and Keenan was always talking her down but the reveal at the end was a little bit of a surprise.  I figured there had to be something up with one of her suitors but not exactly how I thought it would be.  But enough about romance.  Laia is truly lovely.  She is one determined, brave young lady.  She has been through so much in the last two books but her wanting to save her brother has never wavered.  She’s not the strongest or the fastest but that never stops her from joining the fight or trying to figure out how to help.  Even when her confidence is low, she still fights for what she wants.  She is heroine to be looked up too.  If you haven’t read An Ember in the Ashes what are waiting for?  I suggest you do that now so you can read this book too.  You will not regret it.

Quick Review: Everything I Need to Know I Learned From A Star Wars Little Golden Book

star-wars-golden-book Last Week I get a text from my Mom to say that she is sending me a book.  This book. What can I say, she knows me.  I love Little Golden Books.  I think like most people, Little Golden Books were some of the first books I read or were read too.  The Poky Little Puppy is my Mom’s favorite.  Every Christmas there is a book drive at Barnes and Noble and I donate The Poky Little Puppy in her honor.  The other thing from our childhood is Star Wars.  I distinctly remember our parents taking Kate and I out of school so we could go to the first showing at the local theaters for the re-release of A New Hope. So Star Wars and The Little Golden Books together is just the perfect gift.  This is such a cute book.  I wouldn’t say it’s a kids book.  I have a feeling it’s shelved in the Humor or even the self help section of Barnes and Noble but if wanted to read it to your kids it wanted too.  It’s a simple book that uses scenes from all the movies to talk you up.  Not everything is going to happen as you plan.  There are going to be dark times.  The dark side of the Force at the times may seem more appealing but in the long run it isn’t.  Friends will always find you under Cloud City or rescue you when you have been frozen in carbonate. So don’t let the bad out weigh the good.  And just like Yoda says “Do or Do not. There is no Try” so go read this book and relive the magic that is Star Wars and Little Golden Book and be inspired.

Quick Review: The Darkest Magic by Morgan Rhodes

darkest magic The series The Book of Spirit of Thieves is both a prequel and a sequel to Morgan Rhodes other series Falling Kingdoms.  With it’s dueling narratives that take place centuries before and after and in the same realm as the action of her previous books and also in our own world in present time.  In some ways, it fills the origin holes of some the mysteries and prophecies but stands on it own.  The switching POV of Maddox, Becca, Crystal and Farrell are kind of a mix bag.  I like Maddox as his is different from the others. It’s the prequel part of the story and takes place in Mytica.  Becca, Crystal and Farrell are all in present day Toronto.  The sisters Becca and Crystal are fine.  There is a genuine love between them but a little bit of distance.  Since the events of the last book, they both have learned a lot about themselves and each other and they are not sure what to do about this new knowledge.  Farrell, I could do without, sort of.  I understand why he is a POV but I just don’t really care that much about him as I do the others. He’s a privilege rich white boy who drinks and acts out because he didn’t get the love at home.  He uses people to make him feel better and people keep giving his boorish behavior a pass because he’s just a good kid inside.  He’s just hasn’t gotten over the loss of his brother.  He’s being controlled by an ancient cult leader.  Ok those are both true but still.  I’ve over it.  This series is fine and okay.  I think Falling Kingdoms is a far more interesting series with more compelling characters and more twists and turns.  That being said, it’s still kinda fun to read and it does fill in some wholes of the other series so it’s worth checking out if you’ve read the other series.

Review: Harry Potter and the Cursed Child by Jack Thorne

cursed child***Spoilers***

Whatever you feel about the epilogue of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows there was a sense that it was a beginning of a story and not an end like we thought.  The play in two parts, Harry Potter and the Cursed Child in the continuation of Harry’s story starting right at the epilogue. Harry, Ginny, Ron and Hermione are taking their children to the Hogwarts Express at the start of a new school year.  Albus Severus Potter, Harry and Ginny’s middle child is full of anxiety over many things but most of all of being the son of Harry Potter.  How can he possible live up to the legend of Harry Potter, who with his friends saved the wizarding world? On the Hogwarts Express, Albus meets another new student who also has to deal with shadow of his parent, Scorpius Malfoy.  Without giving away more spoilers less just say that Albus has Harry stubbornness and his penchant to dive right in without thinking of the consequences.  He and Scorpius travel back and time but they truly didn’t think about all the possible outcomes and well drama unfolds.  We see everyone struggle, from trying to find their place in the world to how to relate to their children.  I was able to understand Albus frustrations but I didn’t like him as I did with Harry. Honestly, the best character in the play of Scorpius.  He was funny, optimistic  and kind. Pretty much the opposite of Draco from the books.  He had Ron’s heart and Hermione’s brain.  He was the perfect friend for Albus.  Harry is older but not necessarily wiser.  Hermione was great as always and Ron was great too.  While it was great to revisit the Wizarding World and Harry I think I’m ready to let go of them.  It was a beautiful story and the ending was heartbreaking.  I really want to see it performed because there are many things that happen that I’m not sure how they do on stage.  Like when a couple of characters take polyjuice potion and change into other characters on stage.  That’s just one example.  I really hope this comes to Broadway or it’s get filmed because I don’t think I’ll be making it to London anytime soon.

Review: The Reader by Traci Chee

the reader A world without books sounds terrible. Who would ever want to live like that.  I know there are people in this world who can read but choose not and it’s baffling but that has nothing to do with this book.  Books can really change a life.  For Sefia, her life was simple until her father is murdered and she is forced to go on the run with her Aunt Nin.  For years, her parents have been hiding a mysteriously item and people are hunting down Sefia and Nin for it.  When Nin gets kidnapped, Sefia finally decides it’s time to find out what she’s carrying and why people murdered her father and how she can get Nin back.  It is a book. It tells her.  In Sefia’s journey she is joined by another orphan, Archer and pirates.  Meanwhile there are dual narratives of Lon, an apprentice to the Master Librarian.  A secret society that is tasked with gathering all the knowledge of the world and controlling it.  They spend their time recopying texts from one manuscript to another and learning to see people’s pasts in vision.  Lon proves to be a fast learner and with the help of the Second, a assassin apprentice he begins to see things are not as they seem.  We also meet Captain Reed and his crew first in Sefia’s book and then for real.  At first it was confusing with all these story lines going on at the same time.  I could tell that they were all meant to tie together but it just didn’t jive.  I started to guess that one of the story lines wasn’t happening at the same time as the others and then things started to make sense for me.  It was an exciting first book to a new series.  Sefia is strong and resourceful.  She is resolute in finding the ones she loves.  She teaches herself how to read and discovers the secret of the book.  Archer has an equally tragic backstory.  Taken from his family at a young age, he is raised in violence and forced to fight to the death.  It’s all mixed with tension and intrigued.  I can’t wait to read the next one.

Review: The Secret History of Wonder Woman by Jill Lepore

wonder woman For a superhero who has outlasted all by Superman, Batman and Captain America, she doesn’t get the recognition she deserves.  She was created to inspire young woman to take up their rightful place in society as her creator William Moultan Marston once stated that in the next 1,000 years, Woman will rule the world.  He wanted a superhero that embody female strength can be just as strong as any man if not stronger. To truly understand Wonder Woman and her place in history, you really have to know who origins and the man (and the women who inspired) who created her.  William Moultan Marston was an heir to a family with a long history.  An only child who was doted on by his mother and four aunts.  His wife, Elizabeth Holloway Marston, was just as educated as he was and was often the breadwinner of the family and his other wife, Olive Byrne (yep, he had two wives) was once his student and the caretaker.  He was a lawyer and academic.  He invented the lie detector.  He wrote screenplays and worked for Universal Studios during the earlier days of Hollywood.  He was a little bit of everything and a little bit of a mess. He failed as more then he succeeded but all of it culminated in creating Wonder Woman.  Wonder Woman’s lasso of truth was an extension of his life work of seeking truth through his own lie detector machine and research.  Wonder Woman’s bracelets were inspired by his second wife’s, Olive Byrne,bracelet that she wore instead of a wedding ring.  Speaking of Olive she was the niece of Margaret Sanger.  Champion for birth control and founder of Planned Parenthood.  Feminism was strong in the family.  Actually the suffragist movement very much influenced Wonder Woman as the stories and imagery can be seen all over the the early Wonder Woman comic book.  This was a very easy read that goes into the great detail of William Marsters life and highlight moments in his life that he drew upon to create his Amazonian.  It may take a while before you get the actual creation of Wonder Woman but Jill Lepore does a great job of showcasing how people, situations and politics would influence Moultan Marsters and how they ended up in his work.  How an old professor turned into Dr. Psycho.  Or how the art of Lou Rogers inspired story lines.  How the likes of Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady shaped Wonder Woman’s character and how his own wives and children breathed life into her as well.  Sadly, it also shows how the Wonder Woman changed after Marster’s death.  Like many women after World War Two, Wonder Woman was forced back into the kitchens even if it went against her origins.  She may have gone completely by the wayside if it wasn’t for Women’s movement in the 60’s and 70’s but even then she wasn’t the same.  It’s sad to see that many of the issues that Wonder Woman faced in the late 30’s and 40’s we are still facing today.  The criticism of her is still charged against many female protagonist of any genre. Progress has been made but we are still so much to go.  You to like this book you don’t know need to know anything about Wonder Woman or even comics to enjoy it.  You just need to have an appreciation for a good story and kick ass woman.

Reviews: The Last Star by Rick Yancey and The Countdown by Kimberly Derting

the last star***Spoilers Ahead***

The Last Star and The Countdown and the final books in trilogies about aliens coming to Earth but that’s really where the similarities end.  The Last Star is the finale to The 5th Wave, which follows a few teenage survivors after first four waves of an Alien invasion.  Billions have people have already died, leaving Cassie, Zombie, Sam, Ringer and Evan as humanities last stand. Meanwhile, The Taking Trilogy, explores alien abductions and the possibility that those responsible are on their way.  The 5th Wave is far more epic in scale and more ambitious but not necessarily as entertaining.  The first book I thought was fantastic but was underwhelm by the follow The Infinite Sea.  The Taking was okay but as the series went on it got better.  Not the best series I’ve read but entertaining.  Reading both series so close together gave me a chance to read different views on Aliens.  Are they hostile? Do they come in peace?  How do they go around getting a foothold into Earth.  They both have a very different approach to those questions as the The 5th Wave also piggybacks on the latest trend of YA Dystopia as well as sci-fi.  The Taking is really more of your standard YA fare with aliens in the background.  It still explores the trials of youth and romance and of course a love triangle.

More after the Cut. Continue reading

Quick Review: Sea Spell by Jennifer Donnelly

sea spell Let’s be honest this series is nothing but fluff, not that is a bad thing or anything. We all need a little fluff in our lives.  It was entertaining but I’m glad that this was the final book because I’m not sure what more they could do.  That being said it was definitely left open for a spin off series.  The mermaids or merls (I’m not going to miss the cutesy sea inspired words) have finally regrouped with their talismans and take out Sera’s uncle and the evil mage Orfeo and his monster.  Sera, Neela, Ava, Ling, Becca and Astrid have all overcome their own trials to get to this point and worked together to win.  Astrid had the biggest arc of the ladies. She started off as standoffish and refused to help but after being shown kindness from the other girls, she knows that she has to help.  She sets off to find Orfeo in hopes of getting his talisman.  She expects to hate him but she finds that she starts to like him.  He does something that no one has been able to.  Give her back her magic and her pride.  He shows her the love and caring that has been denied to her since she lost the ability to sing.  Will she turn against her new friends? Of course not but there were times that I really couldn’t blame her if she did.  Sera grew from a girl fearful of not living up to her mother’s standard to true leader.  Becca learned to give up some control and trust others to help.  The others helped but had little to do throughout the series.  So yes it was fluff and not the greatest story of all time but it had it’s moments.  Anyone looking for a series to read on their summer vacation this isn’t a bad pick, as long as you don’t mind all the cutesy words.

Review: And I Darken by Kiersten White

and i darkenI think this is really more a political drama then anything else.  Kiersten White re-imagines the origins of Vlad the Impaler as if he had been born a Lada, a girl, rather then a boy.  Lada is fierce, passionate and ruthless.  She is far more interested in fighting and ruling then she is anything else.  From a young age, she knows that she will never be taken seriously as a girl unless she is the smarter, faster and stronger then those around here and does everything she can to make it that way.  When she and her brother are left as hostages to the Ottoman Empire as a way to secure their father’s throne of Wallachia, she becomes enraged of her lack of power. Felt betrayed by her father for leaving her there, where any misstep by him, forfeits their lives.  She uses her time to learn all that she can from her Ottoman captors to use in her vengeance one day. Things go a little sideways when Lada and Radu meet Mehmed, the son of the Sultan.  He becomes their friend and third point to their triangle.  Radu is the polar opposite to Lada.  While she is strong and aggressive, he’s quiet and conservative.  He has the charisma that Lada lacks. Lada has the strength that Radu lacks.  They are not the closets of siblings but they are all each other has so when push comes to shove, they are there for each other.

This is a fascinating a concept.  I don’t know much about the historical figure of Vlad the Impaler beyond he liked to impale people and the inspiration of Bram Stoker’s Dracula so while reading this I had no idea how much of the story is based on fact and how much is added for dramatic emphasis, so I had to google Vlad to find out.  I found out that yes, Lada would have been the second child and had a younger brother named Radu. They both were sent to the Ottoman Empire as insurance of their father would continue to behave.  The Ottoman’s did educate them both and Radu did convert to Islam.  I’m not sure it is historical accurate that both Lada and Radu were in love with Mehmed but it wouldn’t be a YA novel without a little bit of romantic intrigue.  Lada is constantly trying to prove that she is as strong as the men in her life by shunning anything feminine. There is a lot here to discuss about women’s roles and government.  Besides Lada, we meet two of the Sultan’s wives as well as members of his harem.  Mehmed, also has a harem but his women are hidden from us but we know they exist since he keeps fathering children.  The women try to show Lada their own power that they possess but in truth what little power they have it all depends on the men in their lives and staying in his favor.  Lada sees this and it makes her even more resolute to gain her own power.  As for the book itself, it definitely started out slow and sped up as Lada and Radu started to exert their influence on Mehmed.  I only wished it got to that point a lot sooner.  I think the following books will be more interesting as all the characters and the stakes have been established.  I like Lada and I don’t want to see her descend into the cruel Lada the Impaler but it will make for an interesting read.