Review: Immortal City by Scott Speer

Immortal City #1

Immortal City by Scott Speer, UK edition cover.

Title: Immortal City (Immortal City #1)
Author:Scott Speer
Genre: Paranormal Romance, Young Adult
Publisher:  Scholastic Children’s Books (5th April 2012)
Blurb:

Jackson Godspeed is the hottest Angel in a city obsessed with Immortals. Everyone loves him.

Everyone except Maddy Montgomery, that is. She’s not interested in shallow celebrities . . . Until Jackson takes refuge in the diner where Maddy works and an irresistible connection pulls them together.

But as Maddy is drawn into Jackson’s glamorous world, she’s exposed to more than the paparazzi. A serial killer is murdering Angels. Maddy and Jackson could lose each other for ever.

Rating: **** (4 stars)
Review:

Immortal City is Scott Speer’s debut novel. It tells the story of a mortal and an Angel falling in love in the city of Los Angeles.

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Review: Code Name Verity

Code Name Verity by Elizabeth Wein

Title: Code Name Verity
Author: Elizabeth Wein
Genre:  War Novel, Young Adult
Publisher:  Disney-Hyperion (15th May 2012)
Source: Disney-Hyperion via NetGalley
Format: e-book ARC
Blurb:

Oct. 11th, 1943–A British spy plane crashes in Nazi-occupied France. Its pilot and passenger are best friends. One of the girls has a chance at survival. The other has lost the game before it’s barely begun.

When “Verity” is arrested by the Gestapo, she’s sure she doesn’t stand a chance. As a secret agent captured in enemy territory, she’s living a spy’s worst nightmare. Her Nazi interrogators give her a simple choice: reveal her mission or face a grisly execution.

As she intricately weaves her confession, Verity uncovers her past, how she became friends with the pilot Maddie, and why she left Maddie in the wrecked fuselage of their plane. On each new scrap of paper, Verity battles for her life, confronting her views on courage and failure and her desperate hope to make it home. But will trading her secrets be enough to save her from the enemy?

Harrowing and beautifully written, Elizabeth Wein creates a visceral read of danger, resolve, and survival that shows just how far true friends will go to save each other. Code Name Verity is an outstanding novel that will stick with you long after the last page.


Rating: *****
(5 stars)
Review:

Code Name Verity is a story about two best friends set in the middle of World War II. Both girls are involved in the Allied war effort.

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Review: My Soul to Take by Rachel Vincent

Soul Screamers #1

My Soul to Take by Rachel Vincent, UK edition

Title: My Soul to Take (Soul Screamers #1)
Author: Rachel Vincent
Genre: Urban Fantasy, Young Adult
Publisher:  MiraInk (1st January 2011)
Blurb:

Something is wrong with Kaylee Cavanaugh . . .

She can sense when someone near her is about to die. And when it happens, a force beyond her control compels her to scream bloody murder. Literally.

Kaylee just wants to enjoy having caught the attention of the hottest boy in school. But a normal date is hard to come by when Nash seems to know more about the dark forces behind Kaylee’s power than she does.

And when classmates start dropping dead for no apparent reason and only Kaylee knows who’ll be next, she realises that finding a boyfriend is the least of her worries!

Rating: **** (4 stars)

Review:

My Soul to Take is the first book in Rachel Vincent’s YA series Soul Screamers.

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Women of the Otherworld Challenge: Bitten Review

Each month beginning March 1st, 2012, challenge members will read or re-read the title for that month. In addition, challenge members will either post a review, their reading experience, character castings or anything else related to that title. You have freedom to have fun with your monthly post so be creative! Seeing as this series is 13 novels long, this challenge will last 13 months.

As this challenge started in March and it is already May, you can tell that I am a little behind…

Women of the Otherworld #1

Bitten by Kelley Armstrong, UK edition.

Bitten (Women of the Otherworld #1)
by Kelley Armstrong

Published by Orbit  26th February 2004.

Elena Michaels is your regular twenty-first century girl: self-assured, smart and fighting fit. She also just happens to be the only female werewolf in the world . . .

It has some good points. When she walks down a dark alleyway, she’s the scary one. But now her Pack – the one she abandoned so that she could live a normal life – are in trouble, and they need her help. Is she willing to risk her life to help the ex-lover who betrayed her by turning her into a werewolf in the first place? And, more to the point, does she have a choice?

So this isn’t going to be a “normal” review – there will be no rating given. It wouldn’t be fair for me to try to review it dispassionately, as this is one of my favourite books and has some of my favourite characters in it. It is also a book I re-read a LOT.

Bitten is the first book in Kelley Armstrong’s brilliant Women of the Otherworld series. In it we meet for the first time Elena Michaels, the only female werewolf. Elena rocks. She is brilliantly perceptive, very self-assured and totally kick-ass; at the same time she is also haunted by her past and a little bit (willfully) blind. We also meet Clayton Danvers, another of my favourite characters. I love the way Armstrong creates certain perceptions about Clay, and then stands them on their head. The chemistry between Elena and Clay is extraordinary. When they are together there is just this spark and I always end up smiling when I read about them – even when I want to yell at them. Jeremy, Antonio, Nick, and Peter are all interesting, and believable. They all add something to the story – in fact, I can’t think of a character that doesn’t. I also confess that I have a soft spot for Karl Marsten – he makes me think of a less powerful Thomas Crown.

I really enjoy the plot of Bitten; despite reading the book numerous times, I always find myself desperate to find out what happens next. The main plot of the book is full of twists and turns, and I love the way Armstrong slips in revelations about Elena’s past. I also like the way that this book asks the questions: what makes a monster? It is an interesting question to have running through an Urban Fantasy. The answer Elena comes up with is an interesting one – and one I totally agree with. This book has some of my favourite lines about what a monster is:

The truth is, if a werewolf behaved like this psychopath it wouldn’t be because he was part animal, but because he was still too human. Only humans kill for sport.
– Kelley Armstrong, Bitten (Orbit, 2005), p. 26.

I think this is something that a lot of Paranormal Romance and Urban Fantasy books gloss over: that it isn’t (necessarily) the supernatural element that makes something a monster.

This book and series were in many ways my corner-stone for what I expected when I read Paranormal Romance and Urban Fantasy. If you haven’t picked up this book yet and you’re a fan of Urban Fantasy then I highly recommend that you do. You won’t be disappointed.

Review: Graveminder by Melissa Marr

Graveminder by Melissa Marr, UK edition cover.

Title: Graveminder
Author: Melissa Marr
Genre: Urban Fantasy
Publisher:  Harper (2nd February 2012)
Blurb:

Claysville.
Normal towns don’t lure you back.

Maylene Barrow and William Montgomery have for years borne special responsibilities in the town of Claysville. Duties to the newly departed that help keep their living loved ones safe.

Rebekkah Barrow, Maylene’s granddaughter, left Claysville a decade ago, trying to put painful memories behind her. But evil has been let loose in Claysville and now Maylene is dead. It falls to Rebekkah to return to the town – and the man – she left behind to stop a monster and keep the dead in their place.

Byron Montgomery, following in his father’s footsteps, is the town’s new undertaker, and the man now bears his own special responsibility – to help Rebekkah. He is also the man she left behind.

Rating: ***** (5 stars)

Review:

Graveminder is Melissa Marr’s first adult book; she wrote the fantastic Wicked Lovely series of YA novels. It is the first stand-alone novel I have had the pleasure of reading for a while – and I really enjoyed the fact that there is a complete story told from beginning to end in three hundred and twenty-four pages.

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Review: Tempted by P.C. and Kristin Cast

House of Night #6

Tempted by P.C. and Kristin Cast, UK edition cover.

Title: Tempted (A House of Night Novel #6)
Author: P.C. and Kristin Cast
Genre: Paranormal Romance, Young Adult
Publisher:  Atom (27th April 2010)
Blurb:

This blood smelled too dark. Too thick. There was too much of something in that wasn’t human. But it was still blood, and it drew her, even though she knew the wrongness of it deep in her soul.

Dangerous secrets come between Zoey and Stevie Rae, putting the House of Night at great risk. Stevie Rae, with her super red vamp powers, thought she could handle keeping stuff from her BFF, but her latest secret is a big one. Zoey’s left with trust issues while she needs her friends – and boyfriends – like never before.

Zoey banished malevolent immortal Kalona from Tulsa, but the battle is far from over. He now seeks power at the highest levels, and the Vampyre High Council is falling under his thrall. Without Zoey’s help, the world could still burn in the fiery hell of Aphrodite’s visions. And will Zoey’s connection with A-ya, a Cherokee maiden who tempted Kalona in ages past, help or hinder her resistance to the dangerously seductive immortal?

Two girls walk a tightrope between good and evil. And their choices will see everything they love saved – or destroyed.

Rating: **** (4 stars)

Review:

Tempted is the sixth book in P.C. and Kristin Cast’s House of Night series. The story starts almost directly after the events of Hunted, and as such this review will contain spoilers for previous books in the series. This book is a really good read; on a par with the previous books in the series.

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Review: The Calling by Kelley Armstrong

Darkness Rising Trilogy #2

The Calling by Kelley Armstrong, UK edition cover.

Title: The Calling (Darkness Rising #2)
Author: Kelley Armstrong
Genre: Urban Fantasy, Young Adult
Publisher:  Atom (5th April 2012)
Blurb:

Maya Delaney’s paw-print birthmark is the sign of what she truly is – a skin walker. Experiencing intense connections with the animals that roam the woods outside her home, Maya knows she will soon be able to Shift and become one of them. And she believes there may be others in her small town with surprising talents, including local bad boy Rafe, with whom she shares a powerful secret.

Now Maya and her friends have been forced to flee their homes during a forest fire they suspect was set deliberately. Stranded in the wilderness of Vancouver Island, only their extraordinary abilities can help them get back home. But can Maya really trust her friends? And can she learn how to control her dangerous gift, before it controls her?

Rating: ***** (5 stars)

Review:

The Calling is the second book in the Darkness Rising Trilogy by Kelley Armstrong. The Darkness Rising Trilogy is set in the same world as both Armstrong’s Women of the Otherworld (an adult series) and The Darkest Powers Trilogy. There is the suggestion that both The Darkest Powers Trilogy and the Darkness Rising Trilogy may become interlinked in later books on Kelley Armstrong’s website.

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Review: Hunted by P.C. and Kristin Cast

House of Night # 5

Hunted by P.C. and Kristin Cast, UK edition cover.

Title: Hunted (A House of Night Novel #5)
Author: P.C. and Kristin Cast
Genre: Paranormal Romance, Young Adult
Publisher:  Atom (27th April 2010)
Blurb:

The door close with a sickening thud of finality, shutting my friends out and leaving me alone with my enemy, a fallen angel, and the monstrous bird creature his ancient lust had created. Then I did something I’d only done twice before in my life. I fainted.

It’s all happening, though Zoey Redbird wishes it wasn’t. She has her friends back, which is great. But a dark angel has taken over the House of Night, supported by High Priestess Neferet. Not so great. This leave Zoey hiding out with the (supposedly friendly) red fledglings in Tulsa’s prohibition era tunnels. The not greatness continues.

Naturally, Zoey also has boy issues to stress her out, with a chace to make up with super-hot-ex Erik. But thoughts of the archer that died, semi-permanently, in her arms keep distracting her. Then he shows up as Neferet’s newest minion. Well, hell. Zoey and her friends will need a plan to put things right, and soon, if she can just keep her head and her heart intact.

Rating:**** (4 stars)

Review:

Hunted is the fifth book in P.C. and Kristin Cast’s House of Night series. The story takes up hours after the events of Untamed, as such this review may contain spoilers. The storyline of Hunted kept me really entertained, and whilst it didn’t have me quite as hooked as Untamed it wasn’t far off.

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Review: SpellBound by Rachel Hawkins

Hex Hall #3

SpellBound by Rachel Hawkins, UK edition cover.

Title: Spell Bound (Hex Hall #3)
Author: Rachel Hawkins
Genre: Paranormal Romance, Young Adult
Publisher:  Simon Pulse (29th March 2012)
Blurb:

Sometimes Sophie Mercer wishes she could go back to before she started Hex Hall, the school for magical Prodigium. In one year she’s gone from average girl-next-door to discovering she’s a demon with extraordinary powers. And, just as she is starting to get her head around that, the Prodigium Council strip away her magic and kidnap her friends, leaving her defenceless and alone.

Now, stranded at the mercy of the Brannicks, a family of warrior women who want to destroy all Prodigium, Sophie could really use a little magical help. But the Brannicks have a few revelations of their own, and Sophie’s world is turned upside down . . . again.

Can Sophie find her friends, regain her powers and take on the bad guys and win? Or will this final battle be one step too far?

Rating:**** (4 stars)

Review:

SpellBound is the third book in Rachel Hawkins’s fantastic Hex Hall series. We see Sophie continue her journey – did this start just two books ago – with lots of twists and turns along the way.

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Review: Raising Demons by Rachel Hawkins

Hex Hall #2

Raising Demons by Rachel Hawkins, UK edition cover.

Title: Raising Demons (Hex Hall Book 2)
Author: Rachel Hawkins
Genre: Urban Fantasy, Young Adult
Publisher:  Simon Pulse (28th August 2010)
Blurb:

Sophie Mercer’s first term at Hex Hall was quite eventful. First, her evil grandmother’s ghost haunted her every move, then her best friend was accused of murder and, finally, Archer Cross (aka The Boy Of Her Dreams) turned out to be an undercover demon hunter; which would have been fine, if Sophie hadn’t been the demon he was hunting . . .

Sophie is hoping for a quieter summer, but as she’s spending it with her dad – who just happens to be Head of The Council if Prodigium – at the headquarters of all-things-magical, that’s not going to happen. And, as she struggles with her new demon powers, Sophie finds herself surrounded by dark magic and conspiracies. The only way things could get more complicated would be if Archer Cross appeared again. But he wouldn’t . . . would he?

Rating: *** (3 stars)

Review:

Raising Demons is the follow-up to Rachel Hawkins’ debut novel Hex Hall and the second book in the Hex Hall series. The story begins a semester after the events of Hex Hall.

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