Posted in YA Book Reviews

City of Glass by Cassandra Clare

Image

 

Before I continue on with my rating and review of City of Glass, by Cassandra Clare…let me kind of recap my feelings thus far into the series. I started blogging much later, and need to go back and do some reviews on some of the books I read this year. Probably not all 108, but some of my favorites. That being said, I most likely will not give City of Bones and City of Ashes their own reviews, but will briefly touch on them before City of Glass. 

I read City of Bones years ago. I didn’t understand it and couldn’t get into it. Therefore, I never progressed with the series. One reason, besides not understanding, was this whole Jace-Clary-Incest thing. As someone who finds that disturbingly disgusting, I just never went forward. Earlier this year, I read Clockwork Angel and Clockwork Prince. These two stories, from Cassandra Clare’s prequel trilogy, really helped me understand City of Bones and I decided, incest aside, to give it another go. So I read it again. My aunt in fact bought me the first 4 books, so I almost felt an obligation to read them. Perusing through the back of the covers to see the progression, I read that Jace and Clary started dating (in the 4th book…technically end of book 3), I kind of freaked. So I did a little digging and asking around, to find out that along the way they discover they were lied to and they were not related. So! I put aside that disgust I felt, and started the series. During City of Bones and City of Ashes, the sexual tension between Jace and Clary was intense. And I kept saying to myself “they aren’t related…”but, going into City of Glass, I felt that that plot needed to fizzle out soon because it was bordering absolute disgust. City of Ashes was a great book. So far, it has been one of my favorites of the three I have read. The emotions of Clary towards Simon and trying to save his life, ultimately turning him into a vampire to do it, to the struggles of discovering more about her powers to create more ruins, everyone had to make decisions they weren’t proud of, or that weren’t easy. Pushing on and persevering together, each in their roles.

It’s no lie, but Magnus Bane is pretty much my favorite character, as is Luke. But for the sake of the general review of the first two books, I loved Magnus in City of Ashes and was glad he was more predominant than he had been in City of Bones,. In City of Ashes, watching the struggle of Magnus being in love with Alec but Alec (because he is a Shadowhunter) not being allowed to be out in the open about his own feelings is heartbreaking. At the same time, “in real life,” situations like this happen all the time. I think that Clare wrote these struggles in a respective manner that can bring understanding and sympathy into the readers’ minds for these two. I mention this situation specifically, because this relationship develops further in City of Glass, and one of my favorite scenes was between Alec and Magnus, so I felt that this particular blurb needed to be mentioned!

Now, for City of Glass! Overall, I give this rating 4 stars out of 5. I enjoyed it, but I felt like a good chunk of the story was “filler,” like I was in college all over again just trying to “spruce” up my research paper with a few more words or lines about nothing. For the parts that were more than just filler, there were a whirlwind of emotions. New characters were introduced and other characters really started shining through.

Sebastian Verlac: Will the real Sebastian please stand up? Oh wait, he can’t because he is dead! So…who is this impostor? None other than Jonathan Christopher Morgenstern, Clary’s real brother. I knew something was off the moment Sebastian was introduced. The way he casually was  everyone’s friend. Flirting with Isabelle, attempting to be kissed and seduce Clary with failure, the anger at the ultimate rejection by Clary. In Valentine’s weird way, he absolutely LOVED Sebastian and was happy with how Sebastian turned out. 

Isabelle Lightwood: Not a new character by any means, but in City of Glass, I felt she was more of that normal, 16 yr old bitchy, “someone give her a chill pill,” female. She was in this book more than the other two. I felt like her emotions, true to her age, were all over the place. Hot and cold. But Isabelle’s heart was always in the right place. The stress of being a Shadowhunter coupled with the emotional strains of being a young, 16 year old girl trying to figure out who she is gives her that edge/kick in City of Glass that she hadn’t fully had in City of Bones and City of Ashes. 

Jace and Clary: I will lump them together. Most of the book dealt with their struggles of 1) being in love 2) being siblings and 3) saving Alicante from Valentine. Clary was a bit more whiny in this book. Jace a bit more of an ass than usual. Each one of them act and speak before they think and neither one of them think of how their actions will affect others around them. They fly by the seat of their pants. Act on whatever the first whim they have is and out they go! I really loved the scene with Raziel. As far as Clary and Jace interactions, Raziel was my favorite scene. If you haven’t read the book, I won’t give any spoilers. If you haven’t read the book, they aren’t related, so just try to swallow that incest bit down knowing they aren’t (that is what I did…). 

Alec and Magnus: I will clump them together as well. Alec had a lot of growth between City of Bones to City of Glass. He really stood out, and always let people know he was “18 and the adult” of their little group. So. What is my favorite scene of the entire book? What scene had me laughing so loud while I was reading silently in my room? *ahem Spoiler Alert* During the last 100 pages or so (when all the good bits of a book happen), Shadowhunters and Downworlders needed to be paired up to be marked with this rune that Clary  had to bind them to share powers. Alec decided he wanted to be Magnus’ partner (for battle and actual partners). That he was finally ready to be out about it. So instead of introducing his parents to Magnus, what does he do? He looks across the room trying to find Magnus, when he spots him, walks right up to him and starts making out with him…in front of everyone! Seeing as how you are not allowed to be gay and a shadowhunter, this caused a lot of stares, gaping mouths and maybe a few chokes here and there….followed by the uncomfortable awkward silence. Magnus stressed a few times that he didn’t want to be hidden, that no real relationship could truly survive if people that you loved and cared about didn’t know who or what you were, or who you were in love with. 

How did it end? Well, that I think you need to find out for yourself. I don’t like giving away information…okay well too much information. City of Glass is no quick read, but once you get through some of the unnecessary extras, the character development is pretty spot on. I hope that City of Fallen Angels (book 4) doesn’t disappoint when I pick it up after the holidays.

Side Note:

Also, I clearly left out a few characters…if you want to find out what happens to Jocelyn (Clary’s mother), Simon, Luke and all your other favorite characters (or could be favorite if you started to read the series), I would suggest picking it up and giving it a go! I clearly didn’t include A LOT of information either. City of Glass has multiple story lines, and this review should not and could not reflect almost 600 pages worth of a novel, it is not a book report…just a review of my take, feelings and favorites about the book. If you haven’t started the series but are interested, I know I gave away 2 tidbits and I won’t apologize! (I feel from my own experience that the incest plot line needed to be snuffed out before I could continue on with the story). It was creepy how thick Cassandra Clare played that one out. All the other character’s internal struggles, figuring out who they are in this world…that is for you to discover on your own. I have enjoyed the ride so far, and am curious how the rest of this series will play out. 

Posted in YA Book Reviews

To infinity…and Beyond?

Image

I was given this book for an honest review.  I give this book 3 stars.

There is a lot of hit and miss with this book for me. I think that the concept is fascinating and original. One thing that really bothers me about the YA or New Adult genre is that many times, the main female character is so whiny with that “woe is me” attitude. You know the one right? Where only her issues are the most important? Where if any other person in her life has any similar issues, she mistreats them, or gets angry or just flat out whines? Well, Raven Stone is just like that. The entire book I felt Raven was constantly nagging or whining because she “just didn’t understand…” and “why aren’t these pills helping the hallucinations?” etc. For the first third of this book, I was genuinely confused. I felt that some concepts could have been explained a bit more, rather than Raven and the reader figure it out together. Even at the end, I was left with a “wtf” look on my face….because, seriously, WTF?

I don’t want to give a book report. Anyone can read a book and give a synopsis. I think the synopsis given with the book, suits it well enough. What I will give you is this:

Damian is WOW….I would take some of that any day of the week! The tension written into the book between Raven and Damian is spot on if you love romance in your reading. It was that hot tension that you feel when you watch Bones, between Bones and Booth…or Dr. House and Dr. Cuddy…you know the tension right? Where you are ready for them to just give into their primal urges and knock boots already? (Yeah, yeah…I know…this is a 16 yr old girl and a 17 yr old boy…but let’s face it, we have all been there at that age…it doesn’t make it any less real!). The entire time I read Beyond, I was waiting patiently to see what would happen between these two. I was so caught up in them, that my confusion didn’t matter. I read this book rather quickly, simply because I HAD TO KNOW WHAT HAPPENED. I didn’t necessarily love the book enough to give it a 4th star, but I believe that a lot of YA/Paranormal Romance readers will enjoy this book.

I enjoyed this book, but I have a hard time with Raven’s character type. I just wish, for once, that the female characters would be stronger, and more take charge, and not this damsel in distress. I would devour any book that gave me that (Like the Graceling Realm series…). I think too many books these days are writing weak female leads, it is atrocious! Girls that age should be reading about strong female characters, that yeah life might suck sometimes and ‘shit might get real,’ but we can do this! That age is confusing for girls, it is difficult…so why not have a character faced with the same adversity, that has a stronger character structure? That is why I gave it 3 stars.

I also feel that the story line itself could use just a bit more fine tuning. It is a little rough around the edges, but it was still enjoyable, and as I said before, I think that a lot of readers of this genre will enjoy it. It was nice to read a different kind of YA/Paranormal romance other than wolves, vamps, and even though I love me a good fallen angel read, it is nice to implement something that is more real, like ghosts (I live in Ghost Capital…so yeah, I believe…). It makes you think, can these ghosts really hurt us?

Happy reading! And based on that ending, I will be moving on in the series because I want to know what happens between Damian and Raven! (yum!)

Posted in Book Reviews

Charmed, I’m Sure…

Image

This book was a delightful little surprise. For the past couple of months, every time I went to the book store, it was there, staring me in the face screaming “READ ME!!,” so one day, I finally bought it. Instead of placing it towards the back of my current read queue, I moved it right up front.

John Charming. Mmm where do I even begin? He has this wit about him that sucks you into his life from the very beginning. Each chapter is labeled to reflect this wit. Chapter One: A blonde and a vampire walk into a bar….” I knew from the beginning I would have high hopes for this book, and those hopes included some kind of enjoyment and desire to continue on with the series (Goodreads has it marked as Pax Arcana #1…so we shall see?)

I generally like to write any kind of reviews based on feelings, but I think I might sway a bit and include what the overall concept of the book is about. If you enjoy supernatural science fiction, you may or may not enjoy this book. Elliott James brings a new concept into the world of supernatural science fiction. He includes a type of secret police, the very Knights Templar, into the mix. The downfall, though, was that only one knight showed up the WHOLE book and his role was very small.

Let me explain….John Charming was a Knight during WWII. Prior to his birth, his mother was bitten by a werewolf. She gave birth to Charming prior to the first full moon. John never fully became a wolf, though some of the werewolf folklore was true in his case. He had great sense of smell, couldn’t be killed easily, healed fast. He just didn’t change. There is one particular incident in Charming’s life that made these particular traits come into focus, and the Knights turned their backs on him. Of which, he ran. And has been on the run his whole life from that point on. This book takes place in current years. John is a very old young man!

In the course of his run, John Charming finds himself in a little rural town in Virginia called Claysburg. He assumes someone’s identity and becomes that person until he has to move on. Sometimes this can be a few days, or a few weeks. At this juncture, he becomes a bartender. In walks Sig. Tall, blonde, Norse features, not human. Valkyrie. Sig has her own demons, as most of the characters do. But she is currently on the hunt of a vampire suspected of killing a particular breed of women, that most people might not even notice is missing. How does Sig know these women are missing? She sees ghosts. Not only can she see, speak, and feel ghosts, her sociopath of a boyfriend, Stanislav Dvornik, a kresnik (I have never heard of these before, they are ‘seers’, psychics, etc….similar to the Knights Templar) can remove himself from his body and see what is killing them, how and where.

John Charming’s wolf is immediately attracted, let’s face it, how could it not be? A strong, dominant, alpha female walks into a bar. What’s not to like? Charming ultimately gets sucked into Sig’s rag tag team of supernatural police misfits to help take down this vampire hive and preventing a psychotic teen wishing to be a vampire hive queen from taking over all of Claysburg by creating a series of underground tunnels. This unorthodox team includes: Choo, an ex-military surplus supplier turned exterminator, who likes his weed. Cahill, a local police detective. Molly, a former Episcopalian preacher (who is also a lesbian…she had to ‘out’ herself to reassure John she wasn’t coming onto him). Parth, the town’s local naga. And Dvornik’s nephews: Andro and Andrej, every bit of sociopath that their uncle is…they are the sharp shooters and muscle of the group.

What I like most about this book, is that every character is seriously damaged. Each person written into this book has a story. They have reasons why they are a part of this group. They have baggage that they can’t get rid of. I like how Elliott James takes these personas and is able to connect them all together, to bring them together, to be able to (for the most part) use these broken down individuals in such a way that they all 1) connect with each other, 2) work together with such beautiful fluidity and 3) just straight up kick ass. Each character has an added spunk, wit, kick ass first ask questions later, attitude. Each person has something unique that only they can bring to the team as a strength.

I don’t have a lot of dislikes in the book. I feel that there was a lot of buildup, but not necessarily that orgasmic explosion that I enjoy most out of a good book when everything seems to finally happen over the course of a few pages. There was a lot of sexual tension. Between multiple characters. And, some things, which I wont discuss, were rather predictable. Charming states from the beginning he isn’t living happily ever after. But, the end of the book, kind of left me feeling empty. Will this series continue? And if so…what direction will it go? Can it really continue? James just kind of left it. Maybe that is the point. It would fit right in with the quirkiness and wit of John Charming.

If this book were to become a movie this is who I saw as John Charming the ENTIRE time I read:

Image

Can we say…yum?