Book Review: Seven Ways We Lie by Riley Redgate

26240663you can find the book at:

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my review:

Rating: ★★★

~ARC provided by NetGalley in exchange for an honest review~

When a rumour of a teacher-student affair surfaces in Texan high school, this ordinary school becomes much more peculiar when everyone tries to find out who it could possibly be.

Seven Ways We Lie is a really fun and interesting take on a high school contemporary novel. I liked the use of each character representing a different deadly sin. I didn’t really know what to expect from this but, in the end, I really did enjoy this. The first half was sort of confusing due to the different POVs and it did take me a while to learn who was saying what without having to go back to the chapter title. But Redgate did a good job developing the characters and carrying a story with seven different perspectives however I felt like she lost some along the way.

For this review, I’m going to go through each character and their storyline, since I enjoyed some more than others.

Juniper – I had mixed emotions about her. But I did feel sorry for her in the end. Her parts were told in a poem-style, which I didn’t enjoy that much. It was nice but I just don’t think someone would think in poetry all the time

Claire – Oh my, it was so hard to like her but I did understand her. Claire endlessly compares herself to other, always jealous and anxious. And her self-esteem was constantly lowered by the people around her. But her actions within the novel really pissed me off, and although I understand where she’s coming from, what she did makes me wary of her.

Lucas – I was really interested by Lucas. I think this is the first time I’ve read a book with a pansexual character. But I felt like his character was wasted in this novel. And looking back on the book, it focuses more on the others rather than him and I wanted more of him.

Valentine – Similar to Lucas, I felt like he had no proper basis, aside from him being the one who realised the teacher-student relationship, but I quite like them together.

Matt – Matt is that weird kid that smokes pot and has a ridiculously huge crush on Olivia. The scenes with his younger brother were really cute, but I didn’t like how stalkerish his crush with Olivia started out with, but the storyline with his family was interesting to read.

Olivia & Kat – I’m putting these two together since they’re twins. After their mother walks out of them, Olivia and Kat separate themselves from the close family they once were. Olivia becomes subjected to rude comments because of her sexual choices. (there’s a scene where she received a unsolicited picture from a boy, and honestly, her reaction was so funny and I liked how she called the boy out on it) She’s a top favourite, and the way she cared for her sister, despite her distancing, I found admirable. Kat spends her time with practising for the school play or ditching school to play games all day. She doesn’t know how to let go of her anger, and that I can relate to.

Although, I have to say the description makes it seems like the teacher-student relationship is the main focus of the plot but really it’s one of the many sub-plots. Towards the end I felt like we’re steered into rooting for the teacher, but the relationship felt so unhealthy. Though from the way the story unfolds, it’s pretty clear there’s no abuse of a teacher position towards a student, but they were still the responsible adult and, in my opinion, they should’ve known better.

Overall, it’s an entertaining debut, with witty dialogue and complex characters. Riley Redgate is an author to watch.

Hardcover, 352 pages
Expected publication: March 8th 2016 by Amulet Books

Book Review: The Darkest Secret by Alex Marwood

26196106you can find the book at:

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Amazon
Barnes & Noble (unavailable)
Author website

my review:

Rating: ★★★☆☆

~ARC provided by NetGalley in exchange for an honest review~

Sean Jackson’s three-year-old twin daughter, Coco, has gone missing leaving only Ruby and no one has a clue what happened. The media blames their mother, but what really happened to the little girl? The Darkest Secret plays over two weekends, set twelve years apart. The first is in 2004 where various friends and family are attending Sean’s 50th birthday weekend while the second is set twelve years later during the weekend of Sean’s funeral.

This book was an intense read with engaging characters and drama that focuses on a terrible group of rich people. (for some reason, I can imagine this being a BBC program??) They were horrible- to themselves and to each other. I’ve never read a more self-absorbed group of people like these, which makes it even more fascinating to read as you read on trying to figure out what happened and hopefully learn the truth behind the disappearance of Coco.

Marwood has written a relentless novel that creates a group of egoistic characters, and throughout the narrative, there is a sense of complete horror as they reveal how far they will go. Overall, a thrilling novel which I felt had a slow start but once the story kicks in, it’s really compelling.

Format: ARC Kindle Edition
Expected publication: January 1st 2016 by Sphere
ASIN: B010RALUP6

 

Book Review: The Greatest Zombie Movie Ever by Jeff Strand

26534110you can find the book at:

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my review:

Rating: ★★★★☆

~ARC provided by NetGalley in exchange for an honest review~

Justin considers himself to be a director, and after making three failed horror movies, he and his filmmaking friends decide to take it up a notch and make something better than the last three put together. With a limiting budget, a barely completed script and a burning passion to complete this before summer starts, they decide to make The Greatest Zombie Movie Ever. And, by luck, they also have Justin’s crush Alicia Howtz as their female lead. But when the pressure of making a movie finally dawns on them, could Justin be actually directing The Worst Zombie Movie Ever?

Continue reading “Book Review: The Greatest Zombie Movie Ever by Jeff Strand”

BOOK REVIEW: Where Death is a Hunter by Christopher Stookey

you can find the book at:

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Amazon
Author Website (unavailable)

GoodReads summary:

Hannah Fâtier is a thirty-two-year-old physician fresh out of residency training. She’s just started her first job as an anesthesiologist at Deaconess Hospital in San Francisco, she’s bought a new home, and she’s engaged to be married.

In short, life is good for Hannah–until, one day, tragedy strikes. A patient under her care dies unexpectedly during a routine operation. An investigation into the case reveals the cause of death to be a basic medical error committed by Hannah. […] She begins to suspect someone has framed her for a fatal medical mistake she didn’t make. But who would do such a thing and why? And, more importantly, why did her patient really die that day on the operating table?

Where Death Is a Hunter is a medical mystery dealing with hospital death, a dark enigma, one doctor’s self-doubt, and the search for redemption.

my review:

Rating: ★★★★★

~E-copy provided by author in exchange for an honest review~

Hannah Fâtier is an anesthesiologist with a brand new job at Deaconess Hospital in San Francisco. Her life seems ordinary until a patient under her care dies before the routine operation had properly begun. Hannah is blamed due to a basic medical error, yet Hannah knows she isn’t to blame. Research into the patient Hannah discovers many inconsistencies. And learns that someone has framed her for a fatal medical mistake she knows she didn’t make.

Okay, I really enjoyed this book. I feel like thriller novels are now something I should look into more. Hannah is such a great character, I loved her so much and felt so sorry for her as she was put through all this terrible suffering. She lives an intriguing life which in turn increased a good tale. The novel only focuses on what’s essential, and Stookey creates a female lead that was great to root for. And the supporting cast – while they didn’t feel as fully fleshed out, but they were still likeable and believable. This is such a short review, but this book was so great! I could definitely see this as a tv show!

Overall, a detailed, thrilling novel that keeps you gripped until the very end!

BOOK REVIEW: Fire Colour One by Jenny Valentine

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Author Bio

goodreads summary:

Iris’s father, Ernest, is at the end of his life and she hasn’t even met him. Her best friend, Thurston, is somewhere on the other side of the world. Everything she thought she knew is up in flames.

Now her mother has declared war and means to get her hands on Ernest’s priceless art collection. But Ernest has other ideas. There are things he wants Iris to know after he’s gone. And the truth has more than one way of coming to light.

my review:

Rating:★★★★☆

~ARC provided by Netgalley in exchange for an honest review~

The title, Fire Colour One,  refers to the Yves Klein painting FC1, I googled it- it looks cool, but the book is Iris who lives with her mother, Hannah, and stepfather in America until Hannah announces one day that they are returning to the UK to see Iris’s father, Ernest, who is dying. Hannah is desperate to get her hands on Ernest’s art collection. Iris has no recollections of her Dad other than what her mother has told her. She has grown up with the knowledge her father wanted nothing to do with her. Gradually, Iris and Ernest start to bond and Iris hears Ernest’s side of the story, and the life he has lived ever since her mother left him years ago.

Continue reading “BOOK REVIEW: Fire Colour One by Jenny Valentine”

BOOK REVIEW: The Readers of Broken Wheel Recommend by Katarina Bivald

you can find the book at:

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Author Website

goodreads summary:

This is a book about books. All sorts of books, from Little Women and Harry Potter to Jodi Picoult and Jane Austen, from to Stieg Larsson to Joyce Carol Oates to Proust. It’s about the joy and pleasure of books, about learning from and escaping into them, and possibly even hiding behind them. It’s about whether or not books are better than real life.

It’s also a book about a Swedish girl called Sara, her elderly American penfriend Amy and what happens when you land a very different kind of bookshop in the middle of a town so broken it’s almost beyond repair.

Or is it?

my review:

Rating: ★★★☆☆

~ARC provided by Netgalley in exchange for an honest review~

Sara worked in a bookstore in Sweden and over time became friends with Amy, an elderly American who lived in Broken Wheel, Iowa, creating a bond of friendship over their love of books. So when Sara loses her job and is invited to Broken Wheel, Sara takes that chance.

But not everything has a fairy tale ending. Upon entering Broken Wheel, Sara learns that Amy has died and Broken Wheel isn’t at its best. No jobs, few businesses, Broken Wheel reeks of hopelessness. With the help from the townspeople, Sara decides to stay and starts up a bookstore in memory of Amy.

Sara is easily an identifiable character for me, a shy woman who escapes real life into the world of literature and this book was great to read. Filled with charm, and a weird (but loveable) array of characters, this book was a joy to read. Although the romance was light, it was still a story of love: love for books and friendship, this truly is a wonderful read.

However, the beginning of the book was intriguing to read; the responses to the friendship of Sara and Amy was interesting but as the book progressed, it did lose a bit of charm and felt like it was dragging on far too much. I wanted to care about the inhabitants of Broken Wheel, but a select few were often flat and blurred together.

Overall, the bookish element is enjoyable and satisfying to read as it’s pretty much constant and there was a load of lovely moments, including Amy’s letters to Sara..