A Court of Thorns and Roses by Sarah J. Maas

I had to see what all the fuss was about. If people all over the internet were recommending this series, it had to be good. And having read Maas’ Throne of Glass series, and having enjoyed it immensely, I suspected that everyone was not exaggerating. They were not.

I live for fantasy novels. I love magic, spells and curses, other worldly creatures, strenuous quests, puzzling mysteries, and betrayals that make me gasp out loud. This book has it all. If you have read the Throne of Glass series and are looking for another great story to get obsessed with, this is it. It feels like a combination of Hunger Games and Throne of Glass, and also a little bit like the stories from Grimm’s fairy Tales, but it is still its own unique, adventurous fantasy. 

Feyre is just trying to survive the winter, hunting for her family, when she kills the wrong sort of wolf. Her mistake costs her everything, as she is forced to make the choice between immediate death or leaving her family forever, the very ones of whom depend on her for their survival. Thinking that even though her useless sisters and disabled father may die of starvation or exposure without her, becoming a captive is better than death, and she leaves the mortal world to live the rest of her life in the faery realm. She is immersed into a beautiful, but dangerous world, where she is so weak as a mortal that just about everything can kill her. All the creatures seem to be speaking to her in riddles, and her lack of knowledge about the ways of the faery’s makes trying to solve anything close to impossible. The build up is amazing, and when everything is finally revealed, it is delivered by an expert storyteller who leaves out no details. I don’t think I need to tell you that as soon as I am done writing the review for this book, I will immediately be opening up the sequel.

Roald Dahl’s Book of Ghost Stories

I was very intrigued when I saw this book, because I love Roald Dahl’s stories, James and the Giant Peach and Matilda most of all. I had never read a ghost story composed by him, and I was slightly disappointed in reading the introduction to find out that the stories within were not ones he had written. The collection is the result of research, consisting of the reading of hundreds of short stories, and these few he deemed scary enough to be made into episodes for a potential television show. The show never happened, but Dahl wanted the stories to reach others. 

I’m sure in another time, like, when the book was first published, these stories would have been a little bit scary. But they are from another time even more distant than that. None of the stories in this collection scared me. I find it hard to believe that anyone reading this when it was first published in 1983 would have been frightened by any of the tales. I think it more likely that the stories in this book would have scared someone reading it when I imagine a lot of them were originally written, which I am guessing is around the end of the 19th century. 

So all I can say about this collection of scary stories is that it is a great example of how the bar moves with time. What was once guaranteed to frighten people over a hundred years ago would probably not even make a person gasp in the slightest now. This could just be me, I think I do have a very liberal opinion of what constitutes being scary, but how could I not when I was literally brought up watching Scream, A Nightmare on Elm Street, and Poltergeist. The only way to judge for yourself would be to read this Book of Ghost Stories. 

Bite of Justice by R.L. Caulder

In the final book of the Blood Oath series we get the intense, filthy, spicy scene between all four main characters that we have been waiting for, definitely a four out of five on my spicy scale. Alina and her three fated mates start to figure out how the dynamic is going to work with four of them being connected by the means of a bond that can only be broken both physically and emotionally, but seemingly not spiritually, through death. Everything else that has been going on, between Alina and the slayers, the plot to overthrow Dracula, is resolved, with the exception of one thing.

There is one big unanswered plot point that I was really bothered by once I realized that it was not going to be discussed further. The author never explains what was going on with the violent deaths that were occuring at the school, the very deaths that forced the administration to send all the students home. I think this may have been done purposefully as a way for the author to get you to read her other books. On the authors website, as well as at the end of this book, you are directed to where you can purchase additional novels that follow Alexandra, Alina’s demon friend, as well as Alora and her family, who happen to rule Hell. 

Another disappointment, though it was not as all encompassing as I found it in Book 3, were the grammatical and punctuation errors. This is just something I cannot let go of in a book that has been, or at least I assume has been, professionally edited, reviewed, and published. Books like this that exist pretty much purely for the purpose of being an exciting, fantasy, controversial romance, novels that don’t have much else going for them, should at least be well edited. I’m not completely ragging on this genre, I mean look at me, I read plenty of these types of books. They serve a purpose, and we all know what that purpose is. I would just appreciate it if there was a bit more care put into the final edits. I do apologize for the rant, but I feel like it is long overdue and this series just put me over the edge a bit. 

I hope to have a book review for you next week that will be full of praise and nothing but kind words. I have been working on a very long history book for several weeks that I have been enjoying very much. Hopefully between now and next week I will have found myself with enough free time to finish it.

Verity by Colleen Hoover

After seeing this book mentioned frequently amongst readers of a particular genre I decided that I had to read it. I then went into this book knowing only what was summarized on the back cover. I was pleasantly surprised with the story, which goes back and forth between the present day and the not so distant past. We follow Lowen as she struggles to get her life back in order while also trying to get the extensive notes of an unfinished book series in order. Then there is Verity, the talented writer who no longer has the ability to finish her series, the very same series that Lowen is trying to make outlines for as she goes through the piles of papers that Verity has strewn about her large office. The themes comprised a mixture of loss, mystery, thriller, romance, desire, and macabre, which worked extremely well together and I loved it. 

I could see this becoming a film one day, something which has a racy and perplexing feel comparable to that of Gone Girl, which also happens to be an incredible book. It was a delight to finally read a well written book that was also a little bit sexy, but not overly so, one that didn’t try too hard and was not the main draw of the story. I definitely need more books like this in my life and I am probably going to do some research towards finding ones that have a similar feel. If you couldn’t tell, I am encouraging you to read this book, it is worth it.

Bite of Vengeance by R.L. Caulder

This book is absolutely riddled with grammatical, spacing, and punctuation errors, it comes out on top with the greatest number of mistakes I have ever found in a published work. It was incredibly frustrating to have to stop reading with such frequency as I had to pause and reach for a post it to mark a flaw, of which I already said, there were many. Every time I found a mistake I hoped it would be the last one and I tried to let it go, but at some point I just gave up on being able to think well of the author and the persons responsible for publishing this mess. You can see my picture of shame along with this post, the dark pink being all the errors I found and the light pink being the spicy scenes. It is kind of embarrassing that there are more errors than there are exciting plot moments, especially when you consider that people usually buy these types of books specifically for the dark romance and not living out a fantasy of being a book editor. 

I just really wanted to get that out of the way before I review the actual story. Again, it is very fast paced, events taking place over hours and days rather than weeks. I like that for the majority of this book they are out of the school and in the real world. Honestly, all the plot focused around the school is quite boring, we never get much of an insight into the subjects they study, which I would have found very interesting. The real world, the world in which vampires live alongside slayers and other magical beings is so much better since we get to see them in their day to day life. 

I have one more book in this series left to go. I do want to see how the story ends, but I am more interested in seeing if the pages have been edited better than its predecessor. I don’t know what went wrong here, I didn’t find any errors in the first book, and I only found three in the second one. I’ll let you know how things turned out next week.