Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Liesl & Po Review

Liesl & Po
by Lauren Oliver
From Goodreads:
Liesl lives in a tiny attic bedroom, locked away by her cruel stepmother. Her only friends are the shadows and the mice—until one night a ghost appears from the darkness. It is Po, who comes from the Other Side. Both Liesl and Po are lonely, but together they are less alone.
That same night, an alchemist's apprentice, Will, bungles an important delivery. He accidentally switches a box containing the most powerful magic in the world with one containing something decidedly less remarkable
Will's mistake has tremendous consequences for Liesl and Po, and it draws the three of them together on an extraordinary journey.
From New York Times bestselling author Lauren Oliver comes a luminous and magnificent novel that glows with rare magic, ghostly wonders, and a true friendship that lights even the darkest of places.
My Thoughts: I posted on Twitter that I wanted to hug this book, and that pretty much sums up my feelings.  You know that tingle you get when you pick up a book, read the first few lines, and know immediately that you're going to love it?  Liesl & Po was that book for me. Liesl is a cute, sad little girl.  Her father has just died after a lingering illness, and she's been kept in her attic room for months and months by her selfish Stepmother.  The one solace left to her is her drawings, and she draws late at night.  Because of this talent, she attracts the attention of Po the ghost and Will, the alchemist's battered assistant.  When Will accidentally switches a box of magic with the ashes of Liesl's father, the adventure begins.

Liesl, Po and Po's ghostly animal companion, Bundles, set off to return what she thinks is her father's ashes to the place where her mother is buried, Will is on the run from Merv the alchemist and the Lady Premiere, to whom the magic was promised.  Joining in the chase is Mo, who just wants to give Will a hat, Augusta Hortense Varice Morbower, Liesl's scheming stepmother, a nosy old woman on a train, and a black-haired thief. 

It's a wonderful fairy tale, with a touch of Dickens, but more like A Christmas Carol than Oliver Twist.  The characters, especially the secondary ones, are wonderfully odd.  Merv the alchemist reminds me a bit of Vizzini the Sicilian from The Princess Bride, only instead of mumbling "Inconceivable!" all the time, Merv's favorite word, in regards to Will, is "useless".  I mentioned to someone on Goodreads that Liesl & Po was the type of book that I could almost hear Jim Dale, narrator of the Harry Potter books and The Night Circus, reading aloud.  Turns out, he does do the narration for Liesl & Po on Audible.  I plan on downloading it later since my copy of Liesl & Po is part of an ARC tour.  The same goodreads friend asked me how it compared to Lauren Oliver's other books, Before I Fall and Delirium, but I can't compare them, all are well written, all are good, and all three books have a completely different feel to them.  You might love one and not the other two, or love two (in my case Delirium and Liesl & Po) and just like one (Before I Fall).  I'm pretty impressed that Lauren Oliver has the ability to be such a writing chameleon but still keeps her awesomeness.

Here's some quotes I loved, but keep in mind that I read the ARC so I don't know if these made it into the final version that's on sale now:
"All children were the same to him: strange and sticky and best avoided, like an upright variety of jellyfish."

"It was a waste of time.  It was as the alchemist would have said, useless.  (Useless was one of the alchemist's favorite words, and he used it interchangeably to describe Will's plans, thoughts, work, appearance, and general self hood.).

"Coincidences; mix-ups; harmless mistakes and switches. And so a story is born."

"There was something very disturbing about hearing the Lady Premiere's voice so soft and slippery sounding.  It was off, somehow, like seeing a bunch of roses laid over a rotting corpse."

"They were fragile, too easily broken and dismantled: They had bones that broke and skin that tore and hearts that gave up with a sigh and rolled over."

"It did not help when Liesl began mummering to herself (or so it seemed to them; for when they saw a flicker or flash or shimmer of light, they thought Tick of the eyes instead of Ghost or Magic."
As much as I really loved Liesl, Po, Bundles and Will, my favorite character was Mo.  Mo is a guard for the Lady Premiere, and Mo (as in slow as Molasses), is a simple, sweet man who loves hot chocolate.  Because he's been teased by the other guards for drinking it, he hides his preference by sipping out of a thermos labeled Coffee.  I once ordered a Peppermint Hot Chocolate from coffee shop inside of a grocery store in Oklahoma.  I love Peppermint Hot Chocolate, I long for it all year round until it's fall/winter and it's readily available.  But on this occasion, the coffee shop worker asked if it was for my kid.  Now, I don't have any children and there weren't any standing around me, so I was confused why she was asking, so I just said no.  And she seemed surprised and told me that Peppermint Hot Chocolate was usually ordered by kids.  I felt vaguely offended, but forgave her as the drink was delicious.  Hot chocolate should not just be for kids!  So Mo won my heart, and it only took a few sentences.

Liesl and Po gets a Midnight Book Rating of:

*I received a copy of this ARC through Around the World ARC Tours, but all thoughts, opinions and snark are my own.
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4 comments:

  1. Oh my God, Kate, after reading your review I was thinking to myself that I must remember to add this book to my tbr shelf on goodreads and hopefully get to it soon.

    But then after I read the quotes you added from the book I was like "I MUST GO BUY THIS NOW!!!"

    It was the line... ""Coincidences; mix-ups; harmless mistakes and switches. And so a story is born."... that gave me goosebumps!

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  2. Oh please! Hot chocolate is chocolate! What woman wouldn't want it?! Back to the book. I haven't read Delirium yet but I like Before I Fall so I know I like Oliver's writing. This one sounds fun with a bunch of great characters and I'm with Bittner, after reading the quotes I'm definitely adding it to my TBR shelf!

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  3. I absolutely love it when I react to a book the way you did to this one!

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  4. This is on my to read list. I have it on my Kindle and should obviously start reading it!

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Leave a comment, you know you want to! Here's hoping that your next book is a Midnight Read!

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