Showing posts with label Books to read in 2013. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Books to read in 2013. Show all posts

Monday, January 7, 2013

Thirst No. 4 The Shadow of Death Review

Thirst No. 4 The Shadow of Death
by Christopher Pike
Genre: YA, Paranormal
Format: Owned Paperback
Midnight Minute: Sita/Alisa is back, with a new body and old enemies that she's determined to destroy.
From Goodreads:
 Alisa is a five-thousand-year-old vampire, stronger and more cunning than her adversaries. But now she's trapped in the body of a newborn vampire and at the mercy of a terrible thirst. Worst of all, she's facing enemies whose fierce desire for domination grows ever stronger.

The immortal race the Telar is threatening to release a virus to decimate humanity. But Alisa and her friends can't take down the Telar on their own, and they must turn to the mysterious organization the IIC for help. But the IIC has secrets of its own and may have ulterior motives.

With two rivals and no one to trust, Alisa must rely on her dark side to defeat them. But it could cost her life, or her soul...


Midnight Thoughts:
~ Sita has more lives that a damn cat- she will always come back.  If Pike ever truly decides to kill Sita off it's going to be like Elvis- lots of people will still believe she's out there somewhere.  And I'm sure lots of fanfiction would pop up with clever ways for Pike to bring her back, again.
~ Sita and her Scooby gang are up against a clock- they need to stop the Telar from releasing a devastating virus on the human race, but...
~ They also have to contend with the IIC and their deadly Array. Rock, meet hard place. 
~ Our last vampire, Sita, tries hard not to kill innocent people, but in a new body her thirst is overwhelming, and so she does some bad, bad things.  
~ Despite the fact that everyone that ever gets close to Sita dies, she's mellowed some and has an actual circle of friends.  Her friends are a source of both strength and weakness for Sita, because she will always be more vulnerable because of how strongly she cares for others.
~ I get that Matt is all upset over Teri, but I'll admit, I was hoping that he and Sita would hook up.  I'm shallow that way.
~ I admire how Christopher Pike never dumbs down his YA novels.  Mysticism, ESP, complicated weapons, ancient gods?  Pike brings it all, and introduces quite a few topics you just don't see in YA these days. 
~ The gang soon learns the Array isn't the weapon they must fear- it's The Cradle! Dun dun duuuun!
~ Uses for Vampire Blood #909: Decoding secret passages in journals.  Human blood does not work, I know this because like Sita, I added a few drops of my blood to a spray bottle and sprayed it on the pages of my Harry Potter books, in the hopes that J.K. Rowling had some secret message only for me.  But she doesn't. :(
~ In order to defeat the Telar, Sita wants to join up with the IIC, which quite frankly I thought she should have done in the last book (because then maybe she wouldn't have gone all cannibal like she did in Thirst No. 3). 
~ So, at some point Sita is dealing with the evil Telar, the corrupt IIC, and then she gets this freaky, creepy familiar.  Can this vamp ever catch a break?  She doesn't even take a day off to watch movies or veg around the house.  This makes me sad, what's the point of immortality if every day is full of People/Ancient Races/Aliens/Creepy Children you must kill in order to have a day off? Sita needs to start a vampire union...
~ At times, reading this book is like the scene out of Pulp Fiction when Uma Thurman's character overdoses and gets a shot of pure adrenaline to the heart- the action is intense.  Pike balances this with down time, but Sita goes through A LOT in this fourth book.
~ Sita is an interesting character, for all of her strengths she has a lot of weaknesses, she can be stubborn, she can be impulsive.  It would have been easy to make her a Mary Sue because of all her abilities, but Sita is still very much human at heart. 
~ There is a decision that Sita makes in the end that left me cold, and I kept hoping it would turn out not to have happened, but I understand her reasoning even if I can't support it. 
~ I feel that there were some loose ends involving the police detective and his doctor wife that Sita tangles with early in the book, but again, there's a lot going on in this book- I'm glad I took notes! 
~ I am not in love with the cover model for Sita, she looks nothing like her. Not that I'm knocking the model's looks, since the only chance I have of making a book cover is if they ever use my picture for one of those People of Walmart books... The male model is tasty though.


Timeless Characters:
SO MANY CHARACTERS- I wish I'd had this list, because it's been awhile since I read book 3!
Sita- the last vampire, has a target on her back.
Seymour- Sita's very human, very brilliant writer friend.  I wish he'd get his own book!
Teri- Sita's great-great-a thousand times great-granddaughter and Olympian, her role is pretty small in this book.
Matt- Teri's boyfriend, the object of my lust, and half-vampire, half-Telar hottie. 
Shanti- telepath and part of Sita's gang.
Lisa French- teacher who is on the edges of Sita's gang, but the one who originally informed Sita of the IIC.
Paula- mother of John and possibly a modern day version of the Virgin Mary.
John- possibly a reincarnation of Christ or Krishna, plays a lot of video games.
Cynthia Brutran- leader of the IIC and all around bad ass woman.
The IIC- a billionaire company that uses psychics to make money, gain power, and kill.  
The Telar- ancient, immortal race who want to destroy humanity because they don't see them as worthy to walk the earth.  
Umara- Matt's Telar mom, and wife of Sita's lost love, Yaksha.
The Source- the high ranking jackwagons who run the Telar.
Professor Sharp- the man who mentored Cynthia and the other founders of IIC before his technology was stolen by them. 
Freddy- hippie, and ex-boyfriend of Cynthia, used to be part of IIC before things got so heavy, man.
Mary- Freddy's amazing partner who's got some big secrets.
Jolie- psychic and psycho daughter of Cynthia.
Lark- leader of the children that make up the Lens of The Cradle- sociopath of the highest order. 
Haru- leader of the Telar- related to Umara.
Yaksha- yeah, he's been dead awhile, but his memory looms large in this book.
Midnight Moment:
I found several scenes in the book midnight-able.  I enjoyed Professor Sharp's explanation of how the IIC began and the ESP trials, I found it fascinating. Also, I'm thinking of a number between 1 and 100- what is it? 

When Sita comes back to life, she can't remember what happened to her in the afterlife, and I really enjoyed the chapter that dealt with what went down.  It was very Greek mythology-ish, and I loved it!



Stop The Clock:
Honestly, if you've already read the first 3 books, then you just need to keep going.  Sita is never boring! 


Christopher Pike— Website |Simon & Schuster's Page (his official site is still under construction)





Thirst No. 4 gets a Midnight Book Rating of: 


Challenges: A-Z challenge, Christopher Pike reading Challenge, TBR and Mt. TBR challenge. 
Pin It!

Friday, January 4, 2013

What Happened to Cass McBride Review

What Happened to Cass McBride?
by Gail Giles
Genre: YA, Thriller
Format: Audio
Midnight Minute: Popular overachiever Cass is kidnapped by a young man bent on getting revenge for his brother's death. 
From Goodreads:

Kyle Kirby has planned a cruel and unusual revenge on Cass McBride, the most popular girl in school, for the death of his brother David. He digs a hole. Drugs Cass. Kidnaps her. Puts her in a box-underground. He buries her alive. But Kyle makes a fatal error: Cass knows the power of words. She uses fear as her weapon to keep her nemesis talking - and to keep herself breathing during the most harrowing 48 hours of her life.
A vivid, complex, and insightful work of suspense.
Midnight Thoughts:
~I purchased this audiobook on a whim.  I really like narrator Khristine Hvam (she does a lot of audiobooks, including the Daughter of Smoke and Bones series), and she's one of the narrators in this book.  Plus it was on sale.  And late at night.   I had never heard of this book or the author, but I ended up really grateful that I took the chance!
~I thought at the beginning of the book I understood Cass and Kyle.  It was kind of easy, at least for my warped little mind, to root for Kyle.  But as the story unfolds I was struck by how complicated Giles managed to make the characters in such a short novel- the unabridged audio is only 3 and 1/2 hours long!
~The story is told by 3 different characters, sliding in and out of time.  One minute we're in the present, then in the past, and then four days ago, or four years ago.  I didn't have any problems keeping up, and I liked the way it unfolded.  
~David was such a sad character, but at the same time he's not completely innocent.  If he hadn't taken Cass's note then would he have still done what he did?
~The part where Det. Ben (sorry, don't remember his last name) described his young partner as a cocker spaniel on speed was hilarious, and accurate. 
~I really enjoyed the investigation that Ben does, especially the interview with Cass's (wait, is it Cass' or Cass's?) mom.  She really changed how I saw Cass.  I think her name was Letha or Aletha?  It's obviously hard to tell on an audio.
~The ending was great!  I thought that it was surprising, but realistic considering what all had gone down.  I really want to read more by this author!
~I thought this subject matter was very relevant in time where we're much more aware of bullying and the damage that it can do.  But this book is only about that on the surface, there's a lot more going on then Cass rejecting David.  
~Despite the dark overtones to this story (and trust me, it gets fairly twisted) there's also a few moments of genuine humor.  With something this intense, the few laughs were especially welcomed. 
~Giles owes me some gas money, due to the fact that I purposely drove around longer so that I could finish the audiobook.  I will accept a WaWa gift card, Ms. Giles. ;)


Timeless Characters:
Cass McBride- You know the term Ice Princess?  Yeah, Cass kind of embodies all that it implies, but like most stereotypes, there's more going on with her. 

Kyle Kirby- he's cute, which may explain why I cut him so much slack in the beginning, and he's determined to punish Cass for his younger brother's death and does so in a very elaborate manner. 

David Kirby- unlike the fate of Cass, we know in the beginning that David is dead, and that he wasn't the golden boy Kyle is. Sometimes the clothes do not make the man (right, George Michaels?- a million points if you get that song reference!)

Ben- detective, smart, clever and patient.  I'm just filling in the blanks and casting him in my head as someone ridiculously handsome. His partner's name might have been Roger or Robert, but he annoyed me so he doesn't make this list. This is the power of the blogger!

Mr. McBride- Cass's dad.  He's a donkey's behind.  And any man that decorates his entire home in white on white on cream without even asking his wife should be smacked.  Hard.

Letha- sorry, have no idea how to spell her name, but she's Cass's mom and she seems like the perfect kind of mom.  I actually really liked the little bit of her we get to see. 

Mrs. Kirby- David and Kyle's shrew of a mother.  Literally, a shrew.  Okay, not literally, because shrew's can't mate with humans because this isn't a YA Paranormal story, but if it was, she'd be a Were-Shrew.  Truth.

The Chick In The Bathroom Who Sees Cass Throw Up And Immediately Thinks She Must Be Pregnant- I can't remember her name, but I'd totally hang with her in the girl's bathroom and gossip.  



Midnight Moment:
There were several times where this book shocked me.  The first one was the manner of David's death and how Cass's friend describes what her coroner mother saw. It kind of gave me the oogies. 
The ending.  I thought there was really only two ways to go, and I thought the one way would be a bit of a cop out, but Giles managed to twist it so that I was surprised.



Stop The Clock:
I am so on board with YA Thrillers!  Giles doesn't water this down any despite dealing with younger characters, which I appreciate.  90's teen thrillers often wussed out and hahaha, the victim wasn't really dead, it was Karo syrup!  Which is why I was practically forced to read Christopher Pike and Stephen King and John Saul.  Because the audio is so short, it would make an excellent Readathon listen!


Gail Giles — Website |Gail Giles





What Happened to Cass McBride gets a Midnight Book Rating of: 
Pin It!

Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Top Ten Tuesday: I Vow to Read These in 2013!

Top Ten Tuesdays is a meme hosted by The Broke and the Bookish.  Since I'm trying to get back into being more active in the book blogging community, you'll be seeing more participation in this as the year goes on. 

Today's top ten is: 

January 1, 2013: Top Ten Books I Resolve To Read In 2013

1. The Scorpio Races by Maggie Stiefvater
2. Bitterblue by Kristin Cashore (finally!) 
3. Thirst No. 4 by Christopher Pike
4. Beauty Queens by Libba Bray
5. Lola and the Boy Next Door by Stephanie Perkins
6. The Casual Vacancy by J.K. Rowling
7. How to Flirt with a Naked Werewolf by Molly Harper
8. Size 12 and Ready to Rock by Meg Cabot
9. Blameless (the Parasol Protectorate #2) by Gail Carriger
10. The Screwtape Letters by C.S. Lewis

These are all books I thought I'd get to in 2012 and didn't, so I'm making the effort to get to them in asap in 2013!

What books are you making a priority this year?

Pin It!
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...
 
Blog Design by Use Your Imagination Designs all images form the Attic Oddities kit by Irene Alexeeva