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Showing posts with label paranormalcy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label paranormalcy. Show all posts

Friday, September 24, 2010

Paranormalcy by Kiersten White

Weird as it is working for the International Paranormal Containment Agency, Evie's always thought of herself as normal. Sure, her best friend is a mermaid, her ex-boyfriend is a faerie, she’s falling for a shape-shifter, and she’s the only person who can see through paranormals' glamours, but still. Normal.

Only now paranormals are dying, and Evie's dreams are filled with haunting voices and mysterious prophecies. She soon realizes that there may be a link between her abilities and the sudden rash of deaths. Not only that, but she may very well be at the center of a dark faerie prophecy promising destruction to all paranormal creatures.

So much for normal.

Review:

Paranormalcy was absolutely amazing! First of all, Evie was fabulous. I love sarcastic, strong characters. I also love girls who are really girly but kick major butt, because it's just so entertaining. Who doesn't love a girl that has a Taser--and isn't afraid to use it? I'm sure all of us girls wish we could take out some vampires with our bare hands. (Trust me, if I could have any weapon, I'd most certainly want a pink Taser covered in rhinestones.) She has such a great personality, and her voice itself was so strong that she felt very real. When I met Kiersten today, she compared Evie's voice to someone walking up to you and hitting you in the face with a bat--which, truly, hits it right on the dot. The way she views life is, also, so refreshing. She really is the personification of a true three-dimensional character. Evie has definitely become one of my favorite characters--ever.

Lend was absolutely amazing, too. I fell in love with him right alongside Evie. His paranormal power--the ability to change his appearance--was very creative, and made you sort of feel bad for him; I wonder how sick you'd get of nobody ever really seeing the real you. He was so great to Evie, and had a great sense of humor, too. Kiersten did a fantastic job at building their relationship; everything happened at just the right pace.

The physical world of the story was also amazing; Kiersten certainly has a way with words. Evie's offhand way of describing anything--she was, at times, brutally honest--helped set the scene and mood for the entire novel. This also helped getting you grounded in the story; it helped create the perfect fictional dream, and sucked you into the world of Evie and IPCA. Kiersten also was fabulous at making you second guess yourself; you never really knew who you could trust, and that was something I haven't seen in a while in YA fiction books. The cover is, also, gorgeous.

Lish--a mermaid, and Evie's best friend--was also another excellent character. She didn't speak English, so a computer translated everything she said--and replaced every curse word with "bleep", a hilarious habit that Evie picked up as well. I actually really liked majority of the supporting characters in the story, which is surprising for me (Even in Sophie Jordan's fabulous novel, Firelight, I had issues with a few secondary characters--such as Jacinda's irritating twin sister). Even the evil characters, such as the faerie Reth, had strong personalities and were like able in their own ways.

Overall, this book was fantastic--the best paranormal fiction novel I've read in a while, up there with Firelight (Sophie Jordan) for creativity, and way up there for everything else.


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Thursday, June 25, 2009

Book Review: Don't Judge a Girl by her Cover by Ally Carter

When Cammie Morgan arrives at her friend Macey's five star hotel for the Democratic National Convention-where Macey's father is about to receive the vice presidential nomination-she thinks she's in for an exciting end to her summer break. But if you're a Gallagher Girl, "exciting" and "deadly" are never far apart.

Things quickly go south when Macey is summoned to the hotel roof to shoot a PR piece with the presidential candidate's son. But instead of cameras, attackers descend from a helicopter and swarm the girls, commanding, "Grab her." After a narrow escape, Cammie and Macey find themselves at a top secret hideout owned by the Gallagher Academy. and thus begins Cammie's junior year at spy school.

Cammie doesn't need her genius IQ to see that the kidnapping attempt has changed everything, especially now that Macey is a major celebrity, and the school has been besieged by news crews. More disturbing, Cammie can't shake the suspicion that her mom and Mr. Solomon know more about the attack than they're letting on. After all, why weren't the attackers surprised to find themselves in combat with two teenage girls who handled themselves like seasoned pros?

But these suspicions won't stop Cammie from jumping at the chance to join Bex and Liz as Macey's private security team on the campaign trail. Before long, the girls are using their espionage skills at every turn, as Cammie gets closer and closer to the shocking truth . . . 

Review:

Fabulous! Absolutely, fabulous! I mean it's about a spy school, how much cooler can a book get? This book was very well written. It was definitely had more action and adventure than the previous books. The suspense built up much more rapidly, and the humor was still very there.

I adore the characters in these novels to no end. I love being in Cammie's head--she's strong and sarcastic, and also a fantastic spy. Throughout this novel, Cammie seems to gain more confidence, and you can always see the wheels turning. Liz has always been the braniac, but in this one she seemed much less vulnrable and stood her ground. Macey was, well, Macey, but you get to know her a lot better in this one.

As I mentioned earlier, this novel has a lot more action than the other books in this series. But, the downside to that is, there is very little romance, probably because the need for action overpowered it. So, while i really enjoyed the action, i was sort of missing the previous subplots of underlying romance.

With a kick and punch Ally Carter never seems to lack, Don't Judge a Girl by her Cover is a great book to just whizz through. The many plot twists kept you hanging on, and left you hungry for more. It leaves you with more questions than answers, which is both good and bad. I swear, this series just gets better and better.

This series would be fantastic for fans of Meg Cabot, the Maximum Ride series by James Patterson, and Paranormalcy by Kiersten White, all of which are hilarious and have kick-ass herioines/female main characters. 

Grade: A+

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