Tuesday, November 22, 2016

STARFLIGHT BY MELISSA LANDERS {review}


Hardcover369 pages
Published February 2nd 2016 by Disney-Hyperion
Rating: ★★★



Starflight is a quick, fun caper in the vein of a teenage Firefly, complete with characters on the run from the law, rough space pirates, corporate corruption, and of course, teen romance.

Solara is eighteen, an orphan and was recently convicted of minor crimes, leading to tattoos across her knuckles. She's desperate to leave the rigid, hard place she lives for the Outer Rim, terraformed planets far past the end of civilization, frontier worlds where they might need a mechanic and won't care about her past.

Doran is also eighteen. He's everything that Solara isn't: he's rich, he's spoiled, he's a dick, and he's her old classmate she beat for an award. I personally think Doran could have been an even better character if he was actually a girl and the inevitable romance was queer. Now that we've got our two perspective characters, one male, one female, with a heaping dose of snark and dislike between the two we've got our obvious romance plot set and we're off to the races.

I mock because I'm tired of straight white teen romance as it's the most common thing in YA. However, I actually quite liked the romance in Starflight. Doran's journey from spoiled jerkwad to loyal friend and crewmember is enjoyable; Solara and Doran's alternating perspective works well for the plot as you can read both of their feelings change before their relationship does. The romance is one of the best aspects of this story.

The other characters on the ship all have their own secrets and motivations, some of which are revealed in the book, some of which are clearly left for the sequel (it features two other crew members as perspective characters). They work together well and that works for the book. I had a real soft spot for the tiny ship mascot, a tiny sugar bear named Acorn. I'm not totally dead inside. Add in various gangs of space pirates and the government chasing them and you've got a story that never truly gives you time to rest, rocketing from action scene to action scene.

Sunday, October 30, 2016

CROOKED KINGDOM BY LEIGH BARDUGO {review}


Hardcover, 546 pages
Published September 20th 2016 by Henry Holt and Company
Rating: ★★★★★


[WARNING: MAJOR SPOILERS AFTER READ MORE]


Six of Crows and Crooked Kingdom worked together really well as a duology. With the first book more of a heist, fast-paced and relatively straight-forward, Crooked Kingdom is a complicated con, with twists and turns that wrap up all the loose threads from both books.

Kaz Brekker is again the standout character, his brilliant mind and ruthless ambition make him fascinating to read. The conflict between his desire to destroy Pekka Rollins and his complex feelings for Inej provides the most interesting threads, particularly when it comes to Kaz's inability to touch another person's skin without flashbacks and a panic attack.

Pekka Rollins and Jan Van Eck were suitable villains, the extent of their malice expanding from Six of Crows. Van Eck in particular was a great villain, serving to expand the perspective of his son, Wylan, who did not get his own point of view chapters in the previous book. Wylan's relatively innocent disposition works well in contrast to the personalities of the other characters, particularly with Jesper, with whom he starts a sweet romance.

Monday, October 17, 2016

ONCE IN A TOWN CALLED MOTH BY TRILBY KENT {review}


Hardcover, 224 pages
Published September 6th 2016 by Tundra Books
Rating: ★★★★

Once in a Town Called Moth is the kind of book you give a teenager if you want to introduce them to Canadian literature.

The premise is interesting enough: a young teenage girl and her father leave their small Mennonite community in Bolivia and settle in Toronto. Why they left is a major thread of the story.

The main character, Ana, is fourteen and just starting high school. After growing up in a reserved and small community, the city - and high school - is a bizarre world she's never before encountered. Ana is a lovely narrator, expressing how she is caught between worlds and emotions with aplomb.

The narrative switches between the present in Toronto and Ana's recollections of Colony Felicidad in Bolivia, which works in more than one way by revealing more of her past as well as containing pieces to the emotional puzzle Ana hopes to solve about her missing mother.

At just over 200 pages, Once in a Town Called Moth is a very quick read with only a small cast of characters and no romance. It's about Ana's struggle with family and identity, which makes it stand apart from a good number of other YA books. I thoroughly enjoyed it and would definitely recommend it as a relatively quick intro to the Canlit genre.

Sunday, October 16, 2016

SIX OF CROWS BY LEIGH BARDUGO {review}


Hardcover, 546 pages
Published September 29th 2015 by Henry Holt and Company
Rating: ★★★★★

There was a lot of hype for this book, which put me off for a while as I often find myself left cold by the most popular YA, but luckily I very much enjoyed Six of Crows.

While it's fairly obvious that the book takes place in a pre-imagined world from another series, it actually made the book more enjoyable to have not read the others. Feeling dropped into another world is one of my favourite immersive techniques for writing and it worked particularly well for Six of Crows.

Each character was interesting in their own right, their motivations and pasts intricate and made the characters come alive. I particularly liked the complex relationship between Nina and Matthias, I felt that was more intricately written than most bland 'opposites attract' romances in YA. I also really enjoyed Inej - there was something about her I found easy to connect to.

One quibble however is that the characters are aged 16 to 18. It felt a bit ridiculous because based on their backstories and the roles they played in the story. I kept thinking they were each about five or so years older - still young, but not children. It made me wonder if the author made them teenagers so that the book would qualify as YA rather than any narrative need for the characters to be that age.

But overall, it was a fun, fast-paced heist book and I greatly enjoyed it.

Monday, August 29, 2016

AND I DARKEN BY KIERSTEN WHITE {review}


Hardcover, 475 pages
Published June 28th 2016 by Delacorte Press
Rating: ★★★★★



Where do I start with this book? I loved it. It was rich, vibrant and beautiful in so many ways.

The story is told in alternating chapters by brother and sister, Radu and Lada. Due to weak rule of their father, Radu and Lada are traded to the Ottoman Empire in exchange the safety of their home country of Wallachia. This worked particularly well as Lada and Radu were both full-bodied characters, their voices crisp and distinct, even as young children.

Radu and Lada accidentally meet the Sultan's third son, a young boy their age, and befriend him. From there the book truly starts. There is so much between the three of them that it's hard to label it a 'love triangle' as the relationships between Radu, Lada and Mehmed change and grow as the novel progresses. It is never boring or tedious because the love shared by the three of them is complex, complicated and sometimes very dark.

Lada is a brilliant protagonist. She's vicious, clever and passionate; her personality is almost too much to be contained. It is made clear to the reader early on that she is not like the 'ordinary' people who wish to live and love - Lada belongs to Wallachia. Her country is her first and only true love. She's fascinating to read. Radu, on the other hand, is sensitive and intelligent. He's a great counterpoint to Lada's calculated brutality and also fascinating to read. His homosexuality, rumoured historically, is explicit in the book. I loved that.

I just absolutely devoured the entire book. The language is rich and beautiful, the characters full and complex, and the story was delicious. It follows history a lot closer than other YA historical fiction but plays around just enough.

Wednesday, August 24, 2016

THE ABYSS SURROUNDS US BY EMILY SKRUTSKIE {review}


Hardcover, 273 pages
Published February 8th 2016 by Flux
Rating: ★★★★★



So not only have I been captured by pirates - I've had the misfortune of being taken in by theatrical ones

I loved this book. Actually, more than that, I have been WAITING for this book. YA sci-fi/fantasy books are chock full of brave teenage narrators that are engaging and engrossing but almost all of them are achingly, depressingly heterosexual.

Not here. Cassandra Leung, our protagonist, has dated girls in high school and has feelings for a young pirate girl named Swift. That's a major part of the book, not the main plot, but their relationship weaves itself through the narrative.

The Abyss Surrounds Us is a bit like Naomi Novik's His Majesty's Dragon meets Waterworld, except it vastly improves upon both by having the main character be an Asian teenage lesbian rather than the dull, dime-a-dozen straight white man. The plot isn't as complex as Novik's writing, of course, it's relatively simple and straightforward.

I found the conflict between the pirate captain, Santa Elena, and Cassandra to be far more interesting than the portions of the book dedicated to Bao, the titanic creature bred to attack ships. Santa Elena is cruel, ruthless and clever, ensuring the loyalty of the crew and attempting to improve their success rate. I wanted more of her. The lack of emotional connection between Bao and anyone else, including Cassandra, just made it hard to connect or particularly care about his fate. Especially when compared to the machinations of the far more interesting female characters.
Bao sees the hurricane behind Santa Elena, and he respects it. He sees no storm in me. Not yet.
The end definitely left me excited to read the second part; I want to find out what happens between Cassandra, Swift and Santa Elena. Though Santa Elena's presence was felt throughout the novel, always hanging over the burgeoning relationship of Cassandra and Swift, she was not heavily featured and I hope that there is more of her in the future.

Wednesday, March 2, 2016

SHALLOW GRAVES BY KALI WALLACE {review}


Hardcover, 360 pages
Published January 26th 2016 by Katherine Tegen Books
Rating: ★★★



I have no idea what I expected from Shallow Graves but I was pleasantly surprised.

Breezy Lin was murdered. Then she wakes up. She can't remember exactly what happened, but now she can tell who has killed another person before. Unable to go home, Breezy wanders, eventually finding herself at a scary religious cult that has some nefarious connections. I found it easy to get into Breezy's mindset and follow her story without thinking "but why?" I can't get enough of interesting perspective characters who are neither white nor straight (Breezy is biracial and bisexual).

Kali Wallace has created a really interesting story and a sinister world in Shallow Graves, fantastical in a modern way, mixing standard paranormal monsters into every day life. All sorts of creatures exist in all sorts of places that Breezy had never before noticed.

The story doesn't have the strongest plot, but in some ways, I liked that. Most of the novel is simply following Breezy along on her journey as she discovers terrifying things around her and about herself. Because Breezy is new to this paranormal world of witches and monsters beyond her wildest imagination, learning along with Breezy is interesting in and of itself. 

Thursday, February 11, 2016

GLASS SWORD BY VICTORIA AVEYARD {review}


Hardcover,  444 pages
Published February 9th 2016 by HarperTeen
Rating: ★★★



Glass Sword picks up only moments after the end of the previous book, meaning that there is no skipping over any fallout of the previous book's explosive climax. While a lot of Red Queen was about the rise of Mare Barrow, the lightning girl, the girl with red blood and silver powers, Glass Sword was about her slow destruction, in every way. In a lot of ways, that sets this book and its protagonist apart and elevates the book in an ocean of similar YA dystopian fantasy.

The main plot of Glass Sword involves Mare Barrow and a small team of followers racing against newly crowned Silver King Maven and the mind controlling queen mother to either capture or recruit 'newbloods' - people like Mare and her brother, Shade - on a commandeered military plane. Because of that it's heavily reminiscent of Mockingjay and Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows; though I feel that Aveyard manages to dig deeper into Mare, so that you don't realize you've been reading the deconstruction of her until she does.

I surprisingly enjoyed the continuation of the relationships between Mare and what I assume are her 'love interests' exiled prince Cal, childhood friend Kilorn, and even her cruel, turncoat ex-fiance Maven. Each relationship went in interesting directions, with Aveyard managing to sidestep obnoxious love triangles (the true villain of YA fantasy) and a whole trope of cliches. I actually quite loved the way Maven cast a shadow over the entire book despite appearing only rarely, it added atmosphere. His petulant, clever brutality makes Maven a dangerous villain, while his age and desire to control Mare add a subtly menacing sexual vibe to his evil. I also loved the relationship between Mare and her brother Shade, though I'm disappointed in the lack of Farley, who is a very interesting character.

Wednesday, January 27, 2016

THE CHAOS BY NALO HOPKINSON {review}


Hardcover, 256 pages
Published April 17th 2012 by Margaret K. McElderry Books
Rating: ★★★★



I had a lot of fun with this book. First off, a bit of background: Sojourner 'Scotch' Smith is a regular 17 year old biracial girl living in Toronto; she doesn't quite fit in anywhere, she's fighting with her best friend, and she's desperate to win an upcoming dance battle so she can afford the deposit to move into an apartment with her brother.

Normal issues. For a normal world. Except things aren't exactly normal. Scotch has a thick sticky blackness growing on her in places. And strange monsters visible only to her float around her at the most inopportune times. It only gets weirder from there.

Scotch and her brother Rich, an aspiring rapper-poet with stage fright, head downtown to an open-mic night at a bar. She befriends a truly great character, Punum, in the bathroom at the bar and then her brother is absorbed by a glowing ball, a volcano appears in the middle of Lake Ontario, and trippy things start happening. This is the part where everything got original. It was a truly trippy experience reading this book, mixing multicultural Toronto with Jamaican legends and LSD.

Scotch was a great protagonist. She's a typical teenager - disagreeable, impulsive and occasionally says stupid shit she doesn't mean -, but she's also compassionate, loyal and smart. She's complex and that makes her entirely endearing. I'd read an entire series about her, paranormal or not. The supporting characters are fun and fully characterized as well, each with their own personalities. I particularly liked Punum, an out-spoken Sri Lankan butch lesbian punk in a wheelchair, and the way she challenged Scotch.

I hope this is the future of YA because smart, well-written and diverse is just what I want.