Showing posts with label HarperTeen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label HarperTeen. Show all posts

Friday, 27 July 2012

Review: Epic Fail by Claire LaZebnik

Epic Fail by Claire LaZebnik
Released: 2nd August 2011
Publisher: HarperTeen
Source: Bought for Kindle
Rating: 3/5

Goodreads description:

At Coral Tree Prep in Los Angeles, who your parents are can make or break you. Cast in point:

- As the son of Hollywood royalty, Derek Edwards is pretty much prince of the school - not that he deigns to acknowledge many of his loyal subjects.
- As the daughter of the new principal, Elise Benton isn't exactly on everyone's must-sit-next-to-at-lunch list.

When Elise's beautiful sister catches the eye of the prince's best friend, Elise gets to spend a lot of time with Derek, making her the envy of every girl on campus. Except she refuses to fall for any of his rare smiles and instead warms up to his enemy, the surprisingly charming social outcast Webster Grant. But in this hilarious tale of fitting in and flirting, not all snubs are undeserved, not all celebrity brats are bratty, and pride and prejudice can get in the way of true love for only so long.


My thoughts:

I am a tiny bit obsessed with Pride and Prejudice. Last year, I went through this phase of watching the film (the Keira Knightley one, not a fan of the BBC adaptation...I know, you're all looking at me like I've just kicked your child right now) every single night for about a month. Not kidding. Every.Single.Night.  So when I saw a book that's a modern retelling...it had to be mine. 

I thought LaZebnik did a fantastic job of capturing the sisters...though she left Mary out for some reason, the other 4 were fantastically similar to the Bennett sisters. I really liked Elise, I think Elizabeth would've approved of her attitude and outlook.At times she did let her insecurities get to her, more so than Lizzie would've, but I figured this was appropriate for the time, I think even Lizzie Bennett would've felt somewhat intimidated in the situations Elise found herself in.  Her relationship with Webster was so close to that of Mr Wichkham, and the whole situation with him was given a modern twist that really worked, yet stayed true to the spirit of P&P. I thought Juliana was really similar to Jane, in terms of her personality and attutide towards Chase (MR Bingley) and the two sisters who were Kitty and Lydia were pretty much perfect.

In fact, I thought overall it was a fantastic modern interpretation. I felt the plot and the characters were brought bang up to date, and for the most part it followed the story faithfully without being a word for word rewrite, which I liked. The only aspect I struggled with was the parents. The elder Bentons were....odd. They had the whole 'don't quite fit in with society air' that worked, but while Mrs Benton was obsessed with the idea of her daughters getting boyfriends just like Mrs Bennett is obsessesed  with her daughters getting husbands....she was also strangely strict about the weirdest things like no cellphones, what her daughters wore etc, and the combination of the two characteristics felt bery jarring. I also wasn't a huge fan of Mr Benton which is a shame as I love Mr Bennett.


The romances were where everything fell a little flat for me. The relationships in P&P were so complicated, many layered and involving so  many factors, and I didn't feel that aspect was fully replicated in Epic Fail. The relationship between Juliana and Chase started out well, it had the same sweet feel from P&P, but it was just a little too simple and easy for my tastes. The relationship between Derek and Elise was equally promising at first. Derek seemed like he would be a wonderful Darcy, brooding and moody and rude, but I missed the chemistry between them that I felt should have been there. 


I felt Epic Fail was a little too short to truly capture the nuances of P&P. Whilst I really enjoyed this super-cute, lighthearted and humourous read, I think I would've enjoyed it more had it not tried to emulate such a fantastic story. While Claire LaZebnik did a fantastic job of bringing the plot up to date, certain elements did fall just a little flat for me.




Today Liz is posting her review of The Debutantes!

Monday, 16 April 2012

Review: Shatter Me by Tahereh Mafi

Shatter Me by Tahereh Mafi
Publisher: HarperTeen
Released: 15th November 2011
Rating: 1/5

Juliette hasn't touched anyone in exactly 264 days.

The last time she did, it was an accident, but The Reestablishment locked her up for murder. No one knows why Juliette's touch is fatal. As long as she doesn't hurt anyone else, no one really cares. The world is too busy crumbling to pieces to pay attention to a 17-year-old girl. Diseases are destroying the population, food is hard to find, birds don't fly anymore, and the clouds are the wrong color.

The Reestablishment said their way was the only way to fix things, so they threw Juliette in a cell. Now so many people are dead that the survivors are whispering war-- and The Reestablishment has changed its mind. Maybe Juliette is more than a tortured soul stuffed into a poisonous body. Maybe she's exactly what they need right now.

Juliette has to make a choice: Be a weapon. Or be a warrior.

In this electrifying debut, Tahereh Mafi presents a world as riveting as The Hunger Games and a superhero story as thrilling as The X-Men. Full of pulse-pounding romance, intoxicating villainy, and high-stakes choices, Shatter Me is a fresh and original dystopian novel—with a paranormal twist—that will leave readers anxiously awaiting its sequel.


My thoughts:

Before I start, I want to say one thing: I preordered this. I have probably preordered about....5 books in my life. The last one was City of Fallen Angels. Before that it was Last Sacrifice. So you see, a preorder is a big deal for me. I expected a lot from this.

And it was probably one of the worst books I have ever read, ever.

The amount of purple prose in this book is truly, truly outstanding. I am amazed that someone could possibly write this way for so long. Now, I am a big fan of purple prose usually. I adore some beautiful, flowery language, but this was too far. It felt so false, so purposeful and it got my back up immediately. There was no need for there to be a similie/metaphor every other sentence.  Don't even get me started on all the crossings out. They made me want to rip out the pages and eat them. I hated them.  


Juliette was possibly the most pathetic main character I have ever come across. I mean yes, she had a rubbish childhood, and yes, she'd been locked in a room with no human contact for a year but did that really give her permission to be so whiny? She just whined and cried and stumbled her way through this entire book. Her treatment hadn't made her strong, it made her useless. She wasn't a fighter, she wasn't resilient she was ludicrous. Her only strength was not giving into Warner straight away, and that's about the only redeemable thing that I can find about her.


Adam was almost as bad. He had no personality at all, it didn't help that their 'romance' was all done off stage. It was just thrown at you, you were forced to accept that This Is How They Feel About Each Other. No proof, no build up, no nothing. Their gushy exchanges made me want to throw up. I actually found myself liking Warner in reaction because at least he was complex and interesting and layered, even if he was despicable.


Plot-wise, not much seemed to happen, and when it did it was all so convenient. There just happened to be something at this point to help them, that just happened to happen, this just happened to happen etc. It was a bunch of not very realistic coincidences strung together. 


I can see WHY so many people enjoyed it, I thought *I* would enjoy it but I just couldn't.