Showing posts with label vampires. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vampires. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Review - Blood Promise by Richelle Mead


Blood Promise (Vampire Academy, #4)Blood Promise
by Richelle Mead
Hardcover, 503 pages
Published August 25th 2009 by Razorbill

***WARNING***
Premise contains SPOILERS!!!
If you have not read the VA series, skip to my Review Summary!!

Premise:

Rose Hathaway's life will never be the same. 

The recent attack on St. Vladimir's Academy devastated the entire Moroi world. Many are dead. And, for the few victims carried off by Strigoi, their fates are even worse. A rare tattoo now adorns Rose's neck, a mark that says she's killed far too many Strigoi to count. But only one victim matters . . . Dimitri Belikov. Rose must now choose one of two very different paths: honoring her life's vow to protect Lissa—her best friend and the last surviving Dragomir princess—or, dropping out of the Academy to strike out on her own and hunt down the man she loves. She'll have to go to the ends of the earth to find Dimitri and keep the promise he begged her to make. But the question is, when the time comes, will he want to be saved? 

Now, with everything at stake—and worlds away from St. Vladimir's and her unguarded, vulnerable, and newly rebellious best friend—can Rose find the strength to destroy Dimitri? Or, will she sacrifice herself for a chance at eternal love?


My Review:


**Spoiler-FREE Summary**

This book felt like two treadmills to me sandwiching the most amazing tension-filled romantic scene in fiction. You gotta get through the first half to get to it… and then you have to get through the last half to get away from it, but that Oreo-filled middle is worth it.

My Rating: 3.695.  My Breakdown – The filling (& romance) in this book sandwich is a 5.5. Wow. The treadmill leading up to the filling is an exciting 4. The exhausting horror after the filling was a frustrating 2.5 for me with a redeeming crescendo. The dreams and Lissa updates were a 3 for me. 


**SPOILER-FILLED Review**

Now let's have a little fun, shall we?

I thoroughly enjoyed a trip to Russia in Blood Promise. I love the cultural setting and the visuals of the night clubs and alleyways. Plus... we got to meet our first Alchemist with the blood tattoo and feel the full force of their distaste for all things non-human. I loved how the Alchemists viewed damphirs in the same class as strigoi. It was a strong shift in perspective that prepared me for seeing Dimitri and Rose's hesitation.

Rose quickly grows into super-awesome-kick-butt-strigoi-killer. Seen through the alchemists' attitude of irritation, we skip the feeling of awe and dive right into "been there, done that". Strigoi are still a challenge, but I have real hope that Rose will take Dimitri out, like she needs to.

Meeting Dimitri's family is wonderful. It felt like a sidetrack, but lots of important things happened out there, in the middle of nowhere. Each member of the family become real and create this negative space of how awesome Dimitri was. Rose gets a chance to mourn his death, like she hasn't, yet. And it feels good. She meets other spirit users and her understanding expands as well as her grasp of the Moroi world politics. Then she even gets a glimpse of the dark side of "blood whores" and how wonderful people end up in that situation... and how close she comes to the danger of it.

I really enjoyed Abe, right from his entrance. He is soooo creepy in a mobster-type way. I love his mysterious power. He was one of my favorite surprises of the book. In the last battle (to skip ahead) he faded into a wallpaper, which totally irritated me. The Abe I knew would not sit around and ask vague questions while being content with no answers. Just sayin'.

Then we run into Dimitri... or he finds Rose, more precisely, as she draws him in. What a great scene!!!  He is still Dimitri, and yet not, too. I love Rose's warring emotions. I love the ghost of emotions hiding deep in Dimitri. Maybe I was looking too hard, but in some ways... he's even better than ever.

I mean... in the first books, Dimitri is unapproachable, right? His sense of duty keeps him aloof and Rose's heart is almost cultivated into this strong, waiting, loving force. But then he gives into his feelings. Like a dam breaking, it's amazing. So, take that barrier of impossibility and times it by a bazillion... and we have Dimitri-the-strigoi. He's impossible, unreachable and yet soooo much more bad-guy than he ever could have been before. Really, really BAD. Bad.

I really, really like that. Lol.

Those scenes where the two of them were dancing around killing each other, drawn to each other and yet repelled simultaneously... just, WOW!!  They are some of my favorite anywhere ever. Amazing.

But then... you know what happens. He bites her. She becomes a druggy. I think I got depressed. So much for two awesome people and an amazing kill-love dance. Now we have patient, sick, twisted bad guy and mega-sick, twisted, weak wet noodle. Yuck. I was sooooooo ready for Rose to overcome that sludgy feeling. That entire section slowed down to drowning in caramel syrup for me. Thick, slow, too sweet, a slow death.

The final escape was satisfying, but not exhilarating. Rose finds herself and even eeks out a response from Dimitri... she's even wonderfully kick-butt again, but she's so weak, it's exhausting - mentally & physically. Plus, I think I'm still in denial about Dimitri. He can't possibly have lost all of himself.

The final spirit-battle was creative, wasn't it?  I liked the power struggle and all the extra insight into how the spirit magic works - both good and bad. There's lots of possibilities hiding there, you know? Plus Rose and Lissa got some stuff straightened out.

Speaking of Lissa... What did you think of the dreams and slippin' into Lissa's head? I liked getting a glimpse of the action back at the academy, but that was tedious. It really added to the treadmill feel. I did not catch on to why Lissa was acting so out of character and it really drove me nuts. This is, like, the book where the two friends are attacked mentally and really should see a psychiatrist afterwards. 

I did not understand enough about Lissa's situation to care how things were going. Rose couldn't do anything about it which made me feel helpless, too. I can see why Rose cared, but I could have got a summary from her afterwards. As for the way Rose treated Adrian? I can't believe he gives her the time of day - or any attention - after that. She was really rude. Even if he's amazing, I want to see more grounds for continued friendship.
Richelle

About the Amazing Author:

Scorpio Richelle Mead is a New York Times and USA Today bestselling author of urban fantasy books for both adults and teens. Originally from Michigan, Richelle now lives in Seattle, Washington where she works on her three series full-time: Georgina Kincaid, Dark Swan, and Vampire Academy.

A life-long reader, Richelle has always loved mythology and folklore. When she can actually tear herself away from books (either reading or writing them), she enjoys bad reality TV, traveling, trying interesting cocktails, and shopping for dresses. She's a self-professed coffee addict and has a passion for all things wacky and humorous.
 

More on her BIO page.

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Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Review - Immortal Rules by Julie Kagawa


The Immortal Rules (Blood of Eden, #1)
Immortal Rules 
by Julie Kagawa
Hardcover, 480 pages
Published April 24th by Harlequin Teen
E-copy courtesy of NetGalley

Premise:

In a future world, Vampires reign. Humans are blood cattle. And one girl will search for the key to save humanity. 

Allison Sekemoto survives in the Fringe, the outermost circle of a vampire city. By day, she and her crew scavenge for food. By night, any one of them could be eaten.

Some days, all that drives Allie is her hatred of them. The vampires who keep humans as blood cattle. Until the night Allie herself is attacked—and given the ultimate choice. Die… or become one of the monsters.

Faced with her own mortality, Allie becomes what she despises most. To survive, she must learn the rules of being immortal, including the most important: go long enough without human blood, and you will go mad.

Then Allie is forced to flee into the unknown, outside her city walls. There she joins a ragged band of humans who are seeking a legend—a possible cure to the disease that killed off most of humankind and created the rabids, the mindless creatures who threaten humans and vampires alike.

But it isn’t easy to pass for human. Especially not around Zeke, who might see past the monster inside her. And Allie soon must decide what—and who—is worth dying for.


My Review:

The short of it? It’s a fun, fast read. There just enough action, just enough hint of romance, enough impossibilities, enough heart to make it a complete entity with plenty room for more books to follow.

I can’t talk about Immortal Rules without comparing and contrasting.  Um... sorry?!

Julie Kagawa does her homework, it seems to me, and researches tons of fantastical lore and then fits it all in. Anything I’d ever heard about “all things fae” was crammed into The Iron King. There was a changeling, hidden dangers, the weight of favors, pointy ears, haughty beauty, sensual dancing… the works. That same energy went into Immortal Rules. The vampires possess impossible speed & strength, they’re virtually impossible to kill, only wooden stakes are effective. There’s the presence of a cross, the question of soul and the after-life… the works!!! 

Another similarity in Kagawa’s books is the amount of action. The two I’ve read both have the feel of EPIC about them. There’s lots of traveling, friendships forged through shared conflict, impossibility of goals and random choices that work out, but casualties, too, so I am concerned that the main characters will make it and satisfied with they do. (Or do they?!)

I have pretty much stayed out of the vampire book craze. Honestly, I think they’re gross. (I just lost half my readers, didn’t I?!) It’s all well –n- good to talk about drinking blood until… whom am I kidding?!  That’s so disgusting!!!  I get queasy at the site of blood taking my kids to the dentist. I’m the mom that freezes in shock over some news story about a kid colliding with a bus and then refuses to watch any news at all for at least three days in case they cover it again and I burst into tears. Yea, I like a good sword fight, I just want it all to be pretend. I want the characters to get up afterwards, brush themselves off and go shower off the pretend blood, or something.

So, how did blood-sucking get sensual?!  Just (nauseatingly) curious.

(Maybe Blood is symbolic of Life, kind of like the Holy Grail... there’s some deeper meaning behind all this, I just don’t know what it is and I’m going to faint before I arrive at it.)

So what did I like about Immortal Rules as unique?  Great question!!  My favorite aspect is how Kagawa split the vampire image right down the middle and created two species. There’s the Vampires who treat people like food and rule the world in their mini dominated worlds, and there the Rabids, which are vampires w/ rabies, I guess, who don’t have any sort of brain left and kill & devour whatever they can get their claws on indiscriminately. With this division, our hero, Allison, can try to find her emotional heart and soul, fighting her vampire instincts and yet there’s still this horror-like danger lurking at every turn. Must have horror and heart in a good vampire story!!

I also like the bloody tears, although it’s a seriously nasty-lookin’ on the very appropriate cover!!  Allie does have heart & soul (despite not having ‘em) and since there’s no water in her, her tears fall with blood and they betray her, which is absolutely a beautiful picture. *sniff*

En fin, did I love this book?  Almost. Will I reread it?  Nope. Would I recommend it?!  Well… yea, actually. I have only read the Twilight series and Sunshine, so this book fit right in between ‘em, kinda  - not cute –n- heartwarming like Twilight and yet not vampire-ugly like Sunshine.  And Kagawa’s got writing skills, so I would recommend this book to… anyone interested in a well-written saga-type story with horror aspects. If you’re tired of vampires, try Kagawa’s fey instead. If you love Kagawa, GO FOR IT!!! (Even if you’re not sure you like vampires!) 

The main character, Allison, doesn’t seem to grow and change as much as Meghan is in the Iron Fey series, but she’s a confident kick-butt girl who carries a samurai sword across her back, so hey!

My Rating: 4 - Pretty Darn Good. There's not much to pick apart, even if it's not going to be a favorite of mine. I will read the next book in the series. Definitely.


UPDATE:  I have won a signed copy of #7 in the Morganville Vampire series, thx so much to Miss Vain!!  So, I'll have a broader Vampire perspective soon. yay!  (?)

About the Amazing Author
:
Julie Kagawa was born in Sacramento, California. But nothing exciting really happened to her there. So, at the age of nine she and her family moved to Hawaii, which she soon discovered was inhabited by large carnivorous insects, colonies of house geckos, and frequent hurricanes. She spent much of her time in the ocean, when she wasn�t getting chased out of it by reef sharks, jellyfish, and the odd eel. 
When not swimming for her life, Julie immersed herself in books, often to the chagrin of her schoolteachers, who would find she hid novels behind her Math textbooks during class. Her love of reading led her to pen some very dark and gruesome stories, complete with colored illustrations, to shock her hapless teachers. The gory tales faded with time, but the passion for writing remained, long after she graduated and was supposed to get a real job. 
To pay the rent, Julie worked in different bookstores over the years, but discovered the managers frowned upon her reading the books she was supposed to be shelving. So she turned to her other passion: training animals. She worked as a professional dogtrainer for several years, dodging Chihuahua bites and overly enthusiastic Labradors, until her first book sold and she stopped training to write full-time. 
Julie now lives in Louisville, Kentucky, where the frequency of shark attacks are at an all time low. She lives with her husband, two obnoxious cats, one Australian Shepherd who is too smart for his own good, and the latest addition, a hyper-active Papillon puppy.
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