Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Not That Kind of Girl by Siobhan Vivian




Title: Not That Kind of Girl
Author: Siobhan Vivian
Publisher: Scholastic
Rating: WARTY!

I've been trying to get my hands on this novel for a while, and it's been so long that I forgot why! I don't know if I was just intrigued by the title or if I'd heard that this is a novel featuring a strong female lead. If it was the latter, someone lied! The reason it took me so long was that I could never figure out if it was written by Siobhan Vivian, or by Vivian Siobhan...yeah, I'm kidding!

So, this novel was a bit weird, to say the least, and none of this has to do with the author! The cover originally had a commendation from Kirkus across the bottom, which (in my library edition) was blacked out by a thick black line across the cover! I approve of this because Kirkus = worthless when it comes to the utility of their reviews. A blog which always positively reviews novels is utterly inutile because it tells you nothing about any novel they review.

But this novel gets worse! The novel is the size of a paperback, yet it maintains the large full-sized hard-back typeface, which means it runs to over 300 pages when it's probably a 200-or-so page novel in reality, if the typeface were smaller and there were more words to a page. Why they chose to fatten it up this way is a mystery. But that's not the only mystery. The entire 'Library of Congress' page, which identifies what this novel is, how it’s described, when it was published, to whom it’s copyrighted, etc., is AWOL! I have no idea why! Oh, and it has a prologue, which I skipped as usual. Who honestly gives a damn about text that's so unimportant it’s not even worth giving it a chapter of its own?

The story was not even remotely about a strong female protagonist. It’s been a while since I've encountered a female main character who was as clueless, needy, whiny and stupid as Natalie is in this novel, which is really annoying because it started out so very well; really quite engrossing and entertaining. Natalie even has a pretty normal name for YA fiction, but her two friends - the first to be her ex, the other to be her next, have the standard exotic YA fiction names; Autumn and Spencer. I'm surprised the latter wasn't named Spring. Natalie's inevitable trope guy is named Conner, of course, because John or Dave would be an entirely inappropriate name for a YA romance guy. His name is better rendered as: Con Her

Natalie starts out as a mature, responsible girl entering her final year at Ross Academy, but as soon as Conner crosses her transom, she's downhill all the way, and stupidly so. For example, when Spencer, whom Natalie used to babysit about eight years before, behaves inappropriately, Natalie steps up to save her from suspension by offering to organize a sleep-in at the school during which these girls and any others who sign up, will use the time to educate themselves about being strong, independent women. The sleep-over fails completely when it’s derailed by Spencer who hijacks the entire evening to natter about how girls ought to be able to slut around all they want and the hell with Natalie's sensible agenda. Natalie is so weak that she gives in and lets Spencer rule.

Somehow a bunch of boys from the stereotypical football team break into the school, and Natalie has to herd them out. No other girls (out of fifty attendees) are remotely bothered by this invasion of their space, evidently. Conner is part of the break in, which ought to have educated Natalie sufficiently about the kind of guy he is, but it doesn’t. He's hiding in the girls' bathroom when she finds him, and he refuses to leave when she requests that he do so. Instead, he assaults her to which she responds by kissing him back. This event she takes as a positive sign and starts secretly dating him. How big of a major dumb-ass is she, actually? I can't say - not politely.

There's this non-mystery running through this novel that Autumn has a bad nick-name ('Fish sticks') which has haunted her through high school. We’re never told exactly what it was that happened for her to garner this name (unless it’s revealed in those last fifty or so pages I didn’t read). Frankly, I lost all interest in what it was (I can make some sordid guesses of my own, but who cares?), because it became nothing but tiresome to have this bullshit 'mystery' brought up time and time again without it ever remotely looking like it would achieve any sort of dénouement. It was impossible to relate to how serious or debilitating this was supposed to be when it was such a non-entity for the overwhelming bulk of the novel, if not all of it.

I decided that this novel sucked big stinking ones at the point of the Conner bathroom incident, yet I gamely continued to read this insult to women, thinking it was so short that I'd be done with it in no time; however, by the time I reached about page 275 out of 330 or so, it was so god-awfully bad that I could simply not force myself to suffer through any more examples of how Natalie became increasingly brain-dead under Conner's mesmerizing influence, and how petty, clueless and downright stupid these people were. Natalie and Autumn break up their friendship at this point. They've been best friends since they were six, yet completely out of the blue, for no good reason at all, they simply fly apart and become almost mortal enemies. It’s completely and laughably unrealistic. Natalie is so petty it’s like she's degenerated back into a six-year-old.

If the novel had looked like it was be going somewhere interesting, I might have been willing to continue to give it a chance, but when you're over 80% the way through, and Le Stupide continues to blossom fruitfully with no sign of a harvest, it’s way past time to call it. This novel is DoA and warty to boot.


If You Find Me by Emily Murdoch





Title: If You Find Me
Author: Emily Murdoch
Publisher: Blackstone Audio
Rating: WORTHY!

Read by Tai Sammons who does a really excellent job.

The problem with audio books is that you can't easily skip the boring and/or thoroughly uninteresting bits! I have no time for prologues, prefaces, or poetical (or other) quotes. I really honestly and truly do not care how literate or well-read you authors are. Really, I don't care what poems or quotations interest or inspire or motivate you. I got your novel so I could listen to or read your story, not random bits of someone else's. If I want to read the quotations or the poetry, I'll get a book of quotations or poetry, 'kay? Just making sure you know.

The premise we’re forced to face, almost from the very beginning of this novel, is that of hard choices reluctantly and resiliently made by the older sister of two, both abandoned by their mother a dozen years after she had removed the older one from her father, who had just been granted sole custody. It slams a hard option down onto the slim, undernourished shoulders of Carey, of being separated from her younger sibling, whom she loves more than life itself, or of accepting that they must live with the man she believes abused them years before. Carey has so much locked up inside her that it's hard to imagine how she even manages to stand up tall without snapping precipitously like an overtightened violin string.

This novel will choke you up even as you pretend you're not choking. It will moisten your eyes even as you lie that it's merely dust irritating you, and it will bring a lump to your throat even as you deny swallowing the last one it delivered. Yes, it’s pure fiction, but you know that reality is hard on its heels, with all too many young children suffering the very kinds of deprivations and abuses which Carey and Janessa have endured. It will make you wish all children could share their good fortune and make you detest to your core the god-awful circumstances which leave other children unrelieved of such horrors.

This novel will prove to you that you can have a strong female main character without any attendant nonsense and bullshit. It will prove to you that you can have a strong girl without rendering her into a boy with breasts. It will show you how to write a wonderful girl who will stay with your readers long after the novel itself has left their hands. It will show you how to write a character who lives and breathes, who commands your attention from word one on page one, who speaks, and who knows without saying so, who has feelings and a life, and who changes every day.

Murdoch begins her story with a welcome amount of humor and two girls living in the woods in a camper trailer, who haven't seen their mother in at least one, and maybe two, months, and who are running out of food. Suddenly, they hear a guy's voice, something which they haven't heard in a long time, and they discover that he knows their names and is accompanied by a woman who's entirely ill-dressed for wandering around the woods.

Carey is only fourteen and responsible beyond her years. Her six-year-old sister Jenessa won't say a word. They don't know the man who is their father and Carey almost consistently refers to him as 'the man'. Now their mother has disappeared leaving only a note to social services saying she can no longer care for the babes in the woods, all that these girls have as their life is completely thrown for a loop is each other to rely on. They're forced to face civilization for what feels like the very first time, and the shocks keep coming one after another.

At their new home - a farmhouse - they discover that they have a new mother named Melissa, their father's wife, and they have a stepsister in the shape of Delaney, a resentful girl who is around gives Carey's age and who gives her a really hard time. Those tough times keep coming even as Carey starts to feel like maybe this house is home. In addition to having to deal with the moody and resentful Delaney, Carey has to contend with a trip to the mall, something which your typical teen would adore, but which Carey realizes she cannot handle, and waits in the car in the parking lot instead.

Both she and Janessa are tested for placement in school, and the tests show that both of them are two grades ahead of their peers, but the social worker elects to place them only one year ahead in order to better integrate them into their new lives. On her first day Carey meets a twelve-year-old who has also been placed ahead, and she feels herself becoming fast friends with "Pixie". She also meets Ryan, who shows her to her home room that first day after Delaney abandons her at the school entrance. The problem is that Delaney also has her eyes on Ryan, who has an interesting secret of his own. The novel continues from there through one gripping incident after another, one revelation after another until we learn all of Carey's secrets, including the big bad secret of the Night of the White Stars.

This novel is outstanding. If I had any complaints it would be about Carey's relationship with Delaney, which on occasion simply didn't ring true for me. Plus I was a little surprised that we learned nothing of Carey and Janessa's acclimation to school work, but these are minor considerations given how brilliantly this novel is written, and what a powerful impression it will make upon you. I rate this novel worthy and whole-heartedly recommend it.


Monday, February 17, 2014

Open Minds by Susan Kaye Quinn





Title: Open Minds
Author: Susan Kaye Quinn
Publisher: All Night Reads
Rating: WARTY!


DISCLOSURE: Unlike the majority of reviews in this blog, I've neither bought this book nor borrowed it from the library. This is a "galley" copy ebook, supplied by Net Galley. I'm not receiving (nor will I expect to receive or accept) remuneration for this review.

It was interesting to see yet another in a huge line of novels begin with the very thing which literary agents freely admit to hating: the misfit kid on the first day of school. Yet this hatred on their part has failed to even begin to not only stem the rising tide of novels which begin in precisely that manner, it's also failed to prevent some of them becoming best sellers! Of course, in this era of self-publishing, we can tell the literary agents and Big Publishing to kiss it, which is exactly what Quinn has done by starting volume one of the 'Mindjack' trilogy in this trope fashion.

Surprisingly, especially given that this is a first person PoV novel, a style which I've really grown to outright detest (with few exceptions, and especially the more of them that I read) it worked ok for me. It got me interested in continuing to read, which is the first hurdle, after all. At least it did for the opening few paragraphs, but as I read deeper, I began to have some real problems with this novel.

So, 16-year-old Kira Moore gets on the school bus with great trepidation. She's is a zero in a world of mind readers. People began to develop this ability over the last few generations due to pollutants in the water until it eventually reached the point where the mind readers were in the overwhelming majority, and the people who could not do so were treated like lepers, and abused and labeled zeros.

This was my first problem with this novel - it is such a trope to have the "outcast" - especially the outcast girl - metaphorically spat upon by every one around her. It's an even worse trope to have this bullying countenanced by the school. This novel is not set in the middle ages. It's contemporary (okay, set in the not-too-distant future), and for me personally, I've read way more than enough novels where outright bullying goes unpunished. They are no longer even close to being realistic. Even when bullying was more common, there never were any schools where every single student across the board was a coldly calculating bully, for goodness sakes!

Of course, if you're creating the fiction, you can create it to be whatever you want, but then if you're really going to do that, I'm going to ask you for some rationale (within the framework of your world) as to why it's this way, and how it grew to be that way, and Quinn has offered me none, which is why this is a problem for me. I fully agree that in any society, there are going to be jerks no matter how decent and equitable a society it is, but for everyone to consistently scorn Kira, including the girl who was, just a few months before, her best friend, struck me as utter nonsense, and this really spoiled the novel for me. Instead of finding Kira pitiable as I am sure Quinn intended, I found the whole premise laughable, which I'm sure she didn't intend.

So why did I continue to read‽ Well, it's because the novel offers some interesting and intriguing possibilities, especially when it turns out that kira is not quite the zero every one of the other seven billion inhabitants of Earth quite evidently is convinced she is (of course, that was no surprise at all). Kira is a 'mind jacker', meaning that while she cannot receive thoughts which are transmitted to her, she can invade the minds of others, including more than one person at once, read their thoughts, and control their behavior.

Here was my second problem. How, exactly, does this work? Again, we get nothing from the author to help us out here; we're simply expected to take it that this is the way things are, for no apparent reason. I don't work well with premises like that! Logic dictates that if you can read people's thoughts by "invading their mind" then you must have a receptor for absorbing their thoughts, so how come Kira isn't a mind reader when she can clearly read minds? It makes no sense! I don't expect scientific diagrams, with charts and formulae explaining every last detail. On the contrary, I detest novels like that, but I do expect the author to make some effort to create the world they're trying to sell to us and have it make some sort of sense! I saw none of that in the early part of the novel.

Kira learns she can mind-jack from bad boy Simon, who is in her year, and who completes the requisite trope love triangle with the good guy, Raf, also in her year. Yeah, another thing to dislike in this novel, because Kira is thinking only of her own deficits, which makes her sound really whiny, and of boys the whole time, which makes her seem appallingly shallow and uninteresting. She never has any other thoughts. I think it's rather sad that a female author can write about a girl and betray her gender so badly in this fashion.

This again begs the question as to why I was still reading this! A better question is whether I could justify continuing to read this given what I've been asked to put up with so far. Quinn had me balanced on a knife-edge, part of me wanting to quit reading this out of disgust for - and fatigue with - this kind of YA novel, whilst an equal part of me wanted to stay with it to see what happened. So, even as I hated myself for putting up with tropes and clichés, and with sad female protagonists, I was still hoping that this could be written out so I didn't have to write it off! Quinn isn't a bad writer; she knows what to do, technically speaking. She's just not very inventive when it comes to writing her away around tropes instead of falling into them.

Here's another inexplicable oddity: the students at Kira's school study Latin because it’s supposed to be a universal root language, but this isn’t true. Latin itself is rooted in what’s called the Proto-Indo-European language, which some scholars have tried to reconstruct, but Latin itself isn’t a root in any really meaningful sense, and even if I granted that and agreed for the sake of argument that it were, it certainly has no application outside of the Indo-European region!

The Proto-Indo-European language itself hasn’t been spoken in over five thousand years. It makes no sense that a society which already has several very widely spoken languages, such as English, Mandarin Chinese, and Spanish, would back-track to a dead language which no one outside of Catholic church officials and some linguistic students actually speaks today. If you're going to pick a "dead" language to promote, then why not Greek - which not only has a proud history every bit the equal of Latin, but which is actually still spoken in modern form today in one part of the world?!

Another real issue that I had was that Simon's relationship with Kira is inappropriate and Kira seems to be unaware of this, letting him touch her rather intimately when they have no relationship other than their shared facility for mind-jacking. I find it both annoying and distasteful that so many YA authors (a shamefully large number of which are female authors) seem to be obsessed with sending out this message to young women that it’s perfectly fine for someone they hardly know to manhandle them, such as by taking hold of their chin with his fingers, or by stroking their hair, as though the girl in question is some sort of a pet or a possession. Simon is completely guilty in every regard, including, at one point, grabbing Kira and kissing her right in the school hallway as though he owns her. He's already referred to her as "my girl" by that point, so I guess Kira lamely bought into his propaganda, which means I have no respect at all for her as a strong female protagonist.

Simon frequently appears as a stalker, often demanding and expecting that Kira meet him, or abruptly dragging her off with him with neither explanation nor by-your-leave, and never once does Kira honestly question the appropriateness of his behavior. There is one time when he outright threatens her, not in words, but by his demeanor and posture, and she caves in to him, dissing Raf in the process. I cannot respect a woman who behaves like that. I realize that Kira and Simon have a secret in common here, which means that they'd be inclined to take more liberties than two strangers ordinarily would, but this doesn’t excuse her limp submission to his every demand, nor does it excuse her letting his behavior continue unquestioned and unchallenged. It doesn’t excuse his abusive and threatening behavior, either. I'm not saying that guys cannot be that way. I am saying that Kira is a sad human being to knuckle under to him so easily and I don't feel any need to like or respect a character like that. Portraying her this way is not a smart move and it’s entirely the wrong message to send to female readers. I would have liked Kira better if she'd had some self-motivation and some self-respect, even if she did feel compelled towards more acquiescence than she felt comfortable with.

She does question the appropriateness of mind-jacking people, but never Simon's behavior towards her, and her guilty feelings about jacking sure don’t last long. It’s a rather hypocritical paradox that Simon is on the one hand urging her to make her choice, whilst simultaneously robbing her of any choice with his own behavior. In this same vein, her behavior towards her close friend Raf is inexplicable. Every love triangle has to have the good guy and the bad boy because it’s the tired and sad trope, and YA authors have shown themselves to be almost universally incapable of thinking outside this box in which they've so willingly rushed to incarcerate themselves. So Raf is the superficial good guy here, although he's quite capable of stalking Kira, too. Why Kira didn't have the smarts to reject Simon and accept Raf is a mystery. Indeed, why she hadn’t accepted Raf already (before she even got to know Simon) is the real mystery. Yes, she believes they're so different, but for her to honestly believe that she's so worthless that they could never have anything together doesn't fill me with a lot of admiration for her brain patterns.

This whole triangle caused me to seriously lose respect for Kira, but what really was not believable was that, for as much as she has shared with Raf, for as long as she has known him, and for as decent a human being as he is, she refused to go to him with her new-found knowledge of mind-jacking! It made no sense that she wouldn’t run this by him at least hypothetically, if not as an outright confession of what she has learned. Instead, she metaphorically kicks him in the balls, and that behavior on her part is inexcusable. She tells him their love is impossible because she's a zero and he isn’t. I know she's thinks she's trying to protect him, but that she can be such a heartless bitch in doing so turned me right off her. I honestly had to question why an author would go significantly out of her way to make me dislike her own hero.

I don’t like the way Quinn pigeonholes Raf, either. He has a "simmering Portuguese temper" - not an ordinary temper, but a Portuguese one. What kind of stereotype is that? Oh, he's 'the Latino breed' therefore he must have a fiery temper? Because we all know that no one who is Caucasian or African or Asian could possibly have a fiery temper, whereas everyone who hails from the Mediterranean environment just has to be completely fiery. I actually liked that Raf was not your typical US YA trope guy. Now I find he's your typical 'smoldering Hispanic' trope guy. Oh well there goes another review bonus point down the drain!

I started out really liking this despite the first person PoV, but I was less than one-third the way through when I started really disliking it. After further trashing Raf, Kira is stalked again by Simon, who shows up outside her house late at night telling her to sneak out. Kira limply does exactly what he orders her to do. At that point I felt like simply ditching this novel because it had now reached a nadir of asininity, and Kira had repeatedly proved herself to be nothing but Simon's toy. I don’t choose to read novels with a female protagonist only to see that woman become a man's play doll, which he can drag where he wants and pose as he wishes. I read these novels to see women break the mold. Kira isn’t breaking the mold, she's burying herself in it.

I decided to read this as far as page 122 which was exactly half-way through (yes, it’s 245 pages, but chapter one doesn't start on page one, it starts on page six, and the novel itself ends on page 238!). I decided that if I was still disgusted with it by the time I reached that point, I was outta there! In the end I read a little further because page 122 wasn't at the end of a chapter, and in reading on, the novel actually turned around a little bit, but at that point it was nowhere near enough for me to want to continue reading this.


Thursday, February 13, 2014

Modelland by Tyra Banks




Title: Modelland
Author: Tyra Banks
Publisher: Delacorte Press
Rating: WORTHY!
erratum:
p234 "Besides the four of them and Zarpessa and Chaste, Tookie recognized only two other girls in the room, tear-streaked Desperada." I have no idea what that means or if it's even English!

Fifteen year old Tookie De La Crème is one of the most awkward teens ever, virtually invisible to her peers because she's so unremarkable - or perhaps not that she's unremarkable, but such an "ugly duckling" that people would prefer to ignore her, given a choice. including her own mother, creamy, whose real name I can now reveal is Cremalatta Defacake De La Crème. It’s not hard to see that this character is modeled(!) on Banks herself, who went through such a phase at about that age. Tookie is tall, gangly, has large feet and head, mismatched eyes, and really unmanageable hair. Her best friend Lizzie lives in a tree and wants to leave town in an Exodus. The bizarre world in which both of them exist, Metopia (with the emphasis on me) is firmly rooted in planet satire.

This entire world is focused solely on modeling, with every young girl desperate to twin a place in Modelland - spots which are few and far between and handed out rather like the golden tickets of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, but in a much more twisted, er, fashion. Once there, girls have an opportunity to become an Intoxibella -a super-powered model. Entirely in keeping with the bizarre nature of the novel, Tookie ends-up getting a place at Modelland and bonds with three other misfit girls whom she meets on the way there: big-bodied girl Dylan, petite-sized Shiraz, and albino Piper.

When this year's T-DOD (The Day of Discovery) is announced, the day when girls might be picked for Modelland, Tookie gets to see up close the 7Seven who are seven models whose description can only be fulfilled by seven words each beginning with 'S'. Each has a super power. Evanjalinda's is to be a chameleon, Simone's is that she can duplicate herself. Bev Jo's is that she reverts to seventeen every time she reaches her thirtieth birthday. Leemora can make people buy things. Sinndeesi is skilled at seduction. Katoocha can see into the future of fashion. Exodus can teleport, but none of the seven can do all seven things, and therefore there are no Triple7s - not since superstar Intoxibella model Ci~L (seal or cielle) mysteriously disappeared. But directly meeting the teleported Exodus during this exhibition, triggers deep emotions in Tookie, who resolves to exodus with Lizzie herself.

It can be no spoiler to reveal that Tookie is taken instead of her sister Myrracle (who has been groomed her entire life fro Modelland), but the "scout" who takes Tookie also has other stops on her agenda. She picks up Dylan, who works at the city-sized store call Bou-Big-Tique, and then she flashes over to the city of Canne Del Abra (the candle-making capital, the name of which I found hilarious) to locate Shiraz Shiraz, and finally to the domed city of SansColor where Piper the not-a-princess is located. The description of how these girls are picked up and transported is quite mind-blowing, particularly when they reach Modelland and go through the admissions procedure. It’s at this point that we realize that their Scout is actually Ci~L in disguise, and who is following her own agenda, and not that of Modelland at all. This part was entertaining, even intriguing, but I'm really not so sure about the writing which depicted the conversation going on throughout this. It was a bit extreme. I found myself hoping that this doesn’t go on interminably, because it would definitely and adversely affect my enjoyment of this novel!

I also found myself asking: if this novel had been written in exactly this way, down to the last crossed 't' and dotted 'i', and submitted by someone who was not an international supermodel, then would it ever have had even the slightest chance of being accepted? My gut response is a definite and resounding "No way in Hell!" That's the problem with Big Publishing - it’s not so much what you write, it’s who you know and how you're known, so be ever grateful that we have independents and self-publishing available to us. I know I keep arguing this case, as I keep arguing that prologues need to be abolished, but it’s not just me. Check out these two references, the first of which shows that literary agents agree with me on prologues, and the second of which shows that self publishing (by Amazon with its effective monopoly called Create Space) is big, but independent publishing is even bigger. Hope is not lost!

So the first day of initiation has the models go through a good-cop/bad-cop kind of a deal. I think Banks set this up to be analogous to the painful process through which young girls go to get into modeling: having to put up with people being hyper-critical about their appearance, and having to starve themselves to look anorexic enough to be featured in the photo-shoots. These girls are made-up to look beautiful, but then their bodies appear to quickly age, and fester, and rot. At this point doors appear, allowing the girls to quit the agency and go home, if they wish. They're supposed to learn from this never to share make-up! A dozen or so do at each stage. A similar stage follows, but in this one, the girls get to wear gorgeous jewelery only to have this jewelery "turn on them": the necklaces, for example, try to strangle them. They're supposed to learn from the that they should only buy originals, never knock-offs. By this means, the faint-of-heart are weeded from the more stout-hearted.

Tookie and her friends survive this weeding-out process with Tookie's steadfastness to guide them, but I have to say that I think that Banks rather dropped the ball here. Tookie, who never indicated that she really cared about Modelland, even though she idolized Ci~L, has pretty much dumped her bestie, Lizzie, at this point. She had the chance, right there, to leave Modelland, go find Lizzie, and leg-it it out of town without anyone being any the wiser, yet she chose to stay with her new friends and her opportunity, and in doing so has quite effectively abandoned Lizzie. This makes me dislike Tookie, and it isn't a good message to send to young girls, although it is what a lot of young women (and men) do: abandon their friends to seek fame and fortune through modeling, popular music, or acting, and in a world where there is such a massive divide between rich and poor, particularly in a nation like the USA, one can hardly blame a person for trying to find a route to speedy riches; though one can hold them responsible for exactly how they pursue their dream.

One problem with reading an inventive and playful novel like this is that you're never quite sure if something odd that you read is a mistake or intentional, or if something humorous was intentional or accidental, such as this part on page 309:

..."I'll see you soon, but now I have to go make a, uh, a special deposit, yep, yep."
"Ew," Chaste snickered. "I can only imagine what kind of deposit he's talking about."
"MattJoe ignored her and pressed a button under his stool...""

So I finished this and I'm willing to recommend this if you like your novel cuh-ray-zee, which this definitely is. I was impressed by the playfulness and inventiveness which Banks shows, and impressed by her solo effort. I have to say, though, that this novel is too long. It needed to be shorter by about two hundred pages, because parts of it were downright boring and skippable. I know that if the author had been anyone but a supermodel, the publisher would have turned this down, or at best demanded edits up the wazoo.

It just goes to show what you can get away with if you are who you are, and have access (as Banks did when writing this) to a series of luxury hotels in which to work, and high class restaurants which will indulge you spending eight straight hours there. Joanne Rowling never had that luxury when she created Harry Potter. Will Smith's son would never have hit the big time had he not been Will Smith's son. Christopher Rice would hardly have had an in to publishing his novels had he not been the son of Anne Rice. Just be grateful for self-publishing, I say, so the rest of us can finally get a fair shot!


Wednesday, February 12, 2014

The Purple Girl by Audrey Kane





Title: The Purple Girl
Author: Audrey Kane
Publisher: Wakefield & Quincy Press (no website available)
Rating: WORTHY!

Illustrated by Tory & Norman Taber

The Purple girl tells us her story, but not her name. She was born purple (and kudos to Kane for putting this in chapter one where it belongs! Down with prologues!!!), but the purple doesn’t just stay with her - it can spread to whatever (and whomever) she touches and wherever she walks. Fortunately, the color quickly fades from everything (and everyone) else but herself; she's permanently purple. The midwife is creeped out by The Purple Girl, but her mom & dad love her and raise her like any child in the world. But guess what, the color purple isn't the most fascinating thing about The Purple Girl. You'll have to read the novel to discover what is!

Even when she's sorely tempted by the chance to lose her purple for the price of her voice box (shades of The Little Mermaid!), The Purple Girl determines, aided by her dog Waxy, that she will remain steadfast in her purpleness. She does this on more than one occasion. During a time of drought, when The Purple Girl's family still has food growing in their garden, she meets Frankie, an extremely impoverished boy from the village who isn't afraid of her as everyone else seems to be. The two of them begin meeting in secret, but eventually Frankie's family must leave to seek work and food elsewhere and they must say goodbye. But The Purple Girl isn't destined for Frankie!

That and the illustrations are some of the great joys of this fine novel. It most assuredly does not go where you expect it to - at least it didn't go where I thought it would. Instead it went to much more interesting places and is the better for it. This novel should go down well for appropriate age groups. It's charming, it's well-illustrated, it features a strong and independent female main character, and it's neither too short nor too long.

I had only one complaint, and that concerns the negative portrayal of the "gypsy" girl, especially when this portrayal is going to reach and possibly influence young children to grow up with a prejudice where none need be created. I found it rather ironical that in a novel which is admirably teaching children that color-prejudice is wrong, we should risk teaching them a different prejudice. I appreciate the call for a miscreant or a scoundrel in fairy-tales, but is it really necessary to deprecate an entire people and portray them in a very unflattering light for the sake of having your villain? That aside, I recommend this book. You can always omit the Romani girl's origin when you read this to your kids, now can't you?!


Tuesday, February 11, 2014

How to Ditch Your Fairy by Justine Larbalestier




Title: How to Ditch Your Fairy
Author: Justine Larbalestier
Publisher: Bloomsbury
Rating: WORTHY!

There are at least two covers for this novel. The one I depict here isn't the one on the library book that I got, but it is the best one. Finally a publisher gets it right, after totally blowing it with the other loser cover (which I now unfortunately have to carry around with me in public as I read this...!).

I got interested in Larbalestier after I'd read about the so-called YA Mafia and read the air-headed 'response' by Holly Black (fortunately for her, I've favorably reviewed three of her novels: White Cat, Red Glove, and Black Heart, so she's safe from me for now!). Larbalestier (bizarre name! It's pronounced lar-bal-est-ee-air) was mentioned in tandem with Black's and I have nothing on her, so I decided I'd better get some dirt! I'm not a fan of (literal) fairy tales, although I confess I've favorably reviewed one this year, so it's odd that I'd pick this one, but the title won me over; then the novel did, too.

This book is written in Australian, which may sound like English, but it really isn’t! Plus, Larbalestier appears to have created her own lexicon of teen terms, so it’s hard (for me at least) to know how much of this is common Australian slang and how much she just made up. Either way it’s hilarious. Here's a partial glossary:

  • Dobbing - ratting out, tattle-tale-ing
  • Doos - sweet, good, positive, pleasurable
  • Doxy - the polar opposite of doos
  • Inside her self/his self - self-obsessed, narcissistic, self-important
  • On the nose - smelly
  • Pulchritudinous, pulchy (and other variations) - gorgeous, adorable, desirable
  • Torpid - dumb

The joke in this novel is that most everyone has an invisible undetectable fairy who gives them an edge in one thing or another, but the edge you get is random and rather whimsical. Some people, for example have a fairy which grants them luck in buying doos clothes at rock-bottom prices. Another has a fairy which attracts of around her own age. There are loose-change-finding fairies and good-hair fairies. The main character of this novel, who isn't old-enough to drive, has a fairy which can find parking spaces anywhere at any time, which means she's frequently kidnapped just so others can avail themselves of her talent. This is important for what happens later, and indeed for one of her motivations in the story. I do, however, have a theory that this fairy business is all in the mind of the befuddled, and there really are no fairies in this world, just blind, gullible belief in them. What? Me, wrong? Never!

This novel is many more things than it seems on the surface. It’s a dystopian teen novel that's rather more subtle than your typical dystopian YA story. It’s a satire on being a teen and on growing up, and it’s a satire on religion, gullibility, and other blind beliefs, with some elements of Catch-22 tossed in and mixed with Frances Hardinge. It’s also a comedy and a wry commentary on hero-worship and blind micro-patriotism, with a nod-and-a-wink to Disney's Freaky Friday tossed in for good measure, except that here it’s fairy-swapping rather than person swapping.

Charlotte Adel Donna Seto Steele is a young adult named Charlie who lives in New Avalon and attends an obsessive-compulsive sports school, where discipline is beyond strict. The children who attend the school accept the discipline because discipline (although not at this wack-a-loon level!) is an integral part of sports. There are 811 infractions, each of which merits a demerit if you're caught. If you accumulate enough demerits, you’re suspended from your next game, and further infractions could lead to expulsion from the school altogether. About a fifth of the student body has been expelled for this reason. You can get demerits for running in the hallways, for being late for class, for not being early enough for an event even if you're not late for the event, for not wearing correct attire for the sport you're doing, for not wearing clean attire, for wearing on the nose attire, for kissing, for talking, and for having your tie in disarray!

When Charlie's demerit level climbs dangerously to eight, she earns her first missed game and is effectively forced into long hours of community service (cleaning up a grave yard in her case!) in order to try and wipe out the demerits. Her two besties, Sandra Leigh Petaculo, and Rochelle, stage an "intervention"! In turn, this necessitates her visiting her arch-enemy's home to meet her fairy-wise parents. Since Charlie's ambition is to rid herself of her parking fairy (that's why she walks everywhere - she believes that if the fairy - which makes Charlie smell of gasoline - becomes bored, Charlie will be rid of her). Her arch-enemy is called Stupid-Name (but is really Fiorenze Burnham-Stone). Given Fiorenze's behavior towards Charlie, this arch-enemy stuff is entirely in Charlie's head and eventually, Charlie realizes this. Fiorenze is also on community service, but we’re not told why. She works pulling weeds and collecting trash at the graveyard with Charlie and the two of them end up having their first conversation there.

Each chapter begins with Charlie's score to date, starting out merely by detailing her days spent walking rather than riding, the number of times she's talked with Steffi, aka Stefan, who is the guy she likes in school, her demerits, and her doos clothing acquisition (which is zero). This list grows somewhat, and the reported numbers change as the story progresses. Chapter 20, for example, begins:

Days Walking: 68
Demerits: 4
Conversations with Steffi: 9
Game suspensions: 1
Public service Hours: 16
Hours spent enduring Fiorenze
   Stupid name's company: 2.75
Kidnappings thwarted: 1
Number of Steffi kisses: 2
Fights with Steffi: 1

Stefan is from a different town, and so acts as a bit of an intermediary for the reader with Charlie's life and the decidedly odd society in which she lives (and I get the impression that her city is a special case, where people are rather different from all other populations). Of course, Stefan is sucked into Fiorenze's sphere of influence because of her boy-attracting fairy, so we’re told, but the lie to this is given when he and she break-up, get together, break-up in repeated cycles.

When I'd read a third of this and had decided, barring disaster, that I would be favorably reviewing this novel, I sought out a bunch of negative reviews to see if I'd missed something, and I was rather disturbed to find that the bulk of the negative reviews - where they actually said something other than a two-sentence whine that they didn't like it - just did not appear to have paid attention to what they were reading, because their reviews were way off base, complaining about things that are not in the novel at all, or that are incidental to where this novel was going. I don’t think they grasped that this isn't a novel about fairies, it’s a novel about a young teenage girl finding her way in the world and learning to stand on her own feet.

For example, one reviewer said that Charlie had no motivation other than ridding herself of her 'fairy', when it was repeatedly made clear that her life was sports, and she wanted to be a professional - that's why she was attending the sports school. Duhh! Another complained about the 'fake teen lingo' and then used some rather bizarre lingo of their own! Another review began with a whine that this book isn’t meant for adult enjoyment! Wow! I never would have thought such a thing of a novel which is clearly identified as young-adult novel! One reviewer accused Justine Larbalestier or trying to create 'British slang'. I'm sorry but if you're too torpid to grasp that Larbalestier is Australian, and this has nothing to do with British slang, then that's an automatic eight demerits and you're on the bench for the next novel!

One reviewer claimed that academics in this story write books by hand and then keep them locked away unpublished! No! The truth is that one academic (Fiorenze's mother, Tamsin, who was explicitly described as an oddball in the novel itself) wrote one book by hand and kept that locked away. If a reviewer is going to outright lie - or at best review a novel with such a poor recollection - why in hell should I pay any attention to such a review?! Another reviewer completely went overboard, accusing Larbalestier of misleading young girls by suggesting that they could change! I am not making this up. This deluded individual went on to pretty much state outright that young girls cannot change and shouldn't even try! I guess he thinks young women must stay in traditional roles and not even, for example, aspire to doing anything we manly men do! Why even bother growing up? Stay a subservient little girl, it’s all you can do! I can't even begin to (politely) describe the wrong-headedness of a clueless opinion like that. Clearly all reviews of the nature of the ones I've mentioned above can be completely disregarded. Having thus satisfied my curiosity, I moved on!

Charlie's dream of dispatching her fairy post-haste took a hit when she visited Tamsin Burnham-Stone. My own theory seemed to take a hit too, because Tamsin surrounded Charlie with mirrors and got her to see her "aura" which was a double one. Tamsin interpreted this to mean that Charlie's original parking fairy was fading, and about to be replaced by a new "proto-fairy". She advised Charlie to continue expelling the parking fairy, but also to try encouraging the new fairy by doing things to welcome it. She wouldn’t, or couldn’t, answer any of Charlie's questions, or tell her what the proto-fairy might be, or how it could be encouraged.

However, I stick to my theory! Even assuming that Tamsin could see auras and wasn't just delusional (and deluding Charlie into the bargain), this really means that what she was telling Charlie was that she's the master (mistress?!) of her own destiny - no one else. If Charlie encourages the right "fairy" (read: attitude), she can be whatever she wants. I suspected that Tamsin's locked-away book tells exactly this story, which is why she's afraid to publish it and rob people of their fairy-tales. Was I right? You'll have to read this novel to find out!

Although the first kidnap attempt upon Charlie is thwarted, the second assault succeeds. Danders Anders, the massive deranged jock grabs her and uses her to find an ace space right in front of an apartment block that he needs to visit. We have no idea why, and even less idea why Charlie doesn't report him. Given how pro-active she is on tackling her fairy issue, and how furious she is about being kidnapped (not because she's been kidnapped per se, but because she's been forced to ride in a car, thereby reactivating her all-but-dormant fairy), Charlie's behavior now is rather contradictory.

This is where this novel almost left the rails rather for me. At first blush, her acceptance of the kidnapping made no sense within Charlie's framework, although it did provide a powerful impetus for Charlie to take up the next offer she gets from Fiorenze, which is to to sneak in and take a look at her mother's hand-written book while Tamsin is away at a conference. When I thought about this a bit, I realized that it does fit within the framework, because Charlie knows full-well that she'd probably get a demerit for dobbing if she did report it. I mean how many times has she reported boys who are overly amorous towards her and got in trouble for excessive whining? So yes, this does make sense in that context.

What Charlie and Fiorenze learn is a trick using salt and incised thumbs, undertaken in darkness, which will result in them swapping their fairies, each one for the other's, but you know as well as I do that it's not going to be that easy! And that's enough spoilers. I recommend this novel.


Narcissus is Dreaming by Rose Mambert




Title: I was unable to find a vendor for Narcissus is Dreaming
Author: Rose Mambert
Publisher: Pink Narcissus Press
Rating: WARTY!

Not to be confused with Narcissus Dreaming by Dabney Stuart!

I finished this novel and felt like I hadn’t read anything. To be more accurate, I felt like I'd read detailed notes which had been prepared for several upcoming novels, and now I should look forward to reading the first draft of one of them. Instead, I got what felt like a mashup of three different novels, one of which was about a movie company making a movie, another of which was about a literal angel of mercy, and the third of which was about the existence on Earth of a handful of visiting alien shape-shifters. None of these three pieces fitted together in any coherent manner, and the result was entirely dissatisfying for me. If I had to choose, I'd choose the angel of mercy because he (or she - it's that kind of a novel) was more interesting, if least featured.

The novel is quite short - only 140 pages or so - which was fortunate for me because it meant I could finish it. Yeah, I get that there are two alien species on Earth: shape shifters and angels. I get that the shape-shifters are being recruited for obvious reasons because they can hide in plain sight, but I have no idea what this novel is about or where it was supposed to be going.

Some of it was beautifully written, other parts so tedious I wanted to skip them. I did skip bits here and there, but I read the bulk of it and I could make no sense of it at all. I have no idea why there was a movie company involved in this story, or why it was relevant that there was a movie being made involving a shape-shifter. That seemed like a totally unrelated story to me.

The 'aliens' were so human in their behavior and motivations - they smoked cigarettes, for goodness sakes, and could get drunk on alcohol! They didn't seem alien at all, more like weird or mutant humans. I had no idea why the 'angel' character was there. He seemed to have so little to do with the main thrust of the story that it made no sense to me, but what the heck - we tossed in a movie company, why not add an angel to the mix?

The shape-shifters made just as little sense. Evidently the shape-shifters are banned from Earth, yet they still come here. How they get in is a mystery given how easy it is to detect them. Why they would even want to come is a greater mystery. None of this is dealt with or even alluded to. Instead we’re dropped right into the middle of what behaves like it’s an ongoing, and long-running series. It isn’t, but we get no introduction to this world, and no conclusion.

The shape-shifters are a pride species, living in tightly-knit groups, yet they cannot feel emotion?! They reproduce every five years as a group, and it's downright dangerous for them to be away from the group when they reach sexual maturity or when they come into heat - so again, why do they come here alone? It made no sense at all. This is yet another example of a novel where even a rudimentary knowledge of the Theory of Evolution would have made a big difference to the depictions of different species.

In conclusion I cannot recommend a novel as dissipated and dissatisfying as this one is!


Fatale Book 4 by Ed Brubaker




Title: Fatale Book 4
Author: Ed Brubaker
Publisher: Diamond Book Distributors
Rating: worthy!

Illustrator: Sean Phillips
Colorist: Elizabeth Breitweiser

This is quite an amazing and a rather disturbing graphic novel, written for a mature audience. I haven’t read any of the previous volumes, unfortunately, so I came into this hitting the ground running, which isn't the best way to join a story! I can’t speak to what came before, but his portion concerns a woman who appears to be a fate or a muse, who leaves unintentional havoc wherever she goes. She's ageless and disturbing, and inspiring to the point where people become psychotic, and obsessive about her, trying to track her down long after she's passed through their life.

A struggling band needs money to make a video for one of their recordings, so why not rob a bank? One of them single-handedly brings this off, and on his way home after his successful robbery, he finds a young woman with no clothes, running in the road in the rain - the pouring rain - with only a sheet for modesty (of which she has little). Yes, it rains throughout this entire novel (subtitled 'Pray for Rain') and I'm not sure why, but it seemed strangely refreshing, and appropriate somehow!

He takes the woman back to the old house where the rest of the band is hanging out listlessly, rather festering in their impotence inactivity, and she starts to have an effect on all of them, inspiring the writer to create new and haunting music, and breathing life back into the band's stagnated career, but even as she rejuvenates them, she destroys them. She helps them to rob another bank, and they make that video. It features the woman, but when she dances, all the extras in the video lose all sense of restraint and begin taking off their clothes and indulging carnal desires quite different from the dancing they were hired to perform. Eventually, all that's left of the band is the one guy who robbed the bank in the first place, and the girl leaves him, saying she's no good for him. Now she tells him?

Like I said, I missed the first three volumes, and there are more to come in this series so I can’t speak for all of it, but this one volume was really good. The artwork was excellent, the coloring matching the mood perfectly, the dialog is realistic, and the story is really unnerving, playing out like a road roller, slowly but unstoppably subjugating everything in its path. I recommend it.


Never Underestimate a Hermit Crab by Daniel Sean Kaye




Title: Never Underestimate a Hermit Crab
Author: Daniel Kaye
Publisher: Diamond Book Distributors
Rating: WORTHY!

This story is decidedly weird, and proudly so! I don’t know what I thought I was getting when I requested to read this, but what I got was more than I expected! This idea, in particular that title, so intrigued me that I couldn’t not request it. It’s obviously a children's story, but I am not ashamed to say I loved it. It comes with a serious note at the end: that hermit crabs are living creatures and require care and attention if you want to keep one as a pet.

The art work is simple and clean, and engagingly well done. The descriptions are short, but highly entertaining. More art and more description would have been welcome for me, but hopefully this author will turn out more such books on other subjects. Indeed, with an imagination like that, it would be a shame if a novel or two were not to come from this mind. The story takes itself seriously, but you can’t help but see that tongue in the cheek there, and you can’t help but be amused at the outrageous assertions as to what hermit crabs enjoy and get up to in their 'spare time' when no humans are around....

I recommend this book, and especially recommend it for children who might like to own a hermit crab as a pet.


Zero Volume 1: An Emergency by Alea Kott




Title: Zero Volume 1: An Emergency
Author: Alea Kott (no website)
Publisher: Diamond Book Distributors
Rating: WARTY!

Image Comics

Illustrated by:
Michael Walsh
Tradd Moore
Mateus Santoluoco
Morgan Jeske
Will Tempest
Colorist: Jordi Bellaire
Letterist: Clayton Cowles
Design: Tom Muller

Set in the near future (with some flashbacks), this is a graphic novel of terrorism and sci-fi, aimed at the adult market, and it relates a story of an unspecified bio-device (the SAP-V enhancer) which somehow augments a person's fighting skills. It relates a story of a portal which allows instant transportation from one location to another. It also relates a story of unrelenting violence; the comic is very bloody and doesn't spare gore or nudity. The artwork is acceptable, certainly better than I could do, but it did not impress me as much as other novels have, especially not given how seemingly perfunctory and unnecessarily gory it was. The comic had a dirty feel, and I am sure this was intentional, but it fell flat for me. I was impressed by how consistent the art was, given the number of illustrators who worked on this project. Having said that, some pages seemed more appealing than others. I found myself taken much more by the larger illustrations than the busier, smaller ones.

Page 56 & page 96:

The book seemed quite experimental in some regards. There were rather oddball images putting in seemingly random appearances throughout the narrative, or there were regular images, but oddly skewed (such as the credits page, for example, and one partition page upon which the text was unaccountably vertical. I saw little point in these, and those experiments didn't worked for me. Obviously the whole point of a graphic novel is to throw a wrench into the orderliness of endlessly rolling lines of rank and file text, taking it off-road and into the wilds, but there's a limit to how much I'm willing to rough-it when I'm reading! The text was odd, too, with some pages consisting of the traditional image-plus-description-or-speech, while others were completely devoid of all text, like the sixteen page sequence starting on page 102. That sixteen page spread seemed a bit overdone; it wasn't the only one but it was by far the most extravagant. In contrast, there was a surprising amount of pure text - memos and interrogation/debriefing reports for example - and at least one of these was almost illegible (page 61). I don’t know if this was intentional.

Another issue that I had was that the story reminded me of a squirrel, jumping almost spastically from one thing to another with no segue in between. This made it hard to get into the story and to follow developments, and even to figure out what was going on. In the end, I had no idea what was going on or even what was supposed to be going on. I have no idea, even having finished the comic, what the story was that I had just been told, or how the various selections were supposed to be related to one another! There's an important difference between infusing some mystery and intrigue into a novel, and simply leaving your reader in the dark, especially by the time they reach the end. The big reveal was what? I have no idea! Maybe it’s just me, but it didn’t work for me and I cannot recommend this graphic novel.


Sunday, February 9, 2014

Undead And Unemployed by MaryJanice Davidson




Title: Undead And Unemployed
Author: MaryJanice Davidson
Publisher: Penguin
Rating: WARTY!

Why the second novel (or any novel) in a series would need a twelve-page prologue is as much as mystery as it is missed with glee by me; been there, skipped that, moving on to chapter one! I started out Liking volume one of this series. It wasn't spectacular but it was an ok read and it was a fast read. This one I started out pretty much the same way, but it went downhill faster than the first one did, to the point where it went beyond my ability to stay with it!

This series has run to some ten novels, so it can hardly be described as a failure. I liked the first one in the series well enough to want to see the follow-up, but in reading this follow-up now, I can’t say I have an interest in pursuing this series any further. I just didn’t like this sequel well enough - or at all after the first half of it. I started out thinking the story was OK, but after reading to about half-way through, it seemed to me it wasn't really going anywhere or showing me anything new or interesting.

It’s a really fast read, but I don’t feel involved with any of the characters and I don’t feel engaged in the stories which are being told. They're ok, and that's the problem, they're only ok, nothing special. They do beat the pants off the god-awful Charlaine Harris Southern Vampire series! I love the TV show, but the novels sucked worse than the vampires did. These novels are significantly better than that, but they're just not really my idea of a truly enthralling read, and the simplistic PoV in this novel finally started getting to me.

In this volume, Betsy Taylor, vampire queen, moves into a new home - which is a mansion - meets a little girl named Marie who, it's patently obvious, is a ghost, and Betsy is beseeched by her vampire acquaintances to take on the Blade Warriors, a church youth organization which is murdering vampires at the behest of some anonymous benefactor - or rather, malefactor. Betsy at first refuses to step up to her vampire queen responsibilities; that is until they attack her personally, and also attack a vampire friend she likes. In the end, there is no war: she makes friends with the vampire killers, overpowering their antagonism with tea and biscuits. This was amusing, but not really that funny and not really very entertaining - like I said, it was ok, but nothing special.

It was at that point, and in the next few pages that I found I couldn't engage with the material. It didn’t draw me in or make me want to find out what would happen next. The problem with this story, I think, in a nutshell is that Betsy is never in any danger, never has any real problem, and there is never any real conflict, no problems to solve, nothing to worry about. It’s more like a child's story ("Betsy the Happy Vampire") than a story for the age group Betsy is actually in, but the graphic depictions of adult life, and vampire life, of course mean it isn't a child's story at all, and that unholy combination simply doesn’t work. It’s very childlike in its simplicity and fruity goodness, and it inevitably becomes sickly, like eating too much of a rich desert. If you put a cream filling in a cake and eat a slice, its wonderful, but if you remove the cake and try eating only the cream filling, after the first taste, it’s nasty. That's how this novel is - all cream filling and no cake! I have no choice but to rate this one warty!


Thursday, February 6, 2014

Cress by Marissa Meyer




Title: Cress
Author: Marissa Meyer
Publisher: Feiwel & Friends
Rating: WARTY!

I've already reviewed the first in the Lunar Chronicles series, Cinder and the second, Scarlet. I have to say that whilst I was knocked out by Cinder I was left really flat by Scarlet, barely finding it a worthy read, so I went into this one hoping for another real cracker of a novel like the first one was, but I was let down again.

I was very much disappointed in the poor quality of the writing here. Here's a couple of quick examples up front, with more to come down the road: Meyer is yet another YA writer who seriously in need of an anatomy lesson. Here it is again: vertebra is the singular, vertebrae is the plural! Oh yeah, and as long as we're on the topic, it's 'biceps', not bicep. Is this the best that "Big Publishing" can offer? Where were the beta readers who Meyer praises in her acknowledgments? Where was the editor she also praises? How much does that editor get paid and why? What's the point of subjugating yourself to all of that if you get so poor a return for allowing the publishing industry to walk all over you?

I don't do book covers because this is a blog about writing and the writer rarely has any influence on the book's cover (or even over the title on too many occasions). This is yet another good reason to self-publish! Having said that, this cover is one more illustration (forgive the pun) of the well-established principle that cover artists never read the novels which they depict. Either that or they do indeed read it and are just as artistically trampled upon by "Big Publishing" as the author is. Cress's hair is twice as long on the cover as it actually is in the novel, and is she naked on the cover?! And what's that down her back that looks like an Official Wear™ National Basketball Association® thigh bone? Is this supposed to indicate that Cress has a spine, unlike Scarlet?! Trust me, she doesn't!

Here's one thing up front about Meyer's quadrilogy, and its language: there is no language barrier! No matter who goes where, everyone speaks English! I found that way too much of a stretch. I know they have a "universal" language but that's a patent cop-out because language barriers are raised on very rare occasions - they just never interfere with anyone understanding everyone! I know that Cinder has a translation chip, but it's not like these guys are traveling in the TARDIS which will translate for everyone! So in volume two, we had Cinder, who is Chinese, and Wolf who is Lunar, in France and conversing with everyone in English without even a hint of any problem. In this volume, we have Cinder et al landing in Africa and conversing with the locals in English with no difficulties. I don't know what language the Lunatics are supposed to speak, but evidently that's English, too, because we have Thorne meeting Cress and conversing in English with no language barrier at all. It's all way too convenient.

Anyway, Cress begins right where Scarlet left off, with Scarlet Benoit (Red Riding Hood), Linh Cinder (Cinderella), Carswell Thorne (aka Flynn Rider), and (The Big, yeah, the Bad, and let's hear it: The Big Bad) "Wolf" (yeah, that's right!) flying high - in a spacecraft which unbeknownst to them is being kept off the grid by Cress. It's interesting to note that the ship's name is Rampion, and that Rampion was the name of the plant in some versions of the original Rapunzel story, after which the child is named. In other versions of the story, the edible Rapunzel plant was employed for this purpose, which makes it amusing that 'Cress' is also the name of an edible plant. Cress has appeared briefly before in this series, but her details were sketchy. In this novel they're filled out.

It turns out that Crescent Moon, aka Cress is a hacker, who has lived for seven years on a satellite, spying on Earth for the Lunatics under Queen Levana, who wants to marry wet rag prince Kai and then murder him and dominate the Earth (wait, wasn't this the plot for Thomas the Tank Engine?!). Frankly, the Queen and the prince deserve each other, but I'm pretty sure that's not how this series is going to play out....

A word about Earthen! Meyer uses 'Earthen' repeatedly to signify something connected with Earth, but it reminds me of 'earthen-ware' - like baked clay pottery! I have no idea where she got this term from or why she thought it appropriate. It's far better than 'Terran' which so many sci-fi stories employ, and which frankly sucks green wieners, but 'Earthen' really isn't that much better. She needs a new term. Let's work on that!

And while we're on the topic of two kingdoms, let me say about the Moon: it has no atmosphere, therefore you cannot see a shooting star on the Moon. That is, unless the lunatics have developed an atmosphere, in which case, how do they generate it and how do they make it dense enough to breathe, since the Moon isn't possessed of sufficient gravity to even retain it let alone accumulate it at density? There will be more on the plot-destroying Lunar gravity later in this review, but since Meyer's so-called Lunar Chronicles has now, in three volumes, not only failed to venture onto the Moon, but also completely failed to relay anything of utility about the Lunar society, we have no idea. I assume volume four will take care of that, but given volumes two and three, who knows?

This 'Cress was raised on the Moon' thing makes no sense in the way Meyer executes it. The Moon is the largest satellite in the solar system in comparison with its planet (and actually the fifth largest in real terms), but it is still only one quarter the diameter of Earth and only 60% the density of Earth. Its gravity is therefore one-sixth of Earth's. This means that a sixty kilogram (130 pounds rounded, near enough) person (by Earth's measurement) will weight only ten kilograms (very roughly 20 pounds) on the Moon. Recall that Cress is raised for roughly half her lifetime on the Moon in this comparatively reduced gravity. She spends the rest of her life in a satellite which has artificial gravity, and there's no reason whatsoever for that satellite to be set to any level of gravitational pull other than the Moon's, yet when Cress arrives on Earth she shows absolutely no stress at all from the fact that effectively she now weighs six times what she has done throughout her entire life to that point! That "20 pound" girl now weighs 130 pounds. Yes, she would notice it! In fact, she'd be debilitated by it. She would be severely handicapped, yet here she is hiking dunes in the Sahara with little more than burning thighs as a consequence of suddenly weighing six times her weight for the first time in her life. Bad call, Meyer! Bad beta readers! Bad editor!

Anyway, once Cinder & crew re-establish contact with Cress, they resolve to rescue her from her prison up high. This "rescue" turns out to be something of a disaster with the crew of the Rampion doing one stupid-ass thing after another (although overall, this action scene isn't too bad, broadly speaking; it's the final action scene which sucks). In the end all they manage to do is to exchange Cress for Scarlet, who is swiftly transported as a hostage to the Moon where, no doubt, she and we will meet Winter. Now they're split into three groups, with Cress, Cinder, Wolf, and an apparently defecting pilot of the Lunatics' ship in the segment which lands in Africa to have Cinder's Lunatic doctor Erland take care of Wolf's bullet wounds - yes, they were firing actual bullets in a space ship with no sign of damage to the ship much less explosive decompression....

The third split consists of Thorne and Cress (who is now utterly in instadore with Thorne for no apparent reason whatsoever), who land in North Africa, and Thorne becomes blinded in the process, due to a bump on the back of his head. This is technically feasible since the occipital lobe, which processes vision, is right at the back of the skull just above the spine. This is also a great argument against intelligent design, when you think about it. The most critical sense in humans is vision, so no intelligent designer would put the processor so far from the receptors. The occipital lobe ought to be at the front of the skull right behind the eyes if humans were intelligently designed.

But not to get too far off track, Meyer spits out some mumbo-jumbo later in the novel about optic nerve damage and some magical stem cell cure from Erland which can fix his eyes by means of eye-drops. Say what?!! Meyer's inane waffling on the topic makes makes zero sense whatsoever and completely drops this injury from plausible into fantasy-land. Mythbusters would declare this claim "BUSTED"! I have to ask, "Why?" Not why she lards up this injury with unhealthy dollops of crazy, but why she actually has Thorne blinded in the first place. It contributes nothing to the story, and it contributes nothing to Thorne and Cress bonding. It's like she tossed a coin, or threw a dart into a dart board covered with wild and wacky ideas for her third volume and the dart happened to stick into one which said, "Hey, let's blind our hero and see where that goes!" Trust me, it goes nowhere.

That's not the only thing upon which Meyer trips in this volume. First of all, it makes no sense to the plot have the team split up and then get reunited not that long afterwards, yet this diversion occupies a space of some two hundred pages (interspersed with other action) of non-activity which could have been completely excised from this novel, and it wouldn to have affected a single thing that happened. Again, it's like Meyer was following some sort of rigid auto-plot generator without actually considering whether what she was planning made any sense. The split does nothing to move the story forward. It does nothing to bond Cress and Thorne, or to have them get to know each other any better. It does nothing save eat up paper with nothing interesting, no action, no humor, and neither important digression nor interesting sub-plot. It's a waste of two hundred pages. I guess if you figure that the novel costs over three cents per page, and if those two hundred were cut out, you'd be paying five cents per page, you're really better off?! Maybe it's a bonus deal: Buy now and get two hundred free pages! Guaranteed organic plot-free pages! It does serve one important purpose, I suppose: that of revealing what a total jerk Thorne is.

The first thing the blinded Thorne does is to slice off Cress's hair without even asking her if this is what she wants. Wilting violet Cress submits to this rape without even challenging it. This begs the entire question as to why Meyer put Cress in this position in the first place: why give her the long hair? If it's just to make a Rapunzel of her and nothing else, then what a complete bust of an artifice that was! I guess it's no more of a rip-off than Scarlet's limp red hoodie. At least there was something packaged with Cinder's robotic aspects; they tie into the overall story. You can't say that about either Cress or Scarlet.

This thing with the hair bothered me because it was such an abuse. Meyer tries to "justify" Thorne's assault upon Cress's person by having Cress marvel at how light her head is now without the hair. And that's it! So what does Meyer expect us to believe? That Cress secretly hated her long hair but was too unmotivated to deal with it for almost a decade on the satellite? That Cress is such a piece of model clay that any guy can do whatever he wants with her and she'll rationalize and approve of the action? That Cress had all the grooming apparatus she needed, including the means to trim her nails, but nothing with which to cut her hair? This makes no sense and is clearly nothing but a cheap ruse on Meyer's part, to turn Cress into Rapunzel without actually having to do any thinking about it.

Meanwhile, back on Earth, Cress figures out where they are from the stars the first night they're there - that is, she figures out that they're in North Africa but she can't put a better handle on it than that. I guess she didn't gaze at the stars too well. The problem here is that they begin heading towards mountains (real mountains, we're told) but there are no such mountains in North Africa - not when you're heading south or south east from "the Sahara"! If they'd headed north, then there would be real mountains: the Atlas chain, but heading the other way, all they will find is the Tademait plateau, which couldn't be mistaken for the kind of mountains which they're clearly talking about, especially not given that the very highest point is less than a thousand meters. Further south than that is the Congo. Lots of jungle, no mountains.

I found myself wondering time and time again where the heck Cress and Thorne were supposed to be. If you look at pictures of the Sahara, there is very little of it that matches what Meyer describes. Farafra (the place where Cinder ends up, I guess) is actually in Egypt, in the so-called white desert, which is beautiful, but nothing like what Meyer describes - and there are no mountains there! If we assume that the mountains are the Ahaggar range, then there are no nearby dunes through which they could head south towards mountains! There are only some thirteen "dune seas" in North Africa, none of which abut real mountains in any southerly direction.

My best guess would be that they landed in the Idehan Murzuk sand sea, and headed south east towards the mountains of Tibesti, but Idehan Murzuk doesn't feature the roller-coaster dunes which Meyer describes and Tibesti is hardly the mountain range we're told they're heading towards. If Meyer had dropped her focus on those dunes and mountains, she would have done a much better writing job. Most of North Africa isn't dunes. It is desert, however: rocky desert. As wikipedia explains, it consists of dry valleys, gravel plains, stone plateaus, and salt flats. From a writing perspective, Meyer could have used Cress's struggle against the massive gravity of Earth for tiring her out and visiting upon her the requisite suffering, without the need for dunes. Again, this was poorly written.

But it gets worse! As Thorne and Cress crest the dunes, we're explicitly told that Cress realizes it's smarter to weave one's way in between the dunes rather than to exhaust oneself hiking up and down every one (some of which can be almost six hundred feet high), but immediately after we're told this, we're told that Cress starts getting tired as she crests one more hill. Now did they avoid the "hills" or not? Again, this is poorly and inconsistently written.

Meanwhile, back in China, the worthless Kai continues to be obsessed with wedding preparations and focused on nothing else. This is all we hear about - how he has no time for anything but the wedding even though he detests it. This is the purest bullshit and nonsense. Meyer really lets down her story here and continues to convince me that Kai is a waste of skin. Kai has an entire empire (really?) to run. I can't believe that he's so stupid as to neglect his empire whilst focusing solely on the wedding he doesn't even want, but this is precisely what Meyer works so hard to convince us of. You know, I actually can believe it: I can believe that Kai is this bone-headedly stupid because Meyer has repeatedly shown us that he's this abysmally stupid.

When Cress's satellite crashed, her cloaking of the Lunatic forces crashed with it, and Earth's leaders suddenly realize that they've been surrounded by Lunatic ships, staying just far enough outside of Earth's protected zone as to not technically constitute a violation of Lunatic treaties. Instead of focusing on how to defeat these, and focusing on building up his military, and focusing on how to defeat the lunatic mind-controlling powers, Kai spends every day discussing wedding menus and other pointless nuptial trivia, which he could quite easily have delegated. The fact that he doesn't even consider delegating this is yet one more testimony to how abysmally and fundamentally STUPID to his very core this jerk of an Emperor (Emperor? More on this anon) truly is. I already detested this loser before I even started this novel. I can't begin to accurately quantify how much of a massive joke he continues to be after I'd read only a fifth of this third volume!

Since this blog is about writing as much as it is about reading, here's a writing issue: repetition. At times there is a good reason to use repetition in your writing, but it's so easy to overdo it and so easy for the reader to become tired of it or even angered by it. And that's just when you know you're doing it! What about unintentional repetition? Meyer indulges in this on the bottom of page 178, which is the start of chapter 21. A sentence that is also a paragraph there reads, "A table beside her held a tray with the two small bullets the doctor had removed - they seemed too small to have done so much damage." (My emphasis).

My assumption here is that Meyer doesn't know she did this, but perhaps she does know - perhaps she did it on purpose. It just doesn't feel to me that she did, because it doesn't feel like it's her style. I think it slipped by both her and her beta readers, and by her editor too. So you have to ask yourself as a writer, does it even matter? Will anyone notice this, and if they do, will they care? I noticed it because I often do this myself. Not so much in my serious stuff as in my goofy stuff, such as Baker Street, and in one of the short stories in Poem y Granite. I still can't decide if it sounds cool in Meyer's example, or if it just sounds repetitive. Like I said, it's no big deal; it's not going to destroy your novel or your reputation as a writer, but it is something you might want to keep an eye open for, especially if you're doing all your work yourself. If you have no readers and editors to help out (not that they were of any help to Meyer in this case), then you need to be aware of events like this in your writing, and at least note such things even if, on reflection, you choose not to change them.

On the topic of writing well, I got to a point over half-way through Cress and I had realized, with increasing sorrow, that Cress is a moron. Worse, she's not interesting. She's worse than Scarlet, but in a different way. Thorne is also a moron. I appreciated him in Scarlet because he offered some light relief from a story which was patchy at best, and annoying at worst, but even then, I realized that what he offered was only appreciable in the context of a poorly told story. If the novel had been better, Thorne would have appeared worse, I'm sure. In this novel, Thorne is just a jerk.

I know that Meyer has Cress in mind as a rather naïve newbie, but she fails to convey this at all, much less consistently in her writing. Cress's behavior is so uneven and inconsistent as to be just annoying. She's on top of things in some regards and completely stupid in others (not stupid meaning inept, but stupid as in really dumb) and there's no intelligent pattern to her perceptions and actions. Meyer has her discovering Thorne playing poker, through which he wins a "droid", but sitting on his lap is that very droid - which looks very human and very convincing to Cress, who storms out like a six-year-old and ends-up becoming kidnapped. When Thorne figures all this out, he is wracked with guilt! That comes over as so false as to be sickening.

Fortunately, the kidnappers are taking Cress exactly where she needs to go, but how could she be so dumb? She has followed news feeds all her life, and she was raised in the schizophrenic "atmosphere" of the Lunar colonies. She has been subject to manipulative visits from the evil Sybil, yet she has somehow failed to grow even one suspicious bone in her entire body (maybe the suspicious bone is that one in the cover illustration?!). I'm sorry, but that doesn't impress me as good characterization, especially when Meyer depicts her as being so childishly thoughtless here, to boot. Why is it that the women, even the droid Iko, are so consistently depicted in Meyer's quadrilogy as being limp emotional rags, and the men so manly? Honestly? If a guy were writing this, I could in some ways understand, if not condone, such poor and weak characterization, but for a female writer to write her main characters as such pathetic little flibbertigibbets is thoroughly inexcusable. And again, I saw no point whatsoever to this splitting up of the crew and the diversionary sojourn amongst the dunes. It was two hundred boring and wasted pages to me.

I have to say a word about 'droid'. This issues directly from Star Wars, and has entered the lexicon of sci-fi writing. It's very convenient because it has traction and isn't genderist like 'android', from which 'droid' is derived, but the word grates on me! I don't like it. Yeah, I know, picky, picky, picky! (see how I used repetition there?!). I just wish there was a better word. I'm going to work on that!

So to cut a long story short (and to reveal not really a very big spoiler), Cinder succeeds in disrupting the marriage between the worthless Emperor Kai and the laughably "evil" Queen Levana with a really poorly written "dramatic eleventh-hour rescue". I do have one question: over what is Kai the emperor? A country, over which Kai rules, has a king. If you want to be an emperor, then you have to be the ruler over more than one country or state. Victoria was an empress. She ruled over the British empire. Kai is a king at best since he never refers to his 'empire' - he consistently calls it a country. So again, whence 'emperor'?!. Just asking!

So in short, this novel was supposedly about how Cress comes into play and how she and Thorne get it on, but I disliked Thorne from the start in this novel. I knew from volume 2 that he was going to be tied-up with Cress (so to speak!), yet right from the point where they first meet, he hacks off her hair without even checking with her that it's okay to rape and pillage her body like this. This was so symbolic of his taking ownership of her that it made me sick! From that point on Cress becomes nothing more than a pleasure droid in his manipulative hands who doesn't take charge of the story. but who instead is merely buffeted about within in.

For a series written by a woman which is supposedly about four strong and heroic women, Meyer has really let down the first three of her main characters and there's no reason at all to believe that she won't betray Winter in just the same way that she's already betrayed Cinder, Scarlet, and Cress. So, in conclusion, and since this is nowhere near as good as Cinder, and actually is worse than Scarlet I really have no choice but to rate this as warty. I will probably read the final volume in the desperate hope that it will recover the glory of Cinder, but since Meyer is now batting a .333, I hold out little hope for that, and I'll get that one from the library, not brand new!