Monday, October 28, 2013

City of Fallen Angels - Cassandra Clare

The fourth book in The Mortal Instruments series follows on the storyline from the original three books once our characters have returned from the Shadowhunter home country of Idris having defeated the evil Valentine. While I'm sure there are plenty of people out there that are stoked there are more books being written in this world that Cassandra Clare has created, I am not one of those super psyched people. Don't get me wrong I did thoroughly enjoy the trilogy that came before this book, but I felt that the story was done and I have happy to leave it there. This new extension and angle have put a twist on it all to keep it fresh but still lack a little for me.

Again having listened to this on audiobook I was truly disappointed by the two narrators, Ed Westwick and Molly C Quinn. The surprising thing, even to myself, is that I love Ed Westwick. I think he is amazingly talented and as soon as I heard him speak I was in a whirlwind trying to pin point where exactly I knew the voice from and when it clicked who it was I was so happy. However the excitement didn't last very long. I found that both narrators seemed to miss the beat and emotion of the text they were reading and their different pronunciation of names and places from all the previous books made me so furious that I found myself correcting them every single time throughout the entirety of the book. For me, this put such a downer on my listening experience, that I fear it has even dampened my feelings for the story itself.

This story took a long time to get anywhere and was mainly focused on the character Simon, who I thought was a little boring even if he is a downworlder now. Then once it did start to flow at a decent pace it felt to me like it was rushed with a few story lines being avoided so that there could be yet another book to conclude everything. The final few minutes of this story were so infuriating that it has made me seriously question whether or not I want to listen to the last book in the series.

There are good fun characters in this story, why didn't Clare follow them instead of making them bit characters who only appear when the main boring characters we follow need something from them. That especially would have made this post trilogy storyline a little more exciting and enticing. More Issy and Magnus to spice things up in the final instalment please.

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Catching Fire - Suzanne Collins

The second book in the Hunger Games trilogy follows Katniss and Peeta in the year following their win in the Hunger Games. After her rebellious challenge to the Capital that enabled both of them to make it out of the games alive, Katniss finds herself as the poster child for the building of a rebellion throughout the 12 districts.

Starting out the reader gets to know what life is like back in District 12 for a Victor. Everything has changed for Katniss and her family, now with their own house in the Victors village and ample food that Katniss shares with as many people as possible. It seems that life could go on and Katniss and Peeta could forget about the games and continue on with life. That is until the announcement of the 75th Annual Hunger Games which have been made extra special by being a game featuring past Victors only. As Katniss is the only female victor from District 12, her fate is sealed.

I found this book to be almost as amazing as the first. While it does follow along the same idea of our main character going into the Hunger Games again, there is a new arena, new contestants and a new feeling of unrest within. The arena appealed to me more this time as it was designed for the purpose of the games, while the forest style area of the original Hunger Games seemed a little bland and pointedly there to help out the girl who climbs under the fence of her district to escape into the wilderness. Also putting characters who know what it takes to survive, into a purpose built arena adds a spark and intelligence to all that occurs within.

I ploughed through this book in one night, without sleeping as I couldn't put it down. I was so excited that a second book in a series could be almost as good as the first. I would say the only thing that made this book stand in the original's shadow was that a large part of the general story was very similar with Katniss being selected for the Hunger Games and going back into the arena. Still a very high quality for a second book, which puts so much pressure on the third and final book Mockingjay. Let's hope it lives up to the challenge.

Wednesday, October 9, 2013

City of Glass - Cassandra Clare

City of Glass was a fun brisk paced book. It was much better than the previous two in the series. I feel that was because there was a lot happening and the story all tied in together. I felt that it moved at the right pace without slowing down, and things weren't explained in great depth to slow the flow of the story down. It was a typical third book and end of trilogy where the story wraps up easily and the good guys win in the end, but not without cost.

I felt the descriptions of the fictional Shadowhunter home land of Idris and the city of glass itself, Alicante, were delightful with just enough information to give you a basic description but little enough to allow the reader to use their imagination to construct a remarkable landscape unlike anything I have read of before in any other novel.

Knowing that this book will be made into a movie in the coming future lifts my spirits. I just hope they can do it justice with the imagery. Watching the full story play out on the big screen will be something to look forward to.

This book is worth the read to finish the trilogy and get some closure on the world of shadowhunters. However I have just been made aware that there are two further stories in this series that I will be listening to very shortly, as well as a prequel trilogy set in Victorian England.