Tuesday, July 28, 2015

Crimson Bound by Rosamund Hodge

Hi there, guys!
What's up?

BASICS

22934445Title: Crimson Bound
Author: Rosamund Hodge
Release Date: May 5th 2015
Publisher: Balzer + Bray
ISBN: 006222476X
Number of Pages: 448
Genre: Fantasy, Young Adult, Romance

 
MY OPINION 
"In all your life, your only choice", Aunt LĂ©onie said to her once, "is the path of needles or the path of pins."
Rachelle remembered that, the day that she killed her.


Right away I knew, this is the quote I want to start my review with.
What those two paths are exactly about, will be explained later in the book and I really, really liked Hodge's explanation.

“You always have to choose between the path of needles and the path of pins.
When a dress is torn, you know, you can just pin it up, or you can take the time to sew it together. That's what it means. The quick and easy way or the painful way that works.” 


But then I found this quote:

“Her dreams were a tangled mess of blood and shuddering trees”

Which I just had to include in my review. This whole book consists out of amazing quote-worthy sentences. Too many to list them all!
(Maybe one day I'll do a Top Ten: My Favourite Quotes!)

The two main characters were unique in a way. What really gave them a twist, was that they differed so much in their believes and past actions.
One one side, there's Rachelle. She was "marked" by a Forestborn when she was 15 and was left with two options:
Kill somebody in the next three days and become a slave to the Great Forest
or die.
Rachelle made her choice and is still paying the price three years later. Rachelle is haunted by her guilt and when she learns that the Devourer will rise again, she is ready to do everything to stop him form seizing power with his capital D Darkness.
She is dark, twisted and a murderer. She's allowed to be selfish and cruel. I do enjoy books with a ruthless heroine. (Such as Graceling, Throne of Glass or The Hunger Games)

Every day for the last three years, she had thought she deserved to die. She still didn’t want to. She wanted to live with every filthy desperate scrap of her heart.

On the other side, there's Armand, one of the king's bastards. He claims that he was marked by a Forestborn and refused to murder somebody. Yet he is alive. He may not have lost his life but he lost his hands by that refusal. And he's the one Rachelle is ordered to protect. He's seen as a saint for being willing to accept death over saving himself.
They both judge each other for their actions and believes and it's a long way to go until they started to understand each other.


This retelling of Red Riding Hood does not stick with the fairy tale it, it goes beyong that.
A good example for that is Marissa Meyer's The Lunar Chronicles Series.
Those stick so closely to the original fairy tales (Cinderella, Red Riding Hood, Rapunzel) that you can easily guess what will happen next.
That is definitely not the case with Crimson Bound. It's hard to even recognize the fairy tale.
There are no wolves (well, not in the literal sense. Har har.)

This whole story is dark and twisted and gory:

In the darkest shadows of the wood stands a house.
The walls are caulked with blood.
The roof is thatched with bones.
Within that bloody house lived Old Mother Hunger, the first and eldest of all forestborn.


I really liked the picture Hodge drew of the court. They were all so ridiculous, especially the morning gatherings.
It reminded me a lot of the past where royal women had to give birth in front of a whole room of nobility. It was quite a big custom among French royality.
Somewhere I've read that Marie Antoinette was almost killed by the amount of people streaming in her chamber.

Anyway, back to Crimson Bound.
There were two things that bothered me.
1) The ending felt odd
Maybe that's just how I feel but Rachelle and Armand's reunion happended too fast and too forced.

2) The blurb on the cover
It's so weird.

Protect him.
Defend him.
But never love him.

 
It gives one a totally wrong idea of what this book is about. Armand and Rachelle's relationship is put into a completely different light.
Otherwise I really like the cover!

RATING
4
out of 5 stars

Saturday, July 18, 2015

Eon: Dragoneye Reborn by Alison Goodman

What's up, guys?

2986865BASICS
Title: Eon: Dragoneye Reborn
Series: Eon, book #1
Author: Alison Goodman
Release Date: December 26th 2008
Publisher:Viking Books for Young Readers
ISBN: 0670062278
Number of Pages: 531
Genre: High Fantasy, Young Adult




Even a cornered rabbit will fight with teeth and claws.

An that's exactly what 16-year old Eona is.
Disguised as a boy by her Master who bought her from a salt farm years before and scarred by an obvious limp, she is the exact opposite of a Dragoneye Apprentice.

There are twelve Dragons in the world of Eona, each one is assigned a year in the twelve-year-cycle.
This year the Rat Dragon is the ascending one, meaning he will provide his Dragoneye with the double amount of power. Toghether the twelve Dragoneyes will protect the country and the Dragon Emperor.
But for five hundred nobody has ever seen the Mirror Dragon. Until now.

Despite Eona's secret and her disability she is her Master's last hope for wealth, and if she fails and is not chosen as the new apprentice for the ascending Rat Dragon, she will be sent back to the labour camp she came from.
She is cornered as the rabbit  and has no way to escape than to force herself through it.

Then something happens not even her Master dreamt about:
She gets chosen as a Dragoneye Apprentice - just not the Rat Dragon's but the Mirror Dragon's.
Suddenly she is thrown into a world of politics, allegiances and powerful enemies.
But what is she supposed to do if not to fight?


Alison Goodman based her story on Chinese and Japanese culture and legends.
I can only imagine the amount of research Goodman put into her duology!
It's comparatively easy to write a story set in Great Britain or the US but in a fictional China/Japan?
Hella difficult. 
Most of the Asian cultures have a really elaborated system of ranks and politeness.
Like, take the soldiers. While on duty they have a certain bow and are not allowed to bow in the "not-on-duty"-way. Even if ordered by their superiors.
I guess we only see the top of Goodman's knowledge about the Imperial China!
Right now, I can't think of any other book which was set in this certain surrounding and I must say, I really enjoyed it!

To get a good overlook over the various Dragons, their Dragoneyes and what they are the Keeper of, there are some info pages included at the beginning! I have to admit, I actually sneered while reading that page. Dragon Dragon? Really? All I could think was: "So, that's basically the new Moon Moon?"
I get it, it's all about the Chinese zodiac signs, but still. Moon Moon. /sneer/

If you're not familiar with the whole Moon Moon phenomena:
http://i.imgur.com/mhbN526.jpg
http://41.media.tumblr.com/34d1060da44c26a4581ee1de17fc01b6/tumblr_mlh6rj8GwT1qgx21do1_500.png
http://apollo-na-uploads.s3.amazonaws.com/1422152164630/moon-moon.pnghttp://36.media.tumblr.com/a7bf1249dd8dcad014396b8aba774b76/tumblr_ndtrw4pyve1tficwmo9_1280.jpghttp://41.media.tumblr.com/c4b322632c6951ed19b1aadd9d8c1d2a/tumblr_ndtrw4pyve1tficwmo5_540.jpghttp://40.media.tumblr.com/0744ed80d89016b82fccace3884b113d/tumblr_mmyhrpB87e1rxt36io1_500.jpg


After reading the overview it became quite obvious what Eona had to do to call her dragon. The Mirror Dragon is the Keeper of Truth after all.

The beginning of Eon: Dragoneye Reborn managed to hold my attention quite well but from page 200 and upwards there was a sudden drop of the pacing. I found myself skimming some passages.
The story went only slowly forward and at some points I wanted to throw Eona's compass at her and scream: "Don't do that. He told you it's freaking poisonous! Come on use your brain!"

Behind each male character I expected the love interest. I waited for the moment she would completely fall in love with either Prince Kygo or Hollin.
Prince Kygo was my main suspect in this case, just because he's the prince and come on in which book did the female protagonist not choose the Prince?
Yes, I'm looking at you America Singer.
Anyway, this did not happen. After finishing Eon, I read some reviews in which readers complained about the lack of a love interest. Like, what? Are we not able to read a book without romance anymore?
A book that's 'merely' about an awesome and conflicted heroine?
Eona had no time for swooning and wooing, she was busy saving the whole Empire, thank you very much.

I withdrew a star from the book's rating because (as I said) it has a quite slow middle part and sometimes I had difficulties in picturing certain places, devices or adornments.
But I'm willing to blame that on my lack in vocabulary.

RATING
4
out of 5 stars

Monday, July 13, 2015

Hi, guys!
Sorry that I'm not very active right now!
I hosted an American exchange student over the last few days and I have some assignments to work on!
But as soon as I'm done with all the school work, I'll post a new review!

See you guys soon!
Franzi