Showing posts with label Laini Taylor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Laini Taylor. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 3, 2018

Mini Review Roundup: 2017 Reads

As I discovered while filling out the Year-End Statistics Survey last weekend, 2017 was a not a good review year on the blog. I only posted two reviews the entire year—two! Ouch! Granted, I was trying to get back into the swing of blogging regularly, so I didn't post a lot in general, but still. Must do better in 2018! Anyway, I was doing a little cleaning up behind the scenes—updating the layout, deleting drafts of posts I'm not likely to finish—when I noticed that I actually did have a few reviews I started to write but never got around to finishing. So, rather than toss them in trash bin, I decided to tweak them a little bit and make a compilation of mini reviews as a final send-off to 2017. 

The Bird and the Sword by Amy Harmon

Read February 2017 | 

I discovered this book through the art of PhantomRin, who, as you might know, has created some amazing fan art for the Throne of Glass series as well as other YA novels. I came across this gorgeous picture she made of the two main characters from The Bird and the Sword, Tiras and Lark, and I was immediately intrigued because this imagining of Tiras totally gave me Heir of Fire-era Rowan vibes, with the long, silver-white hair.
The writing in The Bird and the Sword is so enchanting, and it was easy to get swept up in Lark's story. One of the most powerful elements of the book, for me, was how acutely I felt everything Lark was feeling––her loneliness and isolation that she felt because she is literally unable to speak, the despair over the seemingly impossible circumstances she and Tiras face, but also her love for Tiras and her stubborn determination to do whatever she can to save him.
While I definitely felt there were elements of the plot and the worldbuilding that could have been fleshed out a bit more––for instance, I'm still not entirely sure why Tiras had such a hard time shifting between his eagle and human forms––The Bird and the Sword makes up for these shortcomings with beautiful writing and a sweet romance.

Once and for All by Sarah Dessen

Read in June 2017 | 

I've been meaning to read more Sarah Dessen books ever since I finished Along for the Ride (which I loved) a few summers back. With its intriguing premise of summer romance amidst the flurry of wedding planning chaos, Once and for All seemed like the perfect book to try next. While it was a quick, enjoyable read, this one unfortunately didn't fully capture my interest. Ambrose's constant cheeriness and knack for landing himself in trouble was a bit annoying, and I never really felt 100 percent on board with the budding romance between him and Louna. I was far more interested in the chapters about Louna's previous relationship with Ethan than I ever was for the chapters about Louna and Ambrose, whose relationship felt somewhat forced. The Ethan chapters tugged at my heartstrings, and I sort of wish the book had just focused on that story instead.

Night of Cake and Puppets by Laini Taylor

Read October 2017 |  

To read my review of the original e-book version, click here.
I absolutely love the Daughter of Smoke and Bone series by Laini Taylor and cannot praise it highly enough. Seriously, why is there not a bigger fandom for these books, or the fantastic Strange the Dreamer, for that matter? Laini never disappoints. There are so many laugh-out-loud moments in this novella, and the romance between Zuzanna and Mik is too adorable for words. I really loved the illustrations and how they brought the story to life (even though these interpretations Zuzana and Mik didn't quite fit my own imagined versions of them). Some of the artwork even creeped me out a bit, but that's not necessarily a bad thing, since the series does have a touch of creepiness––I don't think I really appreciated before just how macabre Zuzana and Karou's habitual hangout, Poison Kitchen, is. The bonus comic at the end for the opening pages of Daughter of Smoke and Bone has me seriously wanting the whole series in graphic novel form. It would be so amazing!


Wednesday, May 7, 2014

Mini Review: Night of Cake and Puppets by Laini Taylor

Night of Cake and Puppets by Laini Taylor
Publisher: Little, Brown and Company BFYR
Pub date: November 2013
Source/Format: Bought/E-book

In Night of Cake & Puppets, Taylor brings to life a night only hinted at in the Daughter of Smoke & Bone trilogy—the magical first date of fan-favorites Zuzana and Mik. Told in alternating perspectives, it’s the perfect love story for fans of the series and new readers alike. Petite though she may be, Zuzana is not known for timidity. Her best friend, Karou, calls her “rabid fairy,” her “voodoo eyes” are said to freeze blood, and even her older brother fears her wrath. But when it comes to the simple matter of talking to Mik, or “Violin Boy,” her courage deserts her. Now, enough is enough. Zuzana is determined to meet him, and she has a fistful of magic and a plan. It’s a wonderfully elaborate treasure hunt of a plan that will take Mik all over Prague on a cold winter’s night before finally leading him to the treasure: herself! Violin Boy’s not going to know what hit him.

As much as I loved Zuzana in Daughter of Smoke and Bone, I wasn't quite sure how I'd feel about a whole novella dedicated to her. After all, the lifeblood of DoSaB was its dealings with magic and Karou's travels around the world (both our own and Elsewhere)--so how could a story about two ordinary humans hold up? I should have known that Laini wouldn't let us down. Night of Cake and Puppets is written in the same kind of wondrous, magical prose that first drew me into DoSaB, but with loads of wry humor courtesy of Zuzana, whose feisty voice quickly became my favorite thing about the novella. Actually, both Zuzana's and Mik's voices are fantastic: hilarious and unique and slightly weird, and their personalities shine through. The weaving together of Zuzana's and Mik's narratives is absolutely adorable, showing how they are both completely enamored with each other but too shy to admit it (until now, of course). Even in this story where there is no mention of chimaera or seraphim, Laini still creates a world full of wonder and magic, though in a slightly more lighthearted fashion. It feels, as Mik says, "like something out of a fairy tale." In short, Zuzana and Mik's story is a perfect little break from the angst left over at the end of Daughter of Smoke and Bone.

Favorite Quotes
















My Rating:

Friday, April 25, 2014

Book Review: Daughter of Smoke and Bone by Laini Taylor (Re-Read)

Daughter of Smoke & Bone by Laini Taylor
Publisher: Little, Brown and Company
Pub Date: September 2011
Source/Format: Bought/Hardcover

From Goodreads:

Around the world, black handprints are appearing on doorways, scorched there by winged strangers who have crept through a slit in the sky.

In a dark and dusty shop, a devil’s supply of human teeth grown dangerously low.

And in the tangled lanes of Prague, a young art student is about to be caught up in a brutal otherwordly war.

Meet Karou. She fills her sketchbooks with monsters that may or may not be real, she’s prone to disappearing on mysterious "errands", she speaks many languages - not all of them human - and her bright blue hair actually grows out of her head that color. Who is she? That is the question that haunts her, and she’s about to find out.

When beautiful, haunted Akiva fixes fiery eyes on her in an alley in Marrakesh, the result is blood and starlight, secrets unveiled, and a star-crossed love whose roots drink deep of a violent past. But will Karou live to regret learning the truth about herself?
(I've changed up the format a bit this time, so let me know what you think!)

The Story and the World
I first read Daughter of Smoke and Bone a couple of summers ago and was utterly crushed by the ending, but fell completely in love with the story. By the time Days of Blood and Starlight came out, though, I had forgotten a lot of the finer points of the plot of DoSaB and, being swamped with senior year schoolwork, had practically no time to reread it, let alone start the next one in the series. So here we are two years later and I have to say I'm kind of glad I waited until after the series was finished to pick it up again. Now I get to read the whole series back-to-back, which is good because I'm not sure my heart could handle another soul-crushing cliffhanger.

Daughter of Smoke and Bone has easily made its way onto my favorite books list, and one of the main reasons for that is Laini Taylor's beautiful writing. I think I could read it forever and never get tired of it. Her descriptions of Prague and Marrakesh and Eretz are just so lush. She makes the real world settings seem just as mysterious and fantastical as her fantasy world, and so many times while reading I just wanted to jump through the page and be there!
"There was a deceptive tangling of alleys that gave the impression of a map that shifted behind you, gargoyles tiptoeing away, stones like puzzle pieces rearranging themselves into new configurations while you weren't looking. Prague entranced you, lured you in, like the mythic fey who trick travelers deep into forests until they're lost beyond hope. But being lost here was a gentle adventure of marionette shops and absinthe..."
Then there's the world-building, which is amazing and so well thought out. From the caged city of Loramendi, to Brimstone's macabre yet somehow comforting shop, everything felt so real. I was fascinated by the mythological stories of Ellai and Nitid, the Gibborim and the godstars, wanting read about them almost as much as I wanted to read about Karou and Akiva. I found it fascinating how Laini Taylor took a concept familiar to so many--angels versus devils--and turned it into a mythology completely her own. One of the biggest questions I found myself asking while I read was, what defines an "angel" and a "devil" in this world? Brimstone calls human religion "a quilt a fairy tales, which humans had patched together out of glimpses." In this world, the magical beings are divided not as angels and devils ruled by God and Satan, but as seraphim and chimaera, neither of whom can be definitively labeled good or evil.
"There were angels on the Charles Bridge, and she was their foe. She: enemy of angels, in her black coat and evil tattoos, with her lashing blue hair and black eyes. They: so golden, the very image of church frescoes come to life. She was the demon in this scene, and she half expected, glancing at her shadow sharp before her, to see that it had horns."
What also made the fantasy world in DoSaB so unique was how it crossed over into the real world. In a lot of YA, knowledge of the paranormal is contained to a small group of people who are in the know, but in DoSaB people all over the world have sightings of the angels. Media outlets and the police become involved, which leaves me wondering what repercussions this will have later in the series.

The Characters
Karou's chimaera family is one of my favorite things about DoSaB, and Brimstone and Issa (and Kishmish--poor Kishmish!) captured my heart. I loved Issa, who could be so kind one moment, calling Karou "sweet girl" and delighting in dressing her up as a chimaera, but completely fierce and terrifying the next, wrapping her venomous snakes around the necks of Brimstone's unsavory traders. And then there's Brimstone himself, whose tragic past and fatherly nature toward Karou made me want to hug him (even though he could be a little...well, terrifying).

Even the human characters in this book are awesome. Zuzana is seriously the best "best friend" character I've read in a YA book in a long time. She wasn't just a side character thrown in for the purpose of showing the reader that the main charcter has friends; I really came to care for Zuzana and love her for her quirk and attitude. Not to mention the banter between her and Karou had me laughing out loud constantly. I really hope she shows up more in the next books.

Finally, of course, there's the star-crossed lovers themselves, Karou and Akiva. Let's just say I haven't been this crazy over a fictional pairing since Edward and Bella. Goodness, I love these two!  Karou is witty, hilarious, and a total bad-ass, but at the same time she's still vulnerable and achingly lonely. It made her more relatable, more human, and best of all, it showed that a heroine can have flaws and experience real emotions and still be considered a "strong female character" (I have a bit of a beef with that label, but I'll save that rant for another post).

The Ending
~ IF YOU HAVEN'T FINISHED THE BOOK, BEWARE OF SPOILERS IN THIS SECTION ~

Out of all that happens, my favorite part of the book has to be the breaking of the wishbone and all that ensues afterward. It was the part of the book that stuck with me the most after the first read, and going into this rereading I was partly excited to read it again and partly dreading the heartbreak I knew was coming. Because that ending. So heartwrenching. It was just so unbearably cruel of Laini to put Akiva and Karou/Madrigal through the agony of betrayal and death and rebirth and reunion...only to have them torn apart again by yet another (albeit unwitting) betrayal by Akiva.  My heart twists at the thought of what lies ahead in Days of Blood and Starlight.

Favorite Quote
"Karou wished she could be the kind of girl who was complete unto herself, comfortable in solitude, serene. But she wasn't. She was lonely, and she feared the missingness within her as if it might expand and...cancel her. She craved a presence beside her, solid. Fingertips light at the nape of her neck and a voice meeting hers in the dark. Someone who would wait with an umbrella to walk her home in the rain, and smile like sunshine when he saw her coming. Who would dance with her on her balcony, keep his promises and know her secrets, and make a tiny world wherever he was, with just her and his arms and his whisper and her trust." 
Final Thoughts and Rating
Daughter of Smoke and Bone is a thrilling, beautifully written story of star-crossed love, good versus evil, and the power of hope. I cannot wait to see where the rest of the series will take Karou and Akiva.