Showing posts with label Little Brown Books For Young Readers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Little Brown Books For Young Readers. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 28, 2015

[Review: Wolf By Wolf by Ryan Graudin]

"Wolf by Wolf"
Author: Ryan Graudin
Series: Wolf by Wolf #1
Pages: 400
Genre: YA, Alternate History, Magical Realism
Date Published: October 20th, 2015
Publisher: Little, Brown Books for Young Readers
Format Read: eARC provided by publisher (via NetGalley) for honest review

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Summary:

Code Name Verity meets Inglourious Basterds in this fast-paced novel from the author of The Walled City.

The year is 1956, and the Axis powers of the Third Reich and Imperial Japan rule the world. To commemorate their Great Victory over Britain and Russia, Hitler and Emperor Hirohito host the Axis Tour: an annual motorcycle race across their conjoined continents. The victor is awarded an audience with the highly reclusive Adolf Hitler at the Victor's ball.

Yael, who escaped from a death camp, has one goal: Win the race and kill Hitler. A survivor of painful human experimentation, Yael has the power to skinshift and must complete her mission by impersonating last year's only female victor, Adele Wolfe. This deception becomes more difficult when Felix, Adele twin's brother, and Luka, her former love interest, enter the race and watch Yael's every move. But as Yael begins to get closer to the other competitors, can she bring herself to be as ruthless as she needs to be to avoid discovery and complete her mission?
-Goodreads
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My Thoughts:

An Open Letter To Wolf By Wolf,

I've never read anything like you before, but now I know that I'd like every book to be as awesome as you are. I can't even put into words what you made me feel, but I'm going to have to move past that, because this is a review after all. You gave me a new look at World War II. I didn't ever want to imagine what it would have been like if Hitler won the war, but you made me see it. You also gave me one of the most amazing Jewish protagonists that I've read in years. All I want to say is thank you, and also thank you for just being the beginning. I'm beyond excited that I'll get to have more time with your story in the future!

-The White Unicorn

I really enjoyed Graudin's The Walled City, so when I heard that she was taking on an alternate version of World War II, I knew I had to read this novel. Though I knew I needed to read it, I never would have guessed that this novel would be what it was. It's flat out genius. Graudin's writing is perfect for telling the story. It's raw, it's heartbreaking, but it's also full of hope, and an extreme lust for life. She has this way of blending real facts, and the parts of the story that she made up, perfectly. I have to say that even though I know this book isn't historically accurate, I bought into it without a hitch. 

The past that Graudin created is horrifying. Seeing what could have happened had Hitler won World War II isn't something I've ever really thought about, but it clearly would have been terrible. I'm glad that this story is fiction. There's just no other way to put it. 

Yael is one of the best Jewish protagonists that I've read in a really long time. The fact that she has the ability to skinshift only adds to her appeal, but to be honest it's who she is inside that makes me like her so much. Sure, she's not always likable and she carries the world around on her shoulders, but she's a Jewish girl who's still alive, and everyone she's ever loved is long dead. It makes her mission, and her story all that much more touching. It's so strange to be touched so deeply by a character who is so harsh, but it's what makes this book what it is. The characters are brilliant.

Honestly, it's so refreshing to see a cast of characters like this. It's because Yael is pretending to be Adele, and because she is, it blurs the lines between who she is to the other characters. You start believing that she's Adele just because Adele's brother Felix, and her old flame Luka believe it. In fact sometimes Yael even believes it. It adds an extra layer into the story that's glorious. 

Felix and Luka bring a lot to the surface of Yael/Adele's character. I enjoyed both of their parts in the plot. I also have to give Graudin a shout out for the rest of the secondary cast. No one is left behind, even the dead, and I couldn't have been more pleased by the fact.

Add in the fact that Graudin's world building is perfection, and the fact that she weaves wolves into the story as often as she can, and you have a book that I think everyone should read. It's about the human condition, wrapped in delightful storytelling. We'll never forget the horrifying facts of actual history, and this book will make sure that you don't forget those events, or ones that we can only imagine. 

Rating:
5 Unicorns = Get your hand on this NOW!

Monday, September 7, 2015

[Review: The Dead House by Dawn Kurtagich]

"The Dead House"
Author: Dawn Kurtagich
Series: None
Pages: 432
Genre: YA, Horror
Date Published: September 15th, 2015
Publisher: Little, Brown Books for Young Readers
Format Read: eARC provided by publisher (via NetGalley) for honest review

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Summary:

Debut author Dawn Kurtagich is dead on in this terrifying psychological thriller!

Over two decades have passed since the fire at Elmbridge High, an inferno that took the lives of three teenagers. Not much was known about the events leading up to the tragedy - only that one student, Carly Johnson, vanished without a trace...

...until a diary is found hidden in the ruins.

But the diary, badly scorched, does not belong to Carly Johnson. It belongs to Kaitlyn Johnson, a girl who shouldn't exist Who was Kaitlyn? Why did she come out only at night? What is her connection to Carly?

The case has been reopened. Police records are being reexamined: psychiatric reports, video footage, text messages, e-mails. And the diary.

The diary that paints a much more sinister version of events than was ever made publicly known.
-Goodreads
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My Thoughts:

An Open Letter To The Dead House,

What just happened? No, for real, what just happened? I think that you're the first book to freak me out this year. I've been searching for you, and I'm glad that we finally met. I just don't even know what more I should say. I guess you're just a really cool novel that's really well put together, and I dig it. Continue being you, cause you're one heck of a horror novel!

-The White Unicorn

Guys, this book was a trip. It freaked me out. It messed with my mind. It made me question everything about it. I didn't know what was going to happen, and I'm so glad that it ended up going the way it did, because The Dead House is one of those creepy books that I'm going to remember, while most I'd like to forget.

The novel is about two girls Carly and Kaitlyn Johnson. Or at least that's what they tell you. Both girls are stuck in one body, but have different personalities. Carly takes the daylight hours, and Kaitlyn only comes out in the dark of night. This big tragedy happens to them, and everyone thinks that the girls are just Carly struggling with Dissociative Identity Disorder, and that that is where Kaitlyn comes from. 

The girls are shipped off to a mental institution, and then, they are sent to a boarding school later on. The thing is, you don't know if Kaitlyn is just a split in Carly's personality, or if she's actually real. It's a mind trip. You get to know Kaitlyn and Carly through journal entries and sticky-notes, and they both seem so different. Another option presents itself later on. One that adds a paranormal element to the story, and adds even more creep factor than was there before.  I'd like to this that this second option is what was really going on the whole time.

The fact is that Kurtagich tells her story in diary entries, interview transcripts, video recordings, and police documents. She also jumps the time line around quite a bit, so you really have to pay attention to what is happening. Though it could be really annoying, Kurtagich weaves the pieces of her tale together masterfully. She keeps you confused, but gives you all the tools to understand what is happening to Carly and Kaitlyn on your own terms. 

This book is horrifying, and so much fun. As soon as the paranormal element comes in we see a whole bunch of teens working together to find out what is really going on inside of Carly, and the results prove deadly. Really deadly. 

Trust me, if you like a scary book, this is the one you should be reading next. It's fantastic!

Rating:
5 Unicorns = Close to perfect!