For What It's Worth


Thursday, September 19, 2013

Review: Omens (Cainesville #1) by Kelley Armstrong


16101040#1 New York Times bestselling author Kelley Armstrong begins her new series with Omens, featuring a compelling new heroine thrust into a decades-old murder case and the dark mysteries surrounding her strange new home.

Twenty-four-year-old Olivia Taylor Jones has the perfect life. The only daughter of a wealthy, prominent Chicago family, she has an Ivy League education, pursues volunteerism and philanthropy, and is engaged to a handsome young tech firm CEO with political ambitions.

But Olivia’s world is shattered when she learns that she’s adopted. Her real parents? Todd and Pamela Larsen, notorious serial killers serving a life sentence. When the news brings a maelstrom of unwanted publicity to her adopted family and fiancé, Olivia decides to find out the truth about the Larsens.

Olivia ends up in the small town of Cainsville, Illinois, an old and cloistered community that takes a particular interest in both Olivia and her efforts to uncover her birth parents’ past.

Aided by her mother’s former lawyer, Gabriel Walsh, Olivia focuses on the Larsens’ last crime, the one her birth mother swears will prove their innocence. But as she and Gabriel start investigating the case, Olivia finds herself drawing on abilities that have remained hidden since her childhood, gifts that make her both a valuable addition to Cainsville and deeply vulnerable to unknown enemies. Because there are darker secrets behind her new home and powers lurking in the shadows that have their own plans for her. ~ Goodreads

Source: Finished copy provided by Dutton Adult books for my honest review

Review:
I have been a long time fan of Armstrong's writing. Most readers know her from the, just concluded, Women of the Otherworld series and her YA Darkest Powers/Rising trilogies. My personal favorite is the non-paranormal Nadia Stafford trilogy. I'm going to get back to that series later on in my review.

Omens is not so much paranormal as mystery with a touch of paranormal elements. I didn't have a problem with that but it might be jarring for hardcore fans of the Otherworld series that are missing Elena and all her supernatural friends.

This is a fascinating start to a series and the author does not just hand you the story with one big info-dump. Omens unravels slowly - sometimes too slowly - leaving you with more questions than answers.

Olivia starts out as a somewhat pampered young woman from a prestigious family with a high profile boyfriend. Her life seems perfect until her world is turned upside down by the revelation that she was adopted and her real parents are notorious serial killers. When the news goes public people she thought she could count on abandon her and she has to unravel the secrets of her past on her own and without the money that has afforded her such an easy life.

I have mixed feelings about Olivia, and the story in general concerning her. Even though she's wealthy, she's not a brat. Quite the opposite. She cares for others and is extremely intelligent and loyal. I really admired her. When she finds out the truth about her biological parents, it shakes her to the core but she pulls herself up and strikes out on her own to learn the truth about her parents and childhood. Her inner monologue often leans towards whiny and repetitive in the first half. She makes a few very dumb mistakes, yet still considers herself self reliant. She's a little cocky at times but she's learning though so I was able to cut her some slack.

From the earlier publicity surrounding this title, I thought this was going to be more about Olivia grappling with what it was like to be the child of serial killers. Of thinking you're one kind of person because of how you were raised - then wondering if your genetic makeup could have more of an influence on you as a person. Nature vs nurture. I adore those kinds explorations. I was also very on board with the uber creepy town of Cainesville!

Unfortunately, both of those elements, although touched on, aren't the focus of this story. This is almost straight up mystery and that's just not a genre I enjoy much. I feel that Omens tries to be all things and as a result felt scattered, especially with the multiple POV’s (although it’s mainly form Olivia’s). I do think it's all groundwork begin laid down and will all come together and be something amazing.

I really think this is a series you will need to be patient and stick with for the long haul. It's quite complex, there are an endless cast of intriguing characters and we've just touched the tip of the iceberg as far as Cainesville is concerned. The story could head in dozens of different directions which is always exciting.

One thing I did notice though is a striking similarity to a few plot elements from Armstrong's Nadia Stafford series. That sort of pulled me out of Omens a bit because I kept thinking - Hey! Didn't something like that happen with Nadia? I can also see a set up in the romance department that again, was in the Nadia series. I could always be wrong on that front and if you've never read that series it won't bother you at all. I kept getting a sense of deja vu.

Final thoughts: Omens is a  well written and promising start to a series that's full of mystery, complex characters and the potential for some shocking twists. Personally, I'm not a fan of the mystery genre, so I wasn't as engrossed as I had hoped but I still highly recommend it to those who are.

I also want to point out that Omens is light on the romance. I know I have quite a few followers who enjoy a more plot based/world building heavy story without a lot of steam and this is it.

Author: website | goodreads | twitter
Buy the book!
Omens

Thursday, August 21, 2014

Review: Visions (Cainsville #2) by Kelley Armstrong


18398797As #1 New York Times bestselling author Kelley Armstrong’s new Cainsville series continues, Olivia’s power to read omens leads to the discovery of a gruesome crime with troubling connections to her new hometown.

Omens, the first installment in Kelley Armstrong’s exciting new series, introduced Olivia Taylor-Jones, daughter of notorious serial killers, and Gabriel Walsh, the self-serving, morally ambiguous lawyer who became her unlikely ally. Together, they chased down a devious killer and partially cleared her parents of their horrifying crimes.

Their success, however, is short-lived. While Olivia takes refuge in the old, secluded town of Cainsville, Gabriel’s past mistakes have come to light, creating a rift between the pair just when she needs his help the most.

Olivia finds a dead woman in her car, dressed to look like her, but the body vanishes before anyone else sees it. Olivia’s convinced it’s another omen, a sign of impending danger. But then she learns that a troubled young woman went missing just days ago—the same woman Olivia found dead in her car. Someone has gone to great lengths to kill and leave this young woman as a warning. But why? And what role has her new home played in this disturbing murder?

Olivia’s effort to uncover the truth places her in the crosshairs of old and powerful forces, forces that have their own agenda, and closely guarded secrets they don’t want revealed.

Goodreads

Source: Copy provided by publisher for my honest review

Review:
I enjoyed, yet didn’t love, Omens, the first book in The Cainsnville series. I wanted to give it another try though, since I’ve loved so many of Armstrong’s previous series. 

Looking back at my review of Omens, I see that I basically feel the same way about Visions. It was ok but I’m still really frustrated by the pacing and lack of plot development.

I really like almost every character in this series but they’re all very one dimensional. They’re nice but flawed which should lend lot of messy complications but it doesn’t. Everyone keeps their feelings to themselves and just goes about their business no matter what. No feathers are ruffled. Well, except one - the ex fiancé but that feels forced.

The paranormal elements and the more prevalent Fae world are as always, fascinating but I wish we could see more, learn more of that.

I feel like anytime something starts gaining momentum, Armstrong just changes course and moves on. Find a head in your bed? A corpse in your car? See a wolf that looks at your BF too closely? Olivia is upset for a few minutes, takes a picture, makes a phone call, then moves on. There’s so much investigating and very little action.

There are quite a few (BIG) new reveals but again, they just add to the mystery.

I know I seem like I’m knocking this book a lot, and I guess I am, but the conclusion I’ve come to, is that it’s not so much this book, it’s that I don’t like mysteries, or investigations. That all bores me to tears. I thought the paranormal elements could overcome that for me but it isn’t enough. This series just isn’t the right fit for me.

Several of my friends, who didn’t love Omens all that much, really enjoyed this one so I would still recommend it. Especially if you did liked Omens.

I think I’m done with the Cainsville series unless I hear that the next book is the last one because at least then there would be answers.

Saturday, July 26, 2014

Blogger ramblings…Up next!

I'm mostly caught up on all my review books - just a few more to go!

I MUST stay away from the freebie/.99 diversion reads and putting my plans out there always makes me stay on track so I'm posting what I need to read and review this week.



Have you read any of these books yet?

I'm really looking forward to Lock In by John Scalzi. I haven't read anything by him before but I love him on Twitter. So smart and funny.

The Graveyard Book is a graphic novel adaptation (by P. Craig Russell) of the Neil Gaiman bestseller & it will be my first graphic novel.

Let's Get Lost by Adi Alsaid sounds like a fun road trip book. Perfect for summer!

And I'm curious how I'll fell about Visions by Kelley Armstrong. I liked but didn't love the first book, Omens, but I've heard this one is better.

Do you have any reading goals for the next week?

Thursday, May 7, 2009

All Book Reviews

RATINGS:
*1 out of 4 - No comment.
*2 out of 4 - This book just wasn't for me but you might enjoy it.
*3 out of 4 - Liked it overall but it had a few minor issues....like pacing/ending/one annoying character.
*4 out of 4 - I loved it! I will keep it and probably read it again!


REVIEWS / Alphabetical by title:




C.


F.

G



N.




T.




Monday, July 19, 2010

Bring on the contest!!

Bring On the Night (WVMP, Book 3)
WHAT’S BLOOD GOT TO DO WITH IT?

Recovering con artist Ciara Griffin seems to finally have it all. A steady job at WVMP, the Lifeblood of Rock ’n’ Roll. A loving relationship with the idiosyncratic but eternally hot DJ Shane McAllister. A vampire dog who never needs shots or a pooper-scooper. And after nine years, it looks as if she might actually finish her bachelor’s degree!

But fate has other plans for Ciara. First she must fulfill her Faustian bargain with the Control, the paranormal paramilitary agency that does its best to keep vampires in line. Turns out the Control wants her for something other than her (nonexistent) ability to kick undead ass. Her anti-holy blood, perhaps? Ciara’s suspicions are confirmed when she’s assigned to a special-ops division known as the Immanence Corps, run by the Control’s oldest vampire and filled with humans who claim to have special powers. To a confirmed skeptic like Ciara, it sounds like a freak fest. But when a mysterious fatal virus spreads through Sherwood—and corpses begin to rise from their graves—Ciara will not only get a crash course in zombie-killing, but will be forced to put her faith, and her life itself, in the hands of magic.

Bring on the Night is almost here!! It officially comes out next Tuesday July 27th and I'm giving you a chance to win it all this week

I'm doing things a little differently for this contest. There will be 3 chances to win. The first contest goes up today and ends Wednesday, then the next contest for two days. The last chance to win is Friday's contest.

So what will you win? So glad you asked.

Each winner will get a copy of Bring on the Night (of course) and because the WVMP series is all about the music - a $10.00 iTunes gift card! For Friday's contest I will be adding a little vampire swag to the package.
So let's get to the rules shall we.....

Since this is the third book in the WVMP series and I'm giving away three books - we'll stick with the theme of threes. Jeri has kindly sent over her list of her three favorite CD's and three favorite books. Here they are...

CDs:
1. Nirvana, Unplugged in New York
2. Eve 6, Eve 6
3. The Cure, Hot Hot Hot

(Wow, that was tough. I wish I could divide it by decade, but that would be way too much work. ;-)

Books:
1. Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett, Good Omens
2. Lewis Carroll, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland
3. Caprice Crane, Stupid and Contagious
 
Thanks Jeri!!

*To be entered for the contest tell me your 3 favorite CD's & books.....*

•You must be 16 years or older to enter. International entries OK (if your country is listed HERE you can enter)
•All entries must be received by Tuesday 7/20//2010 11:59 pm EST
•Leave a comment - tell me your 3 favorite CD's & books
•Winner will be posted on this blog Wednesday 7/21/2010 - it is your responsibility to check back to see if you won. (Next contest starts later that day)
•The winner has 7 days to email me with their address or I will pick another winner.

*Extra entries:
+1 blog follower
+ 1 if you follow me on Twitter (@teamsheltie)
+1 if you post a link on your blog or tweet about contest (include links for me to check)

I loved this book and I can't wait for you all to read it too!!

You can pre-order at Amazon Bring On the Night (WVMP, Book 3)
or at The Book Depository HERE for $5.99 PLUS free shipping!! Come on people that's a great deal!!!

You can always cancel if you win here since you'll know before they ship it out.

AND - My review will be up tomorrow but as you may suspect .....I loved it!

Monday, June 17, 2019

My Monday Musings…



I seemed to hit a wall in my reading roll. All of a sudden I didn’t feel like reading so instead I binge watched a few shows on Netflix and Amazon.

I watched the first episode of Good Omens but wasn't' int he mood for that level of camp so I'll come back to it soon.


Special – Netflix

This is a semi-autobiographical series starring Ryan O’Connell on Netflix (episodes are only about 15 minutes each) about a gay man with cerebral palsy as he learns to become more independent – dating, getting an apartment, and job.

Ryan is a breath of fresh air – flawed, awkward, selfish yet vulnerable. The relationship with his mother is especially complex as he starts striking out on his own and she has no clue what to do with her life now – as it revolved around Ryan and his needs. She rediscovers her sexuality, and and struggles to transition from caregiver to a fully fledged woman. Her scenes are absolutely heartbreaking and beautifully acted. The cast is rounded out with Kim – his co-worker and bff – a plus size, Indian American girl, who is a whirlwind of truth bombs and funny one liners – but also has these little moments of vulnerability.

They both work as writers for a website called Eggwoke and there are plenty of jabs at “woke” and social media culture.

The few weaknesses – the potential love interests for Ryan are bland and unmemorable, and because of how short the episodes are they can end abruptly – but pick right back up so it’s not too big of a deal.


Fleabag – Amazon Prime

I’ve heard a lot of great things about this show but avoided it. I have a love/hate relationship with hot mess character driven shows. I love complex flawed characters but series about them? Well, at a certain point the show tends to get more and more outlandish to up the stakes and I start to get get bored and I need my stories more grounded. And most of these flawed characters shows (and this one) rely on sex to accomplish this. Unpopular opinion – I’m not a prude – but I can only watch people bang so many times…

I’ve also heard a lot about the *hot priest* and wasn't sure how I felt about that. But anyway…I took the plunge and really like it.

Fleabag does a lot of unlikable things – she strings her on and off boyfriend along, pokes at her sister in cruel ways at times and yes, has a lot of sex (don’t really care about that one – because…so?? it's consensual and she's having fun) but she’s also in deep pain after losing a friend to an accident, trying to keep their cafe afloat and realizing that even sex can’t keep you from feeling lonely.

Lots of complex relationships in this one. Especially the one with her sister, Claire– who I adore!

I have a short shelf life for people who act like a wrecking ball and don’t learn from it – but Fleabag  provided enough nuance that I ended up liking it quite a bit.

It's only the 2 seasons and there won't be anymore.

I think I'm going to try Russian Doll next.

Reading:


I was surprised but I was approved for The Girl in Red by Christina Henry on Netgalley so I’m reading that.

It started off with a gruesome bang (which I love) but then I just wasn’t in the mood to read. I do hope to finish it soon though.

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Review: Archangel's Consort by Nalini Singh

Archangel's Consort (Guild Hunter)
Vampire hunter Elena Deveraux and her lover, the lethally beautiful archangel Raphael, have returned home to New York only to face an uncompromising new evil…
A vampire has attacked a girls’ school—the assault one of sheer, vicious madness—and it is only the first act. Rampant bloodlust takes vampire after vampire, threatening to make the streets run with blood. Then Raphael himself begins to show signs of an uncontrolled rage, as inexplicable storms darken the city skyline and the earth itself shudders. The omens are suddenly terrifyingly clear.
An ancient and malevolent immortal is rising. The violent winds whisper her name: Caliane. She has returned to reclaim her son, Raphael. Only one thing stands in her way: Elena, the consort who must be destroyed…. (Adult, PNR)

Review:
 Warning: There are minor spoilers from the previous two books in the series. You really to need to read them both before starting Archangel’s Consort

This is the third book in the Guild Hunter series, and last to feature Elena & Raphael. Much has changed since their first meeting. Elena is now a made angel – the first and only of her kind. Raphael, Archangel of NY and partner to Elena struggles with his desire to protect and control her, yet not cage in her free spirit.
This book is a bit of a departure from the first two. Elena and Raphael’s relationship and power struggles take center stage. I like how their relationship was written. Singh never breaks either’s spirit but we’re not bound by endless whining from either side. They fight, they compromise and they love each other. It’s a give and take. It’s never easy with these two and that’s ok.
The “big bad” comes in the form of a rising ancient, possibly Raphael’s mother Caliane and she doesn’t find Elena worthy of her son. That puts Elena in a great deal of danger and Raphael in the unenviable position of choosing between his consort and a child’s love for his mother, despite her cruelty to him.
There were a lot of layers in Archangel’s Consort. Raphael is tempted by the darkness and madness that consumed both his parents. Both he and Elena have to confront their families and their violent pasts. Elena struggles to fit in as an angel and remain a hunter. For me it didn’t always work. Raphael’s descent into madness and the threat from his mother never really felt fully realized to me. I’m not sure I ever really worried about either.  I mostly felt like a fly on the wall for Elena & Raphael's most intimate discussions and actions throughout the book. The real action doesn't take place until the last third of the book. Archangel's Consort is more of a relationship book and if you love the couple - you'll love the book.
The next book in the Guild Hunter series will be focused on Dmitri so there was a bit of setup for the future characters. In so many of these series the development of future books takes over the current storyline. That didn’t happen here. Through Elena’s interactions with Raphael’s seven, we get glimpses of their tortured pasts just enough to peak our interest but not enough to disrupt the flow of the existing story. I know Illium and Dmitri are fan faves, however I was most intrigued by Jason but I’ll be reading them all.
I have one peeve with Singh’s writing of Elena & Raphael. The use of the term “Archangel” and “the Archangel of NY”. I get it; it makes sense why Elena calls him that versus Raphael and it shows her vulnerability to this powerful man but it is so overused. I had a friend that stopped reading the series because it drove her so crazy. At least Raphael alternates between “hunter/ my hunter” and Elena. It’s almost too worshipy (new word) even though I know the context in which she’s using it. Either way, Elena uses the word/phrase almost constantly and it is just said way too many times for me.

Rating: I’m doing a weird rating for this one. 4 out of 4 for the Raphael and Elena relationship. It’s beautiful and sweet and fully developed – a nice conclusion if you’ve followed their story from the beginning. However…a 2.5 out of 4 for overall plot. The danger didn’t really worry me in any way, I would have liked to have seen more of a threat to our daring duo and to Raphael’s sanity.

Author's website: http://www.nalinisingh.com/
Source: Borrowed from Supernatural Snark (Thanks Jenny!!)
Buy the book! Archangel's Consort (Guild Hunter)