Reviews

The Balloon Thief by Aneesa Marufu

yve_ma's review against another edition

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adventurous medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

2.0

cxppatee's review

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adventurous dark emotional inspiring medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

3.75

colorfulleo92's review

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4.0

This was a different spin on the fantasy genre and it was very emersive and interesting to read. Intrigued to read more from Aneesa Marufu in the future

chelsealeigh's review

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adventurous challenging emotional hopeful lighthearted medium-paced
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes

4.75

weirdoella's review against another edition

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3.0

{3/5}

Bon, bon, bon...
Je comptais a ce que ce livre soit une bonne lecture voire même un coup de coeur.
On en est bien loin !
L'idée en elle-même m'a séduite dès la lecture du résumé, sauf qu'on ne va pas plus loin que cette ébauche d'idée..
Cependant, la plume de l'autrice est agréable, fluide et légère donc ça se lit bien.
Le fait d'être plongé dans la culture orientale en prenant la mythologie et les djinns était une très une bonne idée et j'ai bien aimé cet aspect là.
Par contre, tout le reste était très bancale on a envie de frapper nos deux protagonistes qui malgré le temps passé ensemble et leur envie de changer n'en font rien.
Les 200 premières pages ne servent qu'à placer le monde et les 100 dernières sont juste de la bataille.
Bref, le rythme est a revoir, la psychologie des personnages aussi.

farfetched's review

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adventurous challenging dark emotional hopeful inspiring reflective tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

5.0

A fantastic debut novel, it leaps right into tackling racism, prejudice and discrimination. Khadija definitely got her chance to shine, and I loved that this book made a point of saying that racial discrimination is not the only kind that exists. There is a prominent transgender character who is respected by the main characters and the narrative. I never quite knew how it was going to end, or that anyone was safe until the end of the book, the action running right up until the end, but didn't feel that rushed in my opinion. I'm looking forward to the sequel! 

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johanna_b's review

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DNF @ pg. 189

Sadly, I won't be continuing with this book. I was enjoying it for the most part in the beginning but there were a couple things that I struggled with in this one that made me make the hard decision to discontinue it. Firstly, I was never invested in the plot and the story itself felt like nothing new. You know when you're re-watching a movie with your friends that you remember enjoying a while back, but now you just can't bring yourself to care? That's how I felt about this book. And secondly, the whole mythological side of this story was starting to become really dark. I had that twinge of doubt when the demon jinn was introduced and then when the Queen appeared on the scene and totally went psycho on the nawab, I just decided I'd had enough. Thankfully I had borrowed this one from the library so it didn't cost me anything which I'm really happy about! Not sure whether or not I'd recommend this one as the reason I stopped reading it was solely based on a personal opinion, but that said, I would be hesitant to do so. Happy Reading :)

lawbooks600's review

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3.0

Representation: Asian main character
Trigger warnings: Terrorism, racism, sexism, near death experiences, military violence and war themes, hospitalisation

5/10, I picked this up a while back from one of the two libraries I go to and the latter has more modern books than the former so I chose from that one I was really hoping that I would enjoy this since I typically like fantasy novels like this, too bad this isn't the case since I found so many issues within this, where do I even begin. It starts off with the main character Khadija whose surname I don't know yet and she is forced to marry a man her father already chose for her much to her disappointment and the only way she can escape is through the sky and a hot air balloon and this must've been set a while back if inventions like aeroplanes, electricity and even airships weren't described. Anyways apparently Khadija meets another character called Jacob and he plays quite a critical role later on in the book and soon enough it is revealed that the country they live in called Ghadaea or something along those lines is oppressing a certain type of people called hari and they do magic which they don't like and the tensions start to brew the further I went in. And there's where the problems start to show, for starters the characters aren't even that well written and didn't experience any character development and second of all is the worldbuilding, it's barely explained which left me more questions than answers like where did the hari come from, how can they do magic and what are the jinn, I just don't know. Towards the end of the book the conflicts come to a head when there were acts of terrorism and then Khadija and Jacob were involved in a big revolution which left them in a sorry state wrapping this up in a cliffhanger and a low note. I'm not sure whether I'm going to read book two in the series but maybe that could explain some plot elements.

annum_1's review

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dark sad tense fast-paced

4.0

siobhanthebookworm's review

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3.0

I had such high hopes for this book, but I was quite disappointed. For most of the book it looked like it was going to get a 3.5/4⭐️, but the ending completely ruined it. There was no resolution to any of the issues, no culmination of the romantic plotline, and the leaders still held their prejudices. This book should not have been a standalone, it would have worked so much better as a series, then the ending would not have been so rushed. I really hope the author writes a sequel, because this desperately needs one. I think the concept of this book is amazing and could have been really interesting and worthy of more stars if it had been executed correctly. Same for the worldbuilding and mythology, it has so much potential but everything felt very rushed and I think the story might have worked better without the fantasy elements and if it had just been a political commentary. The political and social aspects of this book were very interesting, but the ending left nothing resolved. As for the characters, I really liked Jacob’s character. His story was the most compelling and intriguing, very realistic, very complex and full of nuances, and I found myself enjoying his chapters the most. Whilst I liked Khadija as a character, I felt there was something missing with her, a lack of depth/motivation that made her less compelling. I feel that she had potential to be an amazing female protagonist, but something went wrong. The prose too at times seemed quite trivial and almost childish, which made some scenes quite painful to read, but this might just have been because it was Marufu’s first novel. Overall, I did like the book, but it definitely could have been explored better and, if my hopes of a sequel came true, I would read it to get the answers I need.