Reviews tagging 'Violence'

Living Shadows by Cornelia Funke

2 reviews

ailsaod's review against another edition

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

5.0

 I absolutely loved this! While Reckless didn't live up to my past impressions, Fearless surpassed them. This book hits the balance of both being very fun and having deeper levels to dig into if you so choose. What I think is especially interesting is how the setting enhances the story - this book is about a Jacob going on an adventure to try and stop a curse that is killing him but it easily becomes a metaphor for terminal illness. I normally hate it when stories focus on terminal illness - My sister's keeper had me miserable in the least fun of ways - but here Jacob is surrounded by immortal fairies and elves who are unable to understand his desperation, here Jacob has to confront that he will likely die before Fox when he always assumed she would leave him first due to her shapeshifting abilities. In the mirrorworld you can life forever in a moment if you find the right magical object and these things make Jacob's plight much more interesting.

Another, very different, reason I love this book is that I adore Nerron. Nerron acts as Jacob's rival in this book and while Jacob isn't a particularly nice person, Nerron is SO much worse. Nerron is hateful and paranoid but he has just enough bad luck and sad backstory behind him to make him sympathetic without overdoing it. I think he's great but definitely in an 'I'll appreciate him from a distance because he is a mess' kind of way.

This book is probably one of the best I have read this year - which makes me sad that book three is such a let-down. 

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gailbird's review

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adventurous dark tense fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.5

 
Crossing a fairy costs you your life, and Jacob Reckless, as he says, managed to get on the wrong side of two of them. Suffice to say, he’s for sure going to die. It’s only a matter of time until the moth one of the fairies marked him with consumes his life and flies away with it. Jacob has been on the hunt for magical objects that are supposed to break curses, heal wounds, or prolong life ever since.  

Reading this book just made me want to read the first one again. And then read this one again before reading the third one. This is portal fantasy and fractured fairy tales and an original fantasy world and parallel universes and alternate history all rolled into one. This is the more regal, matured distant cousin of Inkworld: Mirrorworld. 

It’s a quest for a magical object with life in the balance. I love the worldbuilding, the characters, the stakes, the pacing. Jacob and his shapeshifting friend, Fox, traverse realms in search of the one thing that might save Jacob’s life. They encounter fairytale-esque monsters, unlikely allies, and repeatedly cheat death on their way to trying to make the reaper fold once and for all. But he’s not the only one trying to escape death. Nor is he the only one on the hunt for the object. 

The way the narrative builds from being a quest for a magical object to save someone’s life, to being an elaborate plan for a long-dead ruler to come back to life, to being a revelation about the origins of not one but two magical entities is just <chef’s kiss>. Expectations are overturned at every corner, leading into deeper and more sinister complications for the next installment. 

Another thing I like about how this book was written were the way references to the events of the first book came up—they came up naturally where you would expect them to, but without explanation beyond what was being discussed. There is no recap/plot synopsis/review period for what happened in the first book. You can read it yourself or simply get on with this story—because this story isn’t exclusively contingent on every event from the first book. There are a couple of pivotal points that stem from it, like Jacob being marked to die and the political marriage that joined one country to another—somewhat melodramatically but also fabulously called the Blood Wedding—but that’s about it. 

The road is marked with adventure, political intrigue, magical objects, professional rivalry, and people from a distant past. Also, a business card with the name Norebo Johann Earlking on it and nothing else. It will be important later. 

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