Reviews tagging 'Violence'

Saint Juniper's Folly by Alex Crespo

3 reviews

marmaladereads's review against another edition

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emotional hopeful mysterious 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? Yes

5.0

 This was such an unexpectedly beautiful story, it really washed over me in stages, and by the time I reached the end, I was completely entranced.

This story is a triple POV shared by three teenagers connected by a haunted old house in the woods.

Jamie has been rejected his whole life by everyone around him. He was raised in foster care and immediately does not fit in the small town of his latest placement. He runs away from his foster home and ends up squatting in an abandoned house in the woods, only to realize once he's entered the house that the ghost that occupies it will not allow him to leave.

Theo is an overly anxious goody two shoes who has always felt like he has to be perfect to be loved by anyone, including his parents. He stumbles across the haunted house and Jamie, and vows to help him, even though they don't really get along.

To help Jamie, Theo also locates and enlists the help of Taylor, a local witch who comes from a long maternal line of witches but has been forbidden from practicing her craft by an overprotective father after the death of her mother.

The three must work together (racing against time and fighting an angry ghost) to rescue Jamie from the house he is trapped in before it is too late, growing from strangers to friends to more. There is a beautiful romantic subplot between Theo and Jamie, as well as the unraveling of multiple interconnected threads of family and personal secrets that all made this story feel like it was really woven together.

I loved the way the relationship between Theo and Jamie blossomed, but I also really enjoyed the fact that Taylor remained integral to the story throughout and never felt like a third wheel. There are definitely some twists that shocked me, and I rushed through the end of the book with baited breath. By the end I simply loved it.

There are definitely a couple of creepy moments but this is more of a mystery than a horror and ultimately I found it more hopeful and heartwarming than scary. It does start at a slow to medium pace, and at about the 60% mark it picks up pretty rapidly and it suddenly becomes apparent that everything up until that point was some skillful build up.

I did have an issue with a couple of moments that didn't make sense to me other than to dismiss them as Teenage Logicâ„¢, like why it would be so bad for anyone else to discover that Jamie was trapped in the house, and I didn't feel that Taylor's friend Anna really added much to the story, but these minor issues didn't take away from my enjoyment of the story in the end. 

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imstephtacular's review

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dark emotional hopeful mysterious medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Loveable characters? Yes

4.0


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raneyak's review against another edition

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adventurous emotional mysterious fast-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

4.25

I loved reading this book. It was quite short, so I was able to finish it between an evening and the next afternoon, but I was very tempted to stay up late reading it all the way through. I found it to be very compelling and hard to put down, which doesn't happen too often for me.

My favorite aspect of the book was the characterization, and specifically, I loved Theo's character. He felt very autistic-coded and I related so much to him. The way that he struggled sometimes to get his thoughts out coherently felt so real, and I empathized with how seriously he takes things and how much of a goody-two-shoes he was for most of his life.

(Mild/vague spoilers below about the romance aspect of this book)

I also can't get over the raw romantic chemistry that was somehow translated onto the page. I find that a lot of romance relies pretty heavily on the author telling the reader the two leads are falling for each other, or the reader filling in the gaps on their own based on their knowledge of various tropes. In this book, I could feel the characters falling for each other and it felt very real. The language is very lyrical and vivid, and Crespo is able to capture living emotions in a way that many authors struggle to do.

As much as I loved Theo and Jaime, Taylor's story left a little bit to be desired. I think this book could have benefited from being a little bit longer to allow us to really get to know her character better. Since Theo and Jaime spend a lot of their chapters getting to know each other, I felt like I left the book less connected to her than I was to the boys. I would love to see more of her and Anna's relationship, which was abandoned for most of the book. I would also love to see more of her personal life beyond the core plotline, and the same goes for Theo. Once the three main characters got together, it felt like their home lives disappeared almost completely.

I really did enjoy this book, though, and I am excited for it to be released. I can already see it making the rounds through queer reading circles, and I would love to get my hands on a physical copy. Thank you NetGalley and Peachtree for the opportunity to read an eARC!

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