Reviews tagging 'Alcohol'

The Atlas Six by Olivie Blake

169 reviews

peachtease's review against another edition

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dark mysterious reflective 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

4.0


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rhogosch's review against another edition

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challenging dark mysterious tense fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.0

Wow,
als ich das Buch gekauft habe, habe ich ja mit vielem gerechnet, aber ganz sicher nicht, dass sich das Ganze zu nem philosophischen Thriller Drama entwickelt (ja das Genre gibt es und zwar seit genau jetzt).
Die Fantasy ist dabei gar nicht im Fokus. Blake verwendet wenig Zeit auf Worldbuilding und versucht gar nicht erst die Mechanik ihres Magiesystems zu erklären. Und wieder erwartend stört es null. Von Anfang an treten die Figuren und ihre Charakterisierungen in den Vordergrund. Im ersten der acht Teile störte es mich noch richtig, dass vermeintlich massiv wichtige Gespräche und Szenen die eben zum Worldbuilding und Charaktereinführung beigetragen hätten einfach gescipt werden. Doch sobald ich mich von meinen Erwartungen gelöst hatte ein Fantasy Schwergewicht zu lesen, Boom unglaublich geniales Storytelling. 
In diesem Buch geht es um die Fragestellung was unbegrenzte Macht mit den verschiedensten Persönlichkeiten macht. Wie ihr Ehrgeiz ihr, Streben, bzw. ihr „Hungern“ sie zersetzt und verändert. Würdest du morden um die Naturgesetze formen zu können, jeden Menschen wie ein Buch lesen und umschreiben zu können, um einfach allmächtig zu werden?
Eine Besonderheit spielt dabei Blakes Schreibstil. Wer braucht lineare Zeitachsen wenn man zeitlich zwischen den Kapiteln springen kann und dadurch eine Szene wieder und wieder in neuem Licht betrachten kann. Nur um einfach jedes Mal neue Facetten zu offenbaren und mich zu zwingen meine Meinung jedes Mal zu revidieren. Gedachtes, gefühltes und gesprochenes geht ineinander über. Das hat zur Folge das man wirklich mit den Figuren denkt. Ihr Handlungsmotive nachfühlt und die Szene quasi selbst erlebt. Das hat aber auch zu Folge gehabt das ich Seiten wirklich dreimal gelesen habe und jedes Mal anders verstanden habe. Was schlussendlich darin geendet ist, dass ich den „“ für wörtliche Rede einfach nicht mehr getraut habe.
Als Krönung verändert sich die Art des Textes immer zu den Figuren. Blake verschafft den nervösen Ticks von Libby sprachlichen Ausdruck, genauso wie ich Callums Passagen auch ohne die Überschrift identifizieren konnte, einfach an dem kalten rationalen Satzbau und Wortschatz. Ich würde so weit gehen zu sagen, dass wenige Sätze in diesem Buch zufällig gewählt worden sind. 

Einziger Kritikpunkt: Leute bekommt mal eure Triebe unter Kontrolle! Also ernsthaft jetzt. Keine einzige Sexszene hat mich gestört, weil sie nicht einfach nur eine Beschreibung des Aktes waren. Sondern weil auch hier das offensichtliche in den Hintergrund getreten ist und dafür Charakterentwicklung betrieben wurde. Entscheidung wurden während diesen Szenen besiegelt, bzw. dem Leser zum ersten Mal erklärt wieso so gehandelt wurde. Aber letzten Endes war es mir dann doch ein zu großes Handlungsmotiv. Jeder hatte auf einmal ein verstecktes Verlangen, eine geheime Liebe, oder ein darauf  bezogenes Trauma. Dabei hätte man noch so viel aus den Wechselwirkungen zwischen den Figuren rausholen können.
ich mein ernsthaft jetzt Tristan wird erst als der Kerl charakterisiert, der sich nichts aus Liebe macht nur um dann nen paar One-Night Stands mit Parisa zu haben, woraufhin er ihr auf einmal Loyal aka „verfallen“ gegenüber wird. Um dann durch den Dreier, echte Gefühle für Libby zu entwickeln um, Plottwist, doch nen geheimen Crush auf Callum zu haben. Auch hier wird alles erklärt und ist nachvollziehbar, erscheint mir letztendlich doch etwas überhöht. Zumal einfach bis auf zwei Ausnahmen jede Figur so ein Liebes Fünfeck hatte.
 

Absolute Empfehlung. Dieses Buch sorgt für frischen Wind und Abwechslung. Gerade für so high Fantasy verwöhnte Menschen wie mich. Achso hab ich eigentlich schon den Cliffhänger am Ende erwähnt…

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monstrouscosmos's review against another edition

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I really enjoyed the world building, and the exploration of each character as individuals as well as their group dynamics. the perspective taking of the chapters was also interesting, and the narrators all added nuance to their performances in ways I appreciated (especially during internal monologues). unfortunately Part 6 definitely got too trigger heavy for me, and I found the expositions started to get both much longer and much less believable. not the book for me, unfortunately! 

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kitkatkatdog's review against another edition

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challenging dark mysterious reflective tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.75

I loved this book. I really thought I knew what would happen and even when it surprised me, it surprised me again. Every page turn was fun, mysterious, and heart dropping. The writing is so visual and descriptive to me. I love the way it all talks and shows you what’s going on. I’ve never really jumped ship for a new ship and back to an old ship on to a new ship, but boy do I just love every character with anyone, even in weird pseudo relationships that they don’t even realize is love. Great book. Great story. Wtf is gonna happen next. I really don’t know… there’s so many areas to explore here and so many questions, I can’t wait to read the other two books in the series

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rozex's review against another edition

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challenging emotional informative mysterious tense slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? It's complicated
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

2.5

For people who like pondering philosophical and theoretical ideas, then this is a good book for you. It was interesting, but I didn't expect it in a fiction book. Didn't get exciting until after 320 pages. The idea of an Alexandrian Library modern society had so much promise. At the end, I was simply reading just to finish the book, not out of enjoyment or interest. 

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nclausel25's review against another edition

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challenging dark mysterious tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.5


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little_literarian's review against another edition

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mysterious medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

5.0

The ending…

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amelianotthepilot's review against another edition

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

5.0

I absolutely loved this book and think its now in my top of all time. It's a dark academia fantasy book that's got such heavy harry potter influences without being copy and paste it was delicious.

6 adults from around the world (literally) are chosen to be apart of the secret society that protects/uses the library of Alexandria. First off I was already impressed that the characters were actually diverse and from all over the world since most books seem to say things like 'you are the top most powerful in the world' and then they all come from NYC/the US which is definitely not realistic. This cast of characters comes from Japan, US, England, South Africa, and France. The story is told from all of their perspectives which is interesting and complex, giving you everyone's separate motivations, secrets, and personalities. Elizabeth "Libby" Rhodes is an anxious bookworm rule follower white girl from NYC and Nico de Varona is a Cuban wealthy privlidged golden retriever adhd sunshine boy from NYC. They are 'physicists' as they study physical magic (ie levitation, gravity morphing, etc) and have recently graduated from magical NYU lol. They are class rivals and love/hate each other but are also equally extremely overly powerful. Reina Mori is an emotionally repressed classicist booklover who works at a coffeshop from Osaka and is a 'naturalist' (can control plants) but she is more than just a normal naturalist she doesn't put any effort into manipulating plants, they just feed off her energy and emotions.  Tristan Caine is a anxious low achieving son of a mafia guy. He has worked his way up to corporate ladder with his powers and by dating a CEO's daughter he plans to eventually marry her and inherit the company. He is an illusionist (can create illusions) but not actually...it's more accurate that he can completely see through any and all illusions without trying. Parisa Kamali is a slut(positive) she is beautiful and uses her beauty and body combined with her power of mind reading to infiltrate anyone and get what she wants/needs. She is from Iran but lives in Paris and lol this is one of my biggest problems with the book is that her name is Parisa and shes from Paris. It's the only lazy thing in the book. Last but not least Callum Nova is the character we don't know much about. He is wealthy and good-looking and from South Africa where his family owns a rich international cooperation. His magic is empathy...

Overall the worldbuilding is very interesting,  a very small percent of the world is capable of magic but only simple things like prestigitation-esque (warming things, turning on lights, opening doors) and are called witches. Then an even smaller percentage of that population are qualified and magical enough to be called medians and attend magical colleges like magical NYU. Then an even smaller percentage are considered for the atlas six initiation. The Atlas Six are six people chosen from around the world to be inducted into the Alexandrian society that protects the library of Alexandria (which has moved around over the years and now resides in England as most stolen things go lol). The 6 must attend a year of within the society before collectively choosing 1 of the 6 to eliminate and then becoming initiates.

This book has it all truly, It's diverse, it brings up deep moral dilemmas such as who deserves to have access to knowledge, should everyone know everything or is that dangerous, would you kill for what you want most in the world, are evil and good so black and white, and the morals of fantasy elements such as mind reading and emotional control. It was truly delicious.

But what really had me even more full-throttle invested is the clear harry potter influence. Atlas Blakely, the man who chooses the 6 and the caretaker of the society, is clearly a Dumbledore character- he's older, aloof, reserved, and only shows up to inconveniently drop lore before unhelpfully disappearing, he clearly has an alternative perhaps evil motive. Then we have Nico. Nico is so obviously a James Potter it hurtssss meeee. Nico is an energetic golden boy who cares so deeply for his friends and will do anything for them. He so obviously gryffindor but is so obviously James in the way he is attractive and knows it, has curly black hair, taught himself difficult magic in order to shape shift and be able to help his best friend. Like guys its right there. And if that's not obvious enough, he has two roommates, one a shapeshifter who changes into a black dog and is annoying but everyone loves (cough cough sirius black), and the other a guy inflicted with a genetic problem who is not quite human and has horrible parents and a tragic past (see Remus J Lupin). And no these roommates arent copy paste wolfstar, in fact the romance doesn't seem to be between those two, but they are blatant enough for me and i ate that uppppppp. Furthermore, I think the 6 clearly fit in hogwarts houses (Libby+Nico in Gryffindor, Paris+Callum in Slytherin, Reina in Ravenclaw, and Tristan as Hufflepuff). Apparently the author used to write harry potter fanfic under the same name so I think these aspects are obviously purposeful.

I loved this book 10/10 loosing my minddddd at the end! I also don't get surprised very often by plots and this one really had me going. This is the first booktok book that I've actually thoroughly enjoyed and understand the hype.

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airborne13's review against another edition

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If I had to read the word “smirked” one more time, I would have thrown this book out the window. 

I wanted to like “The Atlas Six” so badly. The plot sounded interesting and the prologue at the beginning hooked me. However, from the first chapter onwards, the writing became boring and repetitive. In addition, it tried to make up for its lack of plot and interesting writing with sexual content to keep the reader interested. I tried to get further in this book, but found myself getting more and more frustrated with it. After numerous attempts to finish it, I ended up giving this book away to a thrift store. Like many YA novels lately, “The Atlas Six” leans heavily into cheap tricks like sex and trendy cover art to get copies to sell.

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archiveofrasa's review against another edition

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

3.75

all the reviews I watched were spot on when describing this book. overall, it was really entertaining and I did in fact buy the sequel purely because I want to see where this story goes, even if the way events here were executed pretty poorly.

there's much to be desired in this magic system, as every reviewer mentioned. I quickly realised the story wouldn't really explain anything at all. I just started going along with it as if it was a fanfiction, which this book definitely gives me that vibe. it's as if it's from a source material that has a more thought-out world to which if you were a fan of, you'd understand what the fanfic was trying to do and think it was actually quite intelligent.

the themes of moral dilemma were very interesting. I wish we spent more time on exploring why some feel as if this world, which is mostly similar to our own minus the magic (yes I know it doesn't really make sense), is not doing very well and why the Society needs these academics. I feel like if that was built up properly, then I feel like it would've come into fruition near the end much more smoothly. the plot twist was kind of just thrown at us? It was interesting enough that it didn't piss me off but I wish it was done better.

the characters were probably my favourite and I am biased to say it was mainly because of the messy dynamics between all of them. you can literally ship anyone, it's so much fun. I do wish we got more out of Nico and Reina as characters; the scenes they chose for each of their POV chapters didn't really say much about them? I really liked Nico's relationship with Gideon and how that developed, even though I think the author was trying to go for an "academic rivals to lovers" with Libby (I see it but I am a queer friends to lovers guy at heart). I liked all the characters and am curious to see where they end up in the second (and final) book.

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