Amazing premise, very promising but weirdly misogynistic. Reads like Adrian Barnes wanted to write himself into the book so he gave his character no likeable, or recognisable, qualities but made his girlfriend beautiful and smart.
Filled with ableism and misogyny, a very dull, and quite frankly unnecessary read. The only good part of the book is the ending- seriously. The last two paragraphs are haunting and i wish that energy could have been kept throughout the book.
How this is someone’s debut novel I will never understand. This is such an intricate book, filled with detail and intrigue.
Aiden finds himself stumbling to a hunting lodge in someone else’s body, with no idea how he got there. Aiden is in a time loop, destined to live the same few days over and over again. The young Evelyn Hardcastle will die later that night, Aiden’s task? Save her, and as a reward he will be freed from the loop. But every time he sleeps he wakes up as a new person, and he only has 8 chances left…
Not only that, but there are two others like him, but only one can leave. A mysterious plague doctor watching his every move, and a fellow “body snatcher” trying to kill him off. Can Aiden solve who kills Evelyn?
This is so detailed and I love it with my entire heart.
I like this book, but it works better as a sequel. It’s a lot of showing “oh wow Baz and Simon don’t get on…oh man it sucks that Baz literally almost took your magic away…man it sucks that your relationship is super complicated…” hence why when Baz confesses to the audience it’s very jarring.
I’m expected to believe this character I just met is telling me that actually he’s been in love with Simon the whole time? Where?? It’s very half baked. I like the magic, I like the stories woven together, I like the final fight, I like Simon. I love the shade thrown at Dumbledore! but honestly it’s like being thrown in at the deep end. I wish this was a quadrilogy. But I’m not interested in Wayward Son or AWTWB so I guess this is where we part ways SnowBaz.
Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated
3.75
Society has gotten rid of monsters, but when Jam accidentally summons Pet- a creature from her mother’s paintings- Pet reveals that there’s a monster nearby and it’s his job to get rid of it.
I like this book! It’s a great way for teens to learn about different identities and relationships, the friendship between the two main characters is great and the plot is very interesting. I’ve knocked off a point because the end frustrates me.
Redemptions brother is being (it is implied sexually) abused by his uncle, who is well loved by the family. The climax features Pet who wishes to punish him i.e. kill him- however Jam intervenes and asks him not to. This is, to me, utterly insane. It’s different with the current justice system where Black people are being abused by it, (Jam and Redeption and their families are Black), and so it makes sense that the death penalty doesn’t work in this society however, the uncle confesses- so why not kill him? It’s clear he’s done it, and what is the justice system- if it is indeed being scrutinised- going to do? The only plus side is that the uncle is exposed, one of his wives (I believe he is polyam) also confesses to knowing what he did, and so he is ostracised and dealt with that way. But Jams decision reeks of moral superiority, I get the message but I don’t think it’s appropriate for that situation, and it tarnishes an otherwise incredible book.
Utter rubbish. The only Christie original so far that I’ve absolutely hated. This is a morning book that says nothing, has nothing and is nothing. Don’t read it.
Sadness. Pure, concentrated sadness. It sucks that Theo’s death is this new beginning for Griffin, like, I know it’s based on Silvera’s own experience but it’s like if Theo hadn’t died then Griffin would never have moved on? I don’t know. It’s well written and while I don’t really like Griffin I guess that’s kind of the point. Bittersweet.