Did not know anything about the book before I started it and was pleasantly surprised!
I usually don’t read urban fantasy but I loved the world and all the different magical inhabitants. The book has Fae, witches, demons, vampires, witches and much more. The main character has a strong personality and is pretty cunning. The plot kept me on my toes the whole time, since there was a big mystery to uncover. I think it became a little bit slow around the middle but it picked up again and even had me in tears a few times.
Spoiler free Review: This was an amazing ride! If Agatha Christie and Leigh Bardugo co-authored a book - it could look something like this.
The future leaders of 12 provinces go on a 12 day ship voyage together. Every one of them has a unique magical ability- except for our protagonist who only pretends to have one. During their journey people start dying and soon foul play is suspected. The mystery kept me on my toes the whole time and even though I guessed part of the solution, most of it was a surprise to me. I love hard to solve mysteries and this one certainly gave me that. The protagonist was a little bit annoying at times but I still liked him. Not sure about the romance plot, I feel like the story didn’t really need it but it was fine.
All in all I loved the book and will definitely recommend it to friends :)
Maybe I wasn’t in the right mood for this book but now that I finished it, I can’t help but feel disappointed. I was bored right until the very end and would have stopped reading around the 20% mark if I wasn’t reading it for a book club. The main character was a dull teenage girl, nothing about her was special.
The plot in a nutshell: poor teenager who sleeps in her car finds herself randomly inheriting billions of dollars from a guy she’s never heard about and needs to live a full year in his mansion. She shares the house with relatives of the deceased who are mad about not inheriting much. The whole story revolves around the question WHY the deceased left her all his assets and he left behind clues for her to figure this out. There is a little bit of romance hinted to as well which I found very unbelievable and insta-lovey.
I strongly disliked the whole thing - mostly because I really didn’t care about the Why-question. I would have preferred if her finding the reason was more of a side plot and there was a different main storyline instead. I can also already tell that I will forget everything that happened in this book and I know I won’t continue with the series.
I was looking for an easy fantasy read and that’s exactly what I got here. It was very entertaining and I would compare it to books like “A Court of Thorns and Roses” or “Fourth Wing”. We follow Jude, a teenager who’s a mortal who ends up living with her parents murderer as her adoptive father (adoption not official just easier to explain that way) in the fairy world. Her older sister and twin sister live there too. So the family dynamics were interesting to say the least. A new ruler for the fairy kingdom is about to be crowned and Jude gets herself involved in political intrigue. There is also a dark and handsome but cruel prince involved (hence the title). TW: The main character is experiencing extreme bullying, so just be aware of that going into the book.
I got through the story pretty quickly and will be picking up the second one in the series.
Das war das erste Buch, das ich von Daniel Glattauer gelesen habe, deshalb bin ich mit relativ neutraler Erwartungshaltung in die Geschichte eingestiegen.
Darum geht’s: 2 österreichische Familien machen Urlaub in Italien. Dabei passiert ein schreckliches Unglück, welches psychische Folgen für alle Beteiligten sowie einen Gerichtsprozess auslöst.
Die ersten paar Kapitel haben mir leider gar nicht gefallen, weil der Autor die auftretenden Charaktere nacheinander auf fast schon klinische Weise mit seinen Worten seziert hat. Statt Informationen auf natürliche Weise ins Geschehen einzubinden, zählt er Beruf, Familienverhältnisse und Aussehen der Personen einfach nacheinander auf. Hat sich gelesen wie Personenbeschreibungen, die man in der Schule abgeben musste und nicht wie der Anfang eines Romans.
Nach diesen ersten stolprigen Kapiteln nahm die Geschichte jedoch an Fahrt auf. Die eigentliche Handlung war interessant. Trotzdem bin ich mit dem Schreibstil nie richtig warm geworden. Für mich könnte diese Geschichte vermutlich auch ein 5-Sterne-Buch sein, wenn die Erzählperspektive anders gewählt worden wäre (z.B. aus der Sicht der Tochter oder sogar der, des unsympathischen Anwalts). Dieser distanzierte, emotionslose allwissende Erzählstil war mir auf Dauer einfach zuwider - aber ist wahrscheinlich Geschmacksache!
Nichtsdestotrotz fand ich die letzten Kapitel des Buches sehr stark und war auch mit dem Ende zufrieden.
I read “Weyward” with my book club and was pleasantly surprised! Usually I don’t care much for magical realism OR historical fiction - this book fits with both of those genres - but I really enjoyed it. The story is character driven and the three women at the center of it are very well flushed out and different from each other. This turned out to be my new favourite book about realistic witches. Some of the content is pretty heavy and graphic, so I would recommend to check out trigger warnings. I was shocked to hear that this is a debut novel and will definitely be picking up the next Emilia Hart book!
Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated
3.0
I’ve been planning to pick up the Percy Jackson series for years now and I finally did! People have compared it to Harry Potter because it’s following a group of young magical children/teens. The first book was a solid three for me but I listened to it on audio and have to admit that I wasn’t always super concentrated. It’s the kind of book that you can have on in the background and still follow along even if you leave the room for a second.
The plot fell a little bit short for me. Percy and his friends are basically on a fetch quest for the entire book. I would have liked this as a side plot but not the main story line. I also didn’t connect with the characters much. What pleasantly surprised me was that Rick Riordan wrote a main character that has a mental health diagnosis. I try to read diversely but I don’t think I’ve read anything else with ADHD representation. Also loved to be reading about mythological people and creatures. The chapters had actual names and I wish authors would do this more often! All in all I enjoyed the ride and will continue on with the series :)
I always find it hard to rate memoirs. This is somebody’s real story and should be treated respectfully. It has very high ratings and many people seem to love this book. That said: it was not for me. I mostly read fiction but I did enjoy memoirs like „Educated“ and „In Order to Live“.
First and foremost: I would NOT recommend „when breath becomes air“ to anybody who is currently struggling with mental health, especially depression!!!!
I liked the writing and I feel like the author was a great person worth knowing. This book is probably great for people who work in medicine and want to gain the perspective of a patient.
There were chapters focusing on Pauls life before cancer which I sensed were more targeted to people he knew in person. Again I don‘t want to disrespect anybody but these chapters nearly made me stop reading.
Then we got a few chapters about his career and work. I found these interesting but I‘m the kind of person that covers her eyes in medical dramas when they show humans being cut open by doctors. There was a lot of graphic descriptions of medical conditions that had nothing to do with his cancer. I was also not prepared to read about the death of new born twins. Again, not the books fault but it was very depressing to read.
After I finished reading „When Breath becomes Air“ I asked myself: Why did I read this? I don‘t really feel like I‘ve learned something new about cancer. I had expected to maybe take life lessons from it when it comes to the topic of death but I don‘t know… I maybe just could not relate to Paul very well? I feel like I would have appreciated the book much more if I had known the author personally.
I landed on 2.5 stars because to me that‘s the average between 0 and 5. If this was fiction I would have rated it lower.
Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated
4.5
“The Atlas Six“ was not what I expected at all! The first thing that surprised me was the writing style: the sentences were more complex and the words more complicated than I’m used to (English is my second language but I mostly read English books). I got into it after a few chapters and thought that it fit the academic setting quite nicely. It impacted my reading experience though because it brought my reading pace down by quite a bit. I usually finish a book of this length in 1-3 sittings but this took me about 6.
What I loved most about this book was that it kept me guessing until the very last page. I like it when books allow me to form theories about the direction the plot is taking and I LOVE it when it turns out that I‘m completely wrong. Even better when I can see that the clues were there all along and everything makes sense in retrospect. I‘m usually quite good at predicting where a story is headed but here I had no clue (I guessed one thing correctly but that was only a small fraction of what was actually happening).
I also enjoyed the concept of looking at magic in a scientific way and the characters using it for research purposes. The book gave me major thriller vibes in a sense that I was constantly on the edge of my seat and waiting for something shocking to happen. During my reading process I couldn‘t tell if I actually liked the book and I told my boyfriend that it would probably come down to the ending. If the build up had been for nothing, I would have given it about 3 stars but the ending did not disappoint. Loved it!
I thought about giving it 5 stars but even though I got used to the writing style, I didn’t like that it slowed down my reading pace, so I landed on 4.5.