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Every Day by David Levithan cover

Every Day

…loves him not necessarily because he is a boy but as a boy. A struggles to understand with Rhiannon’s view, as I think many of us would; though gender isn’t necessarily an important part of attraction, it is a part. It’s an interesting question that Levithan proposes and one, I think, that cannot be easily answered. Every Day is not a conventional narrative, thanks to Levithan’s intriguing proposal – what if you were to move from body to body ever… Continue reading

Crash Into You by Katie McGarry cover

Crash Into You

…tering since he was six and hasn’t seen his mother for over a decade. Both come from completely different backgrounds – rich and poor – but are united by their familial problems. As with the previous two books, there is a sense of emotional manipulation on McGarry’s part – is it even possible that so many things can go wrong?! – yet her story is so powerful, particularly in emotional terms, that you just can’t help going along with it. If anything… Continue reading

The Game by Anders de la Motte cover

Game

…ppens in the last two thirds of the novel. Instead, we’re treated to HP’s bumbling search for revenge, a lot of telling-and-not-showing and a climax that is so anticlimactic I stopped reading in the last 20 pages of the book because I realised I just didn’t give a rats’ arse. Of course, perhaps the “character development” (if we can call it that) wouldn’t have been as bad if it hadn’t been for HP’s completely and utterly unsympathetic nature. We’r… Continue reading

Severed Heads, Broken Hearts (The Beginning of Everything) by Robyn Schneider cover

Severed Heads, Broken Hearts or The Beginning of Everything

…it’s known across the pond) is her debut – the tale of Ezra Faulkner as he undergoes the fall from high-school goldenboy and jock and in the process learns what true friendship really means. Severed Heads, Broken Hearts (my preferred title as it conveys some of the absurd wit that abounds the novel) is, comparatively, one of the more Green-esque bildungsromane I have read in recent years. It’s unclear whether this is Schneider’s own voice or if sh… Continue reading

Raging Star by Moira Young cover

Raging Star

…means that the real excitement – the grand plan to collapse De Malo’s New Eden – isn’t maximised to the extent that it could have been. As such it feels rather brief and fleeting. As a whole, though, Raging Star is still a wonderful culmination of this great trilogy, concluding Saba’s journey in unexpected ways. What I love about Young’s debut series is her powerful narrative voice and the landscape she sets her story in – harsh, bleak and beautif… Continue reading

Striker: Sudden Death by Nick Hale cover

Sudden Death

…ly what is aimed for. Striker: Sudden Death is also filled with several sudden twists. This makes for an interesting story which isn’t really predictable. The story itself is a good attempt, and while not excellent is still pretty good. Again, another good job by the author. All in all, Striker: Sudden Death is a decent debut novel, and while it won’t outsell any current popular teen-spy novels, it is still an enjoyable read which many 10-15 year… Continue reading

Half Wild by Sally Green cover

Half Wild

…writer, and Half Wild suggests no different: Annalise excluded, Green’s triumph is her ability to populate her novels with wonderfully convincing casts of characters, pin-pointing personality as adeptly as J.K. Rowling. There’s undoubtedly a lot to like about Half Wild. Now that Nathan has been given his three Gifts by his father, the narrative changes focus: the divide between the black and white witches. It’s an excellent shift, widening Nathan’… Continue reading

Shadow of the Hawk by Curtis Jobling cover

Wereworld: Shadow of the Hawk

…omewhere in between the epics such as The Belgariad and The Chronicles of the Icemark. Wereworld‘s greatest strength lies in its concept of upper-class, ruling were-creatures as well as its lack (or sidelined) use of common magic which differentiates it from most modern fantasies. Shadow of the Hawk is an entertaining and exciting followup to the previous two Wereworld novels, offering more than just a mere fantasy quest…. Continue reading