book review: my brilliant friend

My Brilliant Friend (The Neapolitan Novels, #1)My Brilliant Friend by Elena Ferrante

My rating: 3 of 5 stars

it took a while for me to grow into this book. had to force myself to finish the first few parts before gradually immerse myself into the characters, and read the story a Elena Greco sees them.

I think I could relate to some part of the story, who wouldn’t, right? its those tumultuous growing up years with so many conflicts and emotions going within us. Of friendships and love, of envy and pride, of family and the neighbourhood, being of poor or rich, the struggle to choose between one and the other, the struggle of studying and the need to excel. and we always have a friend, somehow, like Lila.

its a nostalgic storytelling of all the things mentioned above and the fact that it starts with an incident in the present before going back to the past, at first, I could not understand how all the characters mentioned in the book would bring us to the present. But it has to take some patience and appreciation that all these people meant something to the growing girls, Elena and Lila.

I am not a fan of the writing style but I am glad that there is one storyteller here. I could read from one perspective, but it would perhaps be nice to hear from Lila’s point of view too because she is the object of admiration and awe, not just to Elena, but to every boys and girls in the neighbourhood.

Towards the end of this book one, I realise I want to continue reading to the next three books and hope I could find the answers to what the first chapter of My Brilliant Friend is hinting and bringing us back to the present. And I would love to find out what happened to the marriage of Lila and Stefano, and whether Elena’s love to Nino is not one sided.

View all my reviews

book review: the cruel crown

Cruel Crown (Red Queen, #0.1-#0.2)Cruel Crown by Victoria Aveyard

My rating: 2 of 5 stars

I share similar views about this one as with many other readers. i read this only after i finished Glass Sword. and i am glad there are some insights to the past.

I thoroughly enjoyed Queen Coriane’s story much more that Steel Scars, and was hoping that there would be more to the story, i mean it could have been expanded and many of us would still love it.

For Steel Scars, at least, it gave me a confirmation about Farley’s relationship with Shade Barrow. i totally skipped all the coded messages and just fast reading the rest.

View all my reviews

book review: glass sword

Glass Sword (Red Queen, #2)Glass Sword by Victoria Aveyard

My rating: 2 of 5 stars

Very seldom i get to read series one after another. I had somewhat appreciated the story in Red Queen and was honestly eager to continue with Glass Sword.

I was however, reading Glass Sword reminded me of why i didnt read YA in the first place. I wanted to like the book but also somehow taken a bit bored and took much motivation to finish it because half way through it feels like im reading redundancy.

I am absolutely not in love with Mare’s character when i wanted so much to feel her. Cal described her in page 394 and i very much share his sentiments.

I do like the different characters of newbloods they ‘recruited’ and a sudden introduction to what is known as Ardents but perhaps to explore and ‘show’ their abilities would probably drag the story longer.

The ending is kind of expectedly disappointing. It feels like after all this hardwork of treading and reading and this is the end?!

I am guessing there will be a sequel, right? It doesnt seem like Cal has a part in the ending. Because he has to be the hero, not Mare.

View all my reviews

book review: red queen

Red Queen (Red Queen, #1)Red Queen by Victoria Aveyard

My rating: 3 of 5 stars

i have to admit this is the first YA book that i actually finished reading! not even Hunger games has that effect on me, despite following the hunger games movies. and i have never even touched the divergent series.

of course, most YA moves along similar storylines and somewhere along reading Red Queen, i cannot helped but being reminded of both the movies mentioned above, with a bit of x-men (the mutants concept) in between and some royalty fantasy. So in a way, Red Queen and the next books coming after this is a mix of everything YA, but surprisingly quite a unique storyline on its own.

i am definitely surprised at myself for actually completing the book, although i am pretty sure that what made me pick up and bought the book (and the Glass Sword together) are the many bookstagrams accounts i follow at IG.

the book just gets more complicated by the pages because really, once i thought i pretty much get where the story is going, it twists and turns, keeps me motivated to know where this is going. i love the descriptions of the places in the book, i appreciated how the characters unfold themselves so that readers could really understand and sometimes foresee how the characters are thinking and behaving. but i believe more will unfold in the next book.

learning that there are two types of people the silvers and the reds, i like the idea that there is a ‘new generation’ coming out of humanity to bring back equality. it’s about a red girl from a humble background thrown into situations and consequences that eventually leading her finding out about her true self and the reality of the world and its hidden secrets underground going on within the walls of silver royalty. unexpectedly and tragically, the end will bring her to a fate of war she never imagined she, not just be a part of, but could very well lead.

View all my reviews

book review: the marble collector

The Marble CollectorThe Marble Collector by Cecelia Ahern

My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Marble Collector has two protagonists. Sabrina Boggs – an only daughter to estranged parents, in her early thirties, a mother with three sons and going through a tense marriage at the moment – albeit a loving husband. Perhaps she is going through some midlife crisis, perhaps trying to find an ‘adventure’ after going through this current life on a daily basis. it sort of grasp you when the novel starts with Sabrina trying to save someone at the common swimming pool she works as a lifeguard, only to realise the person didnt need saving, but realising perhaps she is the one who needed saving. Sabrina is also taking care of her father who is currently at a home recovering from stroke and memory loss.

So this is where the book inter changes, between Sabrina and Fergus Boggs. so it is interesting because we rarely see novels that tries to address the father-daughter relationship. and what will be at the heart of the story are boxes of marbles, which, to me, is quite new and interesting because i realise there is a thriving world of marbles made of glass, swirls and bloodies even olympics so to speak.

Fergus story will bring you back to the past of his childhood and the double life he lead before the stroke. it is quite heartrending because we are following this old man’s train of thoughts and memories because on a current life, he is struggling to remember. and Sabrina is struggling to relearn and connect to her father, whom she thought she knew all her life, but eventually, as she found out, leading another life which she was not a part of. and that knowledge kind of hurts, i bet, because i have the impression that Sabrina is close to her father.

i think the idea of the book is to get Sabrina finds herself through finding her father’s past, the double and new life he had after being divorced from her mother. but i guess i understood that the story is focused on her father, the main character.

i guess the book is good enough to keep me going and continue reading. i am a fan of cecelia ahern but lately her books doesnt give me that reading satisfaction. luckily the marble collector gives me a bit of that rush. it has humour and sometimes touched the heart because i feel for the character Sabrina Boggs and her need to reconnect with her father who is losing some memories. and i also feel for Fergus Boggs, his childhood memories, his ‘difficult’ life and pleasently surprised when i found out his relationship with Cat. But mostly, i am endeared by the close bond and relationship that Fergus have with his brothers, especially so with the late eldest brother, Hamish who throughout the story, is like a living ghost. rarely mentioned but there all the same because eventually it was Hamish who made Fergus who he is.

View all my reviews

book review: good omens

Good Omens: The Nice and Accurate Prophecies of Agnes Nutter, WitchGood Omens: The Nice and Accurate Prophecies of Agnes Nutter, Witch by Terry Pratchett

My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Oh well. it was a fun read. one that didnt require me to think too much but rather just plainly enjoy the whole story. the one that amazes me most when reading a terry pratchett are the characters with made up names that is out of this world. reading good omens just make me feel how serious we have become and reading it brings me back to almost childlike innocent imagination, albeit addressing a very ‘adult’ issue of the end of the world.

i am glad it had a happy ending. 🙂

View all my reviews

book review: the strange library

The Strange LibraryThe Strange Library by Haruki Murakami

My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Sigh..have always loved murakami and will still always love murakami. This strange library is really strange. almost like the author is just having some fun writing it. i just love the illustrations. i love the simple story (as compared to more complex storylines, think 1Q84). and i have learnt from reading murakami, don’t always expect answers. just move on reading and enjoy the fantasy.

View all my reviews

slade house

Slade HouseSlade House by David Mitchell
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Slade House is fantastic. it is my first scary ‘horror’ book and i am just glad it didnt give me nightmares.

i appreciate how the stories were different from one nine years to the other but somehow the relation was seamless. and the mindboggling concept of soul, science and spiritual feeds my imagination that even then, i thought i would do some research about them.

i read without expectations, except for ghosts, but really, there are none so to speak, (glad about that) and with a lot of questions and wondering how and why people disappear that i made me kept on reading. by the third ‘nine year’ i pretty much understood and was so grateful that the 4th revealed so much more about the twins and how they get to be who they are. i am so grateful because i found answers to the many questions reeling in my brain. and i am mesmerized. i actually grow to love the twins, when earlier on, i just thought there were just horrible.

the third David Mitchell’s book i bought and the first to be read. i am ready to move on to his bigger stories.

View all my reviews

reading slump

i have just gone through a reading slump. i just found out about this term from bookstagrammer this morning. it’s interesting. i have always had a book hangover but i have never given a name to the periods when i found myself uninterested to read any book or it seems like no book seems to attract me enough to continue reading it.

and yes i had this reading slump. and usually after a book hangover.so few days ago, i keep on returning to my bookshelf, pick one book up, read the first page or a few, and put it back not interested.

until last sunday, i decided  should just give away these books away since i am never going to read them. somewhere else, just not on my shelf. i picked up Still Alice and surprisingly i thought to myself that perhaps i could give it a second chance. i did watch the movie but i simply hated it. but the book…everyone should just read the book and forget about the movie. i finished the book in two days! shows how much i pretty liked the book, and it is like a most satisfying drink of a reading thirst.

and now i am ready to move on to the next book!