Monday 24 July 2017

Bitten by Kelley Armstrong - TV/Book Comparison

Bitten by Kelley Armstrong - TV/Book Comparison


Bitten is the first book in a fantasy series written by Kelley Armstrong. It focuses on Elena Gilbert, the world's only female werewolf and her struggle to come to terms with this and find her place in a supernatural world. And I loved it.

I discovered Bitten through the TV show. I was searching for a new series to binge watch and saw the premise for the show. I watched two episodes and was completely hooked. I have to admit, I think I definitely prefer the TV show over the books but the books are equally enjoyable and I'm going to talk about both below. NOTE: this book series and TV show are definitely adult, not YA. There are sexy times (which isn't really my thing) and some 'mature' content in both mediums that is not suitable for younger readers.

Book Series

Bitten is the first book in the Women of the Otherworld series by Kelley Armstrong. The series (which is thirteen books long so good if you want an epic reading marathon!) follows numerous characters including witches, ghosts and half-demons, not just Elena and her family. For the purpose of this review I have only read Bitten (and will focus on this first book) and Stolen - the first two books that follow Elena, purely because I'm not too bothered about the other characters the series follows.

I did enjoy Bitten. Since I read the book after watching the TV show I couldn't help but compare and, actually, the TV show was a pretty faithful adaptation to the book. There were some elements that were obviously changed but, for the most part, I could see why they were changed in the transition from page to screen. The one thing I did enjoy in the book that wasn't in the TV show was the final 'fight'. I really enjoyed reading it and liked that Elena started accepting herself to take part in it.

Although I did enjoy the book, I thought book Elena was a bit whinier than TV Elena (although not by much) and this did grate a little bit. Because the book is 300+ pages, we have a lot of time to fill with Elena constantly going back and forth between the two guys in her life and it does get a little repetitive.

TV Series

The TV Series introduced me to this series and, if I was going to recommend a medium, I would definitely recommend the TV series. The cast are wonderful and the action scenes are also pretty good. The first couple of episodes are a little weaker than the rest and it takes a little getting used to, but I can't fault the actors and their portrayal of the characters. Laura Vandervoort who plays Elena turns a whiny character in the books, into a kick ass woman who doesn't need a man to help her. The whole cast gels so well together and their relationship comes across on screen which is really nice to see. 

There are only three seasons of the TV series and, of the three, Season 2 is definitely my favourite. It had me hooked from beginning to end and I loved every second of it. Season 3, for me, was a little slower and I wasn't hooked like I was the first two seasons but, it was still a good conclusion to the series, even if it was lacking in the action and edge-of-your-seat moments that Season 2 had. 

Overall, I would definitely encourage people to try the TV series of Bitten. It's fast paced, has an amazing cast and, overall, a really good plot line. Although the books are okay, this is one of the rare occasions where the adaptation, in my view, is a thousand times better than the books! Let me know if you've watched the show or read the books (or are planning to do either of these things) and what you think of them!


Thursday 9 March 2017

Inspirational (Fictional) Women

To celebrate International Women's Day, I've chosen a few quotes from some strong female protagonists from YA books. I know for me, I love reading about strong female characters, especially in YA, because they give me something to aspire to. I want to be like them in my life. Their lives are so much more complicated than mine so, if they can keep going, then know I can too. Which female protagonists do you admire in YA?

Background Stock Image: Alex Rodríguez Santibáñez https://stocksnap.io/photo/442BFIS2MT
Background Stock Image: Leonard von Bibrahttps://stocksnap.io/photo/FAHVD1I4K9


Background Stock Image: Janko Ferlichttps://stocksnap.io/photo/6XANS2384I

Background Stock Image: Nguyen Nguyenhttps://stocksnap.io/photo/TNXFPX1WIM  

Background Stock Image: Aaron Thomashttps://stocksnap.io/photo/9KBPAZZIE4

Background Stock Image: Skitter Photohttps://stocksnap.io/photo/0G7N1L3G2F

Thursday 16 February 2017

A Letter to Aelin Ashryver Galathynius

Aelin,

I have read many books, hundreds of them, and with each one I leave a part of myself within the pages. When I first found you, you were called Celaena, and you were in a terrible place - somewhere worse than anything I could ever imagine and I know that I would not be strong enough to survive, let alone thrive in the way that you did. Was it hard? To keep going day after day; to be shackled in the mines with no light to find your way? I imagine it must have been. Especially knowing that, in another world, you could have created your own light to banish the darkness, even if the very thought terrified you.

I guess I want to ask you how you do it. How did you keep going, when everything around you was telling you to give up. How did you keep your confidence that everything would turn out okay? When Rowan confronted you, about reclaiming your throne - how did you overcome the idea that you weren't good enough, weren't worthy to sit on the throne?

I have started down the road to the career of my dreams, and yet every day, at some point, there's a little voice in the back of my mind telling me I'm not good enough. That this isn't going to work. I have no doubt that all of the stress and worry that I'm going through will be worth it in the end, but I wanted to take a moment to thank you.

Thank you for coming into my life right when I needed you the most. Thank you for being the strong, confident, kick-ass woman that you are. Thank you for teaching me that no matter what life throws at you, you need to keep going, because you never know what amazing things lie ahead. Thank you for showing me that loving people with all your heart can lead to the worst pain imaginable, but can also mean spending your life with the most wonderful characters. Thank you for doing all of the above as a woman, with all the highs and lows that brings. For fighting on when your body betrayed you and for loving shopping with a passion that is not healthy. Thank you for loving books and proving to me that you can be the most kick-ass person in the whole city, and still get weepy over a romance book.

Thank you Aelin Ashryver Galathynius. For giving me the female role model that I have been waiting for.

Lots of love,

A friend xx

Friday 3 February 2017

Crow Mountain by Lucy Inglis

Crow Mountain by Lucy Inglis

Rating: 3 stars

Synopsis: While on holiday in Montana, Hope meets ranch-boy Cal Crow. Caught in an accident, the two of them take shelter in a mountain cabin where Hope makes a strange discovery, More than a hundred years earlier, another English girl met a similar fate. Her rescuer: a rugged horse-trader called Nate. In this wild place, both girls learn what it means to survive and to fall in love, neither knowing that their destinies are intimately entwined.

Review: I really wanted to like this book. I read Lucy's debut novel City of Halves in 2015 and I absolutely loved it, so I had high expectations for this book. And, I was a little disappointed with it. City of Halves had me gripped from the very beginning - it is very similar to The Mortal Instruments by Cassandra Clare with the supernatural beings hiding in London, but there are differences (my review of City of Halves is ) - there was so much action in City of Halves that I was hooked from start to finish. This book, while it did have action in it's own way, didn't really deliver for me.

Now, I often find that books like this; where two stories from two different time periods link together in the present day, are usually disappointing. The author has two different main characters, two different worlds, a whole extra cast of characters to develop and one story always seems to be less developed than the other, and this book was no different. Unusually, I thought the modern day story of Hope and Cal was more underdeveloped than Emily and Nate's, which is the opposite to what I normally find.

I found Hope and Cal's story quite boring and a little tame. All the characters in the modern day world seemed really underdeveloped and I didn't buy in to any of the relationships. I was really disappointed with Hope though. As our modern day protagonist, I wanted her to be strong and independent, like Emily became in her story and this just didn't seem to happen. I spent the whole book waiting for her to become the protagonist I wanted her to be and she didn't. When Hope and Cal were in the cabin, Cal did pretty much everything. I was kind of waiting for Hope to offer to collect firewood or do something other than read Emily's journal and it annoyed me that she didn't, and that it was left to Cal.
  Cal as well, although more capable than Hope, had an almost stereotypical sob story of a history. I wanted Lucy to change things up with him and add a twist to the tale, something I wouldn't have expected but, his story was quite predictable to me and, again, he seemed underdeveloped.

While I didn't enjoy Hope and Cal's story, I loved Emily and Nate's story. I would have loved a whole book dedicated purely to them and their relationship. It was so interesting to see in to this world of a newly formed Montana, with the Indians and the forming of lifelong enemies. I loved that Nate pushed Emily to become strong and capable, who could ride a horse like a man, who could hunt like a man. One of my favourite little moments was the transition of Emily not being able to bake bread to her learning to do it. Of seeing how sheltered her life was and how Nate helped her to survive. I adored every aspect of their story and, while I hated how it ended, I really liked how Lucy had given Emily the strength to go on and carry on and make a name for herself and, in the end, her and Nate really were forever - Emily made sure of that.

In all, I did enjoy this book and, despite everything this wasn't the worst book of this type that I've ever read - it was definitely saved by Emily and Nate's story and I would have preferred it if the book was simply based on their story, and cut Hope and Cal and the whole modern day aspect out of it entirely. Out of her two books, City of Halves was definitely the better of the two in my opinion and is a book that I love to reread, whereas Crow Mountain is a book I don't think I'd pick up again, despite my love of Emily and Nate.

Wednesday 4 January 2017

Most Anticipated Books of 2017

I cannot believe 2017 is here already! I hope you all had a very happy new year and have had a good start to 2017. It doesn't seem like two minutes since I was writing about my most anticipated books of 2016, but it is that time of year again and these are the books I am most looking forward to in 2017. (On another note, I feel like every year my most anticipated book list gets shorter rather than longer, but anyway...)

A Court of Wings and Ruin by Sarah J Maas

Feyre has returned to the Spring Court, determined to gather information on Tamlin's maneuverings and the invading king threatening to bring Prythian to its knees. But to do so she must play a deadly game of deceit - and one slip may spell doom not only for Feyre but for her world as well.
As war bears down upon them all, Feyre must decide who to trust amongst the dazzling and lethal High Lords - and hunt for allies in unexpected places.

I think this is my MOST anticipated book for this year. I absolutely adored A Court of Mist and Fury last year and it quickly became my favourite book not just of the year but of all time. I am so excited about this book you don't understand. According to Goodreads, this book is due out on May 2nd.

Lord of Shadows by Cassandra Clare

Emma Carstairs has finally avenged her parents. She thought she’d be at peace. But she is anything but calm. Torn between her desire for her parabatai Julian and her desire to protect him from the brutal consequences of parabatai relationships, she has begun dating his brother, Mark. But Mark has spent the past five years trapped in Faerie; can he ever truly be a Shadowhunter again?

And the faerie courts are not silent. The Unseelie King is tired of the Cold Peace, and will no longer concede to the Shadowhunters’ demands. Caught between the demands of faerie and the laws of the Clave, Emma, Julian, and Mark must find a way to come together to defend everything they hold dear—before it’s too late.

This is the second book in the Dark Artifices series and I'm really looking forward to it. I wasn't expecting to love Lady Midnight as much as I did so I'm really looking forward to seeing where this second book will go. I'm a little disappointed at this cover to be honest - Lady Midnight had such a gorgeous cover that this one seems like a polar opposite. Julian is so tiny! I love this world though and I can't wait to go back there. According to Goodreads, this book is due out on May 23rd.

Wayfarer by Alexandra Bracken

All Etta Spencer wanted was to make her violin debut when she was thrust into a treacherous world where the struggle for power could alter history. After losing the one thing that would have allowed her to protect the Timeline, and the one person worth fighting for, Etta awakens alone in an unknown place and time, exposed to the threat of the two groups who would rather see her dead than succeed. When help arrives, it comes from the last person Etta ever expected—Julian Ironwood, the Grand Master’s heir who has long been presumed dead, and whose dangerous alliance with a man from Etta’s past could put them both at risk.

Meanwhile, Nicholas and Sophia are racing through time in order to locate Etta and the missing astrolabe with Ironwood travelers hot on their trail. They cross paths with a mercenary-for-hire, a cheeky girl named Li Min who quickly develops a flirtation with Sophia. But as the three of them attempt to evade their pursuers, Nicholas soon realizes that one of his companions may have ulterior motives.

As Etta and Nicholas fight to make their way back to one another, from Imperial Russia to the Vatican catacombs, time is rapidly shifting and changing into something unrecognizable… and might just run out on both of them.


Passenger was a tough book for me because although I sped through it, I didn't fall in love with it the way I was expecting to. It was a book that got such a lot of hype that I was a little disappointed with it. However, I am looking forward to seeing how this duology ends and this book sounds so interesting that I'm hoping the spark I was missing in Passenger appears in Wayfarer. According to Amazon UK, this book is out on January 12th.

I'm going to finish the way I started with another Sarah J Maas book. The last book in the Throne of Glass series is something I am so looking forward to - I don't think I'm going to be able to wait until September - it's so far away! As of right now, we don't have a title or a cover so all I can say is that according to Goodreads, our hearts will be ripped out on September 5th.

So those are my most anticipated books for 2017. What have I missed? Are there any book releases I should know about? What books are you most looking forward to getting your hands on in 2017?

All synopsis' and images from Goodreads. All publication dates are from either Goodreads or Amazon UK and may change. No Copyright Intended.