Showing posts with label yay. Show all posts
Showing posts with label yay. Show all posts

Sunday, 8 May 2011

In My Mailbox 23 or In Which Tesni Is Ecstatic Beyond Words

Dear Blog,
In My Mailbox is hosted, as ever, by Kristi of The Story Siren. 
I got three books this week. 

FOR REVIEW
Blood Magic by Tessa Gratton

BOUGHT
Anthem by Ayn Rand
Where She Went by Gayle Forman  [You have no idea how happy I am.  I totally danced around the living room when this came]

So I didn't really get many books, but I'm entirely happy with what I did get.
And now there's only one afternoon left of the weekend, so I had better post this and cram in all the unlimited reading time I have while I can.


Saturday, 26 March 2011

One Year Blogoversary (eek!)

Dear blog,
This is a very strange post to write, because it means that Books And The Universe is, as of today, one year old.
Eeek.
When I started blogging last year, I  didn't really contemplate the fact that I would still be doing it now, that I would be awake equally late, still rambling incessantly  talking about books, as much as life seems to be getting in the way that the moment. 

In which I make a number 1 out of some books. 

 I guess, most of all- Thank you, readers.  You're out there somewhere and you're awesome for putting up with me and listening.  The blogosphere is a winning place and huge fun to be a part of.  For one thing, it's always there when I can't sleep, and has opened me up to a whole other aspect of teenage fiction.  Without reading other blogs I probably would never have come across some of my favourite books.  Most of all, blogging  reminds me why I love reading.  Simple as.

I had better use this opportunity to ask- do you have any suggestions for the blog? Is there too much of something? Too little?  Et cetera.  I'll leave that to you.

Well, there you go.  I'm off to finish re-reading Notre-Dame de Paris now.  Over and out.

Saturday, 1 May 2010

Beautiful Blogger Award. Yay!

Dear Blog,
A very very big thank you/efcharistó and virtual hug to Giota of Just Another Book Blog who found my lowly blog worthy of the Beautiful Blogger Award.  Yippee!  I've never gotten a blog award before.

 
This award has a few rules:
1. Thank and link to the person who gave you the award
2. Pass the award onto 15 bloggers you've recently discovered and think are fantastic
3. Contact said blogs and let them know they've won
4. State 7 things about yourself

Seeing as that's what everybody else likes to do, I'll start with seven facts about me:
  1. I've been to 28 countries, which I suppose for a teenager is rather a lot.  When I was 11 my family and I travelled around Europe by way of motorhome which explains things.
  2. I'm home educated/homeschooled.
  3. There is nothing better than Ben & Jerry's ice cream.  Except a good book of course.
  4. I am obsessed with everything  Japanese. 
  5. By the time I was four I could name all the kings and queens of England and name when they were coronated.  I had a poster in my bedroom that had a big timeline with all the names and dates on it and I used to look at it for ages.
  6. I play the classical guitar.  My favourite composer is Ferdinando Carulli. 
  7. I have a knack for languages.  As well as English I speak German, Russian, can read and write a basic level of Kanji and speak bits of Czech, Norwegian, Icelandic and French (but not very much).
Now then. Blogs!  I'm supposed to list ones I've *recently* discovered, but being new to the Blogosphere (about a month or two) I guess all the blogs I read I've read recently.  But many of these I have stumbled upon recently as in, the last few weeks anyway.  So here are 15 awesome blogs I read and love (started off in alphabetical order but then ended up just in no particular layout). 

Along for the Ride
Book Journal
Daisy Chain Book Reviews
The Bookette
The Crooked Shelf
The Book Cellar
The Book Bug: Books for Teens and Tweens
Rebecca's Book Blog
I Swim for Oceans
So Many Books, So Little Time
Green Bean Teen Queen
The Book Scout
Insert Book Title Here
Read.Read.Read
Overbooked

Indeed, such fantastic bloggers and blogs. They deserve it *nods*. :D
*goes off to read book*

Friday, 2 April 2010

Review: The Sweet Far Thing



Dear Blog,
well then. The conclusion to the Gemma Doyle trilogy. The Sweet Far Thing.
This epic tome is 820 pages long and if ever I wanted to take it anywhere with me I had to use my mother's old Fat Face shoulder bag, which is smallish on the outside but within is like a TARDIS and fits about 5 or 6 books/journals/notepads in it. Carrying so many books no doubt does untold damage to my spine, but it's worth it to have a novel or three at hand.

Summary (which I pinched from Amazon. No copyright infringement intended, bla bla bla, but I'm going to town in an hour and time is of the essence):
It has been a year of change since Gemma Doyle arrived at the foreboding Spence Academy. Having bound the wild, dark magic of the realms to her, Gemma has forged unlikely and unsuspected new alliances both with the headstrong Felicity and timid Ann, Kartik, the exotic young man whose companionship is forbidden, and the fearsome creatures of the realms. Now, as Gemma approaches her London debut, the time has come to test those bonds. As her friendship with Felicity and Ann faces its gravest trial, and with the Order grappling for control of the realms, Gemma is compelled to decide once and for all which path she is meant to take. Pulled forward by fate, the destiny Gemma faces threatens to set chaos loose, not only in the realms, but also upon the rigid Victorian society whose rules Gemma has both defied and followed. Where does Gemma really belong? And will she, can she, survive?

Review: First things first-it is a brilliant (albeit tragic) (though I knew what happened already because somebody wrote a major spoiler in their review on Goodreads and didn't mark it as a spoiler post) ending to a brilliant trilogy. Every plot thread is neatly tied up.
There are a couple of flaws, alas. But many good things to balance it out. To every, "hmmph" there is a "yay!" So here they are.
Hmmph It doesn't need to be 800 pages long. Very little happens for the first 700 pages or so. Which is tricky because those 700 pages are important in a way. You find out more about the Order, the Rakshana, discover sinister secrets, etc. etc. But despite these important things, it could be at least 200 pages shorter.
Yay! When it does get going, it's so gripping your fingers hurt from, well, gripping the page so tight. And the edges of the pages are damp from your sweating hands. I stayed up til gone midnight many many nights reading it.
Hmmph it is a little predictable what happens to Pippa. We all knew she was going to turn into an evil power-crazy demonic creature. She reminds me of Cate Blanchett in the latest Indiana Jones (but minus the cringingly bad Russian accent): "It is me! I am the chosen one! The power is mine! Mwahaha!"
Yay! this isn't really a "yay!", but it is the balance to the previous "hmmph": I suppose if she had been brought back or at least hadn't turned into a creepy demon, it would have been a bit, "oh." But interestingly enough **SLIGHT SPOILER**, being a demon wasn't actually her ultimate demise.
Hmmph It's set in 1896. But the main characters all talk like they were from a much more modern era. Not the 21st century perhaps...but still, more recent than the time.
Yay! the few references to high society in the day were quite interesting and added the period backdrop, to remind you what century you were in after lesbianism, drug addictions, rebellious attitudes to religion and other such issues. Scandal, debutantes, balls, exclusive gentlemen's clubs, etc. remind you where you are. If you want any more, I suggest you seek out The Luxe sequence. 400 pages of, as all the critics say, The OC but with bigger frocks and more dashing boys. There are 4 books so far. That's 1,160 pages of gossip in 1899! Personally I'm not fussed on all this but it added some era detail.
Hmmph The ending was a bit sudden and "oh. Ok then." Though I accepted it, it seemed sort of rushed.
Yay! What characters survived the climax met their futures and everything was resolved. As I said at the start, everything was perfectly tied up without it seemingly overly easy.

Additional thoughts: a prequel. yes! yes! yes! Set 25 years before, perhaps alternating point of views between Gemma's mother, Sarah Rees Toome, Mrs Nightwing & all others concerned. What a sock-rocking fanfic that'd make. Bagsy me! Either way, Libba Bray ought to write it. If she isn't already.
Another Additional Thought: despite the many "hmmphs" I have mentioned, perhaps I've only thought these over because I'm writing a review. As you're reading, you throw all these "hmmph" moments aside and follow the plot like Alice follows the white rabbit down his hole. You're too sucked in to stand back and think, "hmm, that's a little annoying." Why complain about the modern dialogue and stuff when Gemma is facing her most dangerous trial yet, the Order and the Rakshana are closing in around her trying to steal the magic, and she needs to uncover the truth about the Tree of All Souls?!

Rating: 4. Not as good I suppose as the first two, but still AN ABSOLUTE MUST for everybody who enjoyed aforementioned first two.