Saturday 27 August 2016

Review: Harry Potter and the Cursed Child - Parts One and Two

Harry Potter and the Cursed Child - Parts One and Two Harry Potter and the Cursed Child - Parts One and Two by Jack Thorne
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

This was a really interesting read for me, and one that I think I will have to read many times over because I grasp the full complexities of the storyline and see beyond some of the things that are still sticking with me - good and bad. I also feel like much of it will make more sense to me once I see the play itself, though so much of it I could already picture in my mind!

I've generally come away with mixed emotions about this title and I think there are a lot of reasons for this. Harry Potter was so dear to me and so instrumental in my reading when I was growing up that coming back to it this many years later as an adult was always going to give me a whole new perspective. When I read the books I was the age of those characters and so I could understand the teenage angst and I could relate it to my own life, despite the magical setting. That was the charm of those books and the way that it allowed you to read them and escape in whole new ways. Although the characters we know and love are adults now (sort of anyway, there were moments that made me raise my eyebrows) a large portion of the play is spent with Albus and Scorpius who are teenagers. Once I realised that they were the central focus it did give me pause.

So lets start with the good. My worries about reading these teenagers (and the tendency for angst in the Harry Potter teenage world) was actually unfounded. Yes Albus had a lot of issues going on, which led to a lot of poor decisions BUT I felt in his case it was totally understandable. This was not the boy/girl love drama of the books, but actual insight into how it must be trying to handle growing up with a father who is as notorious as Harry Potter. Of course you're going to feel like you can't live up to that. Who could? And Scorpius quickly became a favourite character of mine in the whole series, which isn't something I would say lightly considering how little time he's had in the canon, but he was just a delight to read. He reminded me of myself at that age a startling amount and so when he stood up for himself (in a way that I was never able to) I found myself cheering... on my packed train.

I loved that Hermione has become The Minister of Magic - perfect job for her. I think it's only right that a Muggle born takes that job, because they can see both sides of the coin and negotiate with the Prime Minister effectively. Also Hermione kicks ass. End of. Her and Ron's relationship was beautiful. It took everything I like about them in the books and made me see it as something actually sustainable and highlighted how much the pair of them needed each other. In my personal opinion this play shuts down the Harry/Hermione argument because of how brilliantly the Ron/Hermione marriage is portrayed. Bravo to that.

In contrast I felt that the Harry/Ginny relationship was weak - and I acknowledge this could be a very unpopular opinion, but I have been careful to stay away from other reviews on the script so I don't know. It was just that I never felt like they gelled. I can't imagine it would be easy being married to Harry Potter, and lord knows he was a bit of a mess in this story, and yet I found myself wanting to push Ginny into supporting him more. The man clearly needs some sort of PTSD therapy. He went through a lot of things that really nobody could understand.

I also felt that many of the cameos from characters (Snape... Dumbledore's portrait) were more nods to fanfiction than true to the characters. As a Snape fan from book one I feel like I have a very realistic view of him. I never romanticized him and some of the terrible things he did. This play does and I don't know how I feel about that. He isn't hugely noble, he was trying to survive and live with himself after having made terrible decisions in his life that left him twisted and hurt in a way that nobody could heal.

There are other moments that made me frown a little that I don't want to dissect too much, because I do think that upon further readings they will bother me less and in truth I cannot deny that I loved travelling back to Hogwarts for a fresh story. It felt like a piece of me that had been shut away many years ago had the ability to come out and shine again. I shut myself up in my room and devoured it the way that I have always done. And that, for me, is what reading is all about. Losing yourself in the words, the characters, the world and most importantly the emotions that run through you every time you open the cover.

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Tuesday 16 August 2016

Review: The Flame Never Dies

The Flame Never Dies The Flame Never Dies by Rachel Vincent
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

The Flame Never Dies is the second in a series that doesn't hold back. I have to admit that I haven't read the first one before reading this, as I was give a copy of this book for free for an honest review from NetGalley. That being said Rachel Vincent's world building was good enough that I didn't feel lost for long and the customers were fleshed out so well that I immediately understood the group dynamics.

I have read Vincent's Unbound series before and so I wasn't surprised by the quality of relationships portrayed, but the dystopian setting of this book gave the relationships a deeper bonding this time round AND there was noticeable attention to relationships outside of the romantic ones. I loved the grouchy Devi and the sweet Maddock.

I don't want to ruin anything, but I was also impressed by the layers and tricks that were woven into the plotline. Some of them I figured out and I looked forward to their reveal, but these more obvious ones hid the sly twists that hit you in the gut. Leading to some scenes that were incredibly hard to read and I had to take a pause occasionally.

The ending sets up easily for the next in the series (I assume?!) and I am intrigued to find out how this rag tag band of misfits manages to survive... or not? You just never know!

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Sunday 7 August 2016

Review: London Belongs to Us

London Belongs to Us London Belongs to Us by Sarra Manning
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Be still my beating heart. Jean Luc, you scowling Frenchman. I think I am in love. Can't beat a surly bloke in my eyes.

Ahem. Now onto the rest of this review.

This really is a love story to London. Our capital city that is always bustling in one of its boroughs, with the people and the sheer life and joy it holds. I have to say that in this time, when there is so much worry about just wandering around the city streets, it was a real pleasure to just wander round the city and see it through the eyes of Sunny. She is bright and innocent and while trying to find her douche of a boyfriend, and she ends up finding herself through London.

It's a riot of a ride and you never know what is going to happen next or where Sunny will go next and that is the thrill of this book. The wild characters and just everything about the writing of this story talks about the joy of London, even when awful things happen there is a community that cannot be denied.

I loved it. Every single second.

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Wednesday 3 August 2016

Review: Tall Oaks

Tall Oaks Tall Oaks by Chris Whitaker
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Tall Oaks is a fascinating novel from debut author Chris Whitaker. The blurb on the back totally sucks you in and the book itself doesn't disappoint.

There's action right from the start as you're dropped right into the middle of it. Harry Monroe has been taken and this small community is reeling from it and trying to carry on as usual. There are moments of comedy (mostly surrounding the hysterical Manny and his friends) amidst the utter grief that seeps through the rest of the characters. You become attached to characters at one moment and then with a turn of the page no longer know if you can trust them. I've never read anything that made me doubt my instincts quite as much as this title.

I don't want to risk giving too much away, but the characters are engaging and you can identify with them for a multitude of different reasons and I couldn't say that I had a particular favorite. It is the whole cast of them that make this title, not one of them could have carried the story alone. Jim, the cop, who would have usually been the one to carry such a story on his shoulders has too many cracks to be able to survive the attention on him for the whole novel and the author handles this beautifully.

The ending of this book with stay with you a long time. I couldn't stop thinking about it last night because of the haunting way the series of events is explained.

I really feel that this was an excellent first novel and makes me hungry to see what comes next!

Buy Tall Oaks: Tall Oaks


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