Baba Yaga by An Leysen

4.2 foxes out of 5
I was generously given this arc from Netgalley in exchange for an honest review

 

screen-shot-2016-11-23-at-8-39-26-pm

 

This book is beautiful.
My love for Russian folk tales is no secret, and this evocative book was able to bring alive the fearsome tales of Baba Yaga through impressive pictures.
I read this book to my baby cousin, and I was delighted to see the magic of the words and the pictures take ahold of her.
With reminiscence of Hayao Miyazaki, I was also delighted to see that the magic of this book took ahold of me too.

screen-shot-2016-11-23-at-8-34-44-pm

It is impossible not to fall in love with such vivid and imaginative artistry. Each page held a treat, often, my cousin and I would spend moments in complete silence (a feat for her!) absorbing the pictures.

The plot was also fast-paced, with new vocabulary words I was able to introduce to my cousin. She could not get enough, and would ask for ‘just one more page’, till we were reading way past her bedtime (clever girl!). I didn’t mind, though, because this book tells a very impressive moral about kindness and treating others with respect. A valuable lesson, that even I need reminding of sometimes.

This book also taught me that fairy tales are not only for children, that their teachings can, and should, be cherished in adulthood.

I hope, that when my cousin is all grow up she will not forget about Baba Yaga, and her cousin who would stay up half the night reading to her. But I hope, most of all, that my grown-up cousin does not forget the magic of reading.

You can read this review and others on my website:

https://www.tumblr.com/blog/hebhebheb

https://dearwildernessblog.wordpress….

https://www.goodreads.com/user/show/7939714-dearwilderness

also, follow me on instagram for all things books:
https://www.instagram.com/dearwildern

With love,

Do Fairies Bring The Spring?

 

 

3.5 foxes out of 5

This book was generously provided as an ARC by netgalley

I read this book to my little cousin. She enjoyed the pictures, but the story was completely lost on her. Mostly, it had to do with the lack of plot. Although, I realize that I am not the target audience for ‘Do fairies bring in the spring’, but without a plot the book had no continuity. Just because it’s a children book, does not mean you can string together a bunch of sentences and hope that the kids wont find it boring. In truth, I’ve read many children books that had moving plots, characters and morals that benefited both the children and the parent reading the novel.
I appreciate the author was trying to bring in the importance and magic of nature, but it fell short since there was nothing compelling the reader forward.
At the end, when I asked my cousin what the book was about, she did not have a clue. But the pictures were beautiful, and she appreciated the fairy art.

You can read this review and others on my website:

https://www.tumblr.com/blog/hebhebheb

https://www.goodreads.com/user/show/7939714-dearwilderness
https://dearwildernessblog.wordpress….

also, follow me on instagram for all things books:
https://www.instagram.com/dearwildern

With love,
description

The Psychopath Test by Jon Ronson

 

51lkktvcjpl-_sx332_bo1204203200_

3.9 foxes out of 5

“That’s an incredibly depressing though.” I said.”that if you’re in a room and at one end lies madness and at the other end lies sanity it is human nature to veer towards the madness end.”

Have you ever looked at a person and thought ‘man, that guy is a real psychopath.’?
Although, often, they’re don’t lack the functional use of the amygdala which is trademark for psychopaths…they’re just a**holes.
But, what if you HAVE come in contact with a psychopath? Would you be able to tell, or would you fall prey to their calculated charm and manipulations.
That exactly what Jon Ronson set out to do in the ‘Pscychopath Test’, he wanted to identify psychopaths.

WARNING:
After this book you may get a little trigger happy. At the end of the day, I was sure that my mailman, my barista, the old lady next door, and my cat was a psychopath (although I think I was quite spot on with Mr. Whiskers…the furry bastard!)

As a 2nd year medical student (finger’s crossed I don’t fail out of medical school, which is quite likely considering the amount of time spend reading about psychopaths when I should’ve been reading about Myocardial Infarctions) with an interest in someday specializing in psychiatry…somethings didn’t sit well with me but I will speak about that later. I was quite pleased that this book did not read like a psychiatry textbook, but rather Ronson brought humour into his work that allowed the writing to flow naturally. To be honest, I was surprised at how quickly I tore through this novel.

WARNING NUMBER 2
Do not read this book in a public place. I, stupidly, read this on the train and kept sneaking *subtle* glances at the other passengers wondering which one is a crazed serial killer. This had the exact opposite effect, making me look like a paranoid loon. To be fair, this book can turn you into a paranoid loon.

Ronson explored many aspects of the “madness industry” from psychiatrists, scientology, to capitalism. Through it all, he posed many important questions.

At what point does a normal human reactions become a psychiatric problem?
Are the most psychopaths found on top of the corporate ladder?
Will there ever be a cure for psychopaths?

The book gives us the Hare PCL-R checklist that is used in medical and legal settings to identify psychopaths. The most interesting part of this book is the interviews with the patients identified with psychopathic tendencies, and we are able to see the checklist being used.

For instance, item 16 on the checklist was : Failure to accept responsibility for own actions.

“One time Bob interviewed a man who had impulsively killed another man over a bar tab.
‘He only had himself to blame.” the killer told Bob. ‘Anybody could have seen I was in a rotten mood that night.”

The total lack of empathy is characteristic for psychopaths. In fact, they study normal human interactions in order to fake empathy when speaking to other people. Without fear, empathy, or love…what could possibly hold back a person from committing the most heinous crimes possible?
screen-shot-2016-11-23-at-7-57-02-pm
Ronson did not just focus on serial killers. He also spoke about psychopaths whose brutality can be felt in the corporate world.

“Serial Killers ruin families,” shrugged Bob. “Corporate and political and religious psychopaths ruin economies. They ruin societies.”

Through his interview with Al Dunlap, a psychopath who led the Sunbeam corporation in the 90’s, we are able to see the effects that a callous company can have on it’s workers.

I did have some problems with the book. As a medical student in the UK, I have medical ethics hounded into my head everyday, and one of the things repeated to me daily is that patients cannot look at their own medical notes. Heck, if I search for MY OWN notes I could have my license revoked. It did not sit well that one of the inmates at Broadmoore had access to his own medical notes, and not only that, but he was able to sent them to Ronson. The author blamed it on some bureaucracy loophole, but it seemed like a flimsy excuse. He also was able to speak VIA EMAIL to a psychiatrist about the same patient. That just about breaks every confidentiality/legal law in the book. What self-respecting psychiatrist would speak to a JOURNALIST about a patient at their practice. Even if the patient did consent (although it was not mentioned) to having his information shared with a journalist, I don’t think his consent would hold up. Since he’s in a psychiatry hospital, he would have been deemed incompetent to give consent, thus it seems fishy that Ronson was able to get so much in-depth info about a patient.

Thus, this knocked my review back down a star.

But, despite this, in this book, Ronson took us on a incredible ride through the madness industry in what could’ve been a very morbid book if not for his trademark humour.

You can read this review and others on my website:

https://www.goodreads.com/user/show/7939714-dearwilderness

https://www.tumblr.com/blog/hebhebheb

https://dearwildernessblog.wordpress….

also, follow me on instagram for all things books:
https://www.instagram.com/dearwildern

 

With love,

DearWilderness

Thousandth Floor by Katherine McGee

description

2.5 foxes out of 5

Arc generously provided by Netgalley and HarperCollins in exchange for an honest review.

This book is favorably compared to Gossip Girl.

description

I am not a fan of Gossip Girl. Usually, when I do watch it, I watch it only out of necessity. Like, when there’s nothing else on Netflix and I’m cleaning and I need something to distract me from the monotonous job. The pattern follows, I watched a little bit, get sucked into the overdramatic plotlines, watch obsessively for a day, then stop because I hate all the characters. Every. Single. One. Of. Them.
For this book, I come in preparing to hate all the characters, preparing to bang my head at their life choices, and getting a sense of schadenfreude at the misfortune the befalls them caused by said actions. Told in five POV, each chapter jumping into a new character, each one hiding secrets of their own. Many years in the future, in the city that never sleeps, the elite of society live on the top floors of the highest tower of NYC, with a thousand floors. This book explores the drama, the mysteries and the sinful pasts of the different people living the Tower, from the poorest of the poor to the richest of the rich.

Right from the start the prologue was intriguing. In 25 years, no one has fallen from the thousandth floor of the Tower, except today. No one knows why she had fallen, perhaps it was an accident, perhaps she jumped, or more sinister, perhaps she was pushed. And from there, the first chapter starts two months earlier, leading to this fateful ‘falling out’ (sorry for the pun).

For the remainder of the review I’ll be writing it in a way that would make Gossip Girl proud (and for maximum enjoyment, read it in her voice!)

description

Avery: Elite, beautiful, and living in the exclusive 1000th floor, A has it all. Or does she? Poor little rich girl suffering a broken heart…for her adopted brother. Tsk tsk, A , you better be careful because we all know how illicit affairs end.

Leda: Running from a hard past. But remember, L , the past always comes to catch up with you.

Rylin: Spotted! Partying and hard drugs? Poor, orphaned R isn’t so innocent after all.

Eris: Spoiled rich girl has it all…or does she? The problem with being Queen, E , is that your crown could always be taken away.

Wade: Hacker W can learn everyone’s secrets in seconds, but it seems like he has a few secrets of his one. Be careful W , nothing stays buried forever.

You know you love me,
XOXO
DearWilderness

The characters were indistinguishable from the rest, each one speaking and thinking like the other. The writing wasn’t special. I felt that the author told how we should feel rather than showed us, and as a result the characters felt short and I couldn’t bring myself to care. I would honestly say, though, that ALL the characters annoyed me. All. Of. Them. And all the drama that is caused is a direct correlation of their actions. Most of the times I wanted to reach through the book and SHAKE them.They were so very unlikable, but I wont put that as the con because I believe that was done on purpose.

description

The world-building was done well, even including the different drugs people of the future use.

description

Despite this, the cliff hanger at the end intrigued me enough to want to pick up the second book, and hopefully see some of the initial problems ironed out.

Pros:
⎫ World-building
⎫ Creative Idea
⎫ Fast-paced
⎫ Entertaining
⎫ Ethnic Characters
⎫ Cliff Hanger

Cons
¬ Indistinguishable Characters
¬ Writing told us rather than showed us
¬ Book I felt was too long for this type of book (drama could only spur me to read so much)

You can read this review and others on my website:

https://dearwildernessblog.wordpress….

or, you could follow me on tumblr:

https://www.tumblr.com/blog/hebhebheb

Goodreads:

https://www.goodreads.com/user/show/7939714-dearwilderness


also, follow me on instagram for all things books:
https://www.instagram.com/dearwildern…

Rebel and the Sands by Alwyn Hamilton

 

24934065

She’s more gunpowder than girl—and the fate of the desert lies in her hands.

Mortals rule the desert nation of Miraji, but mystical beasts still roam the wild and barren wastes, and rumor has it that somewhere, djinni still practice their magic. But there’s nothing mystical or magical about Dustwalk, the dead-end town that Amani can’t wait to escape from.

Destined to wind up “wed or dead,” Amani’s counting on her sharpshooting skills to get her out of Dustwalk. When she meets Jin, a mysterious and devastatingly handsome foreigner, in a shooting contest, she figures he’s the perfect escape route. But in all her years spent dreaming of leaving home, she never imagined she’d gallop away on a mythical horse, fleeing the murderous Sultan’s army, with a fugitive who’s wanted for treason. And she’d never have predicted she’d fall in love with him…or that he’d help her unlock the powerful truth of who she really is.

I tried with this book. I really, really tried.
I got nearly 50% through this (albeit, rather slowly) before I realized that I would rather be reading my Anatomy textbook than this. And that is NOT a good thing.
I think the problem was, for me, was the mixing of the genres. It could’ve been great, if executed properly, but it fell short. I think the problem was that the only incorporation of anything Arabic-ness was the names, and a some jinn’s popping around. And a few stereotypes thrown in for good measure. That’s it.
I think what bothered me the most was that instead of encouraging diversity (which was incredibly easy to do in a book centered around Middle Eastern mythology) the author went out of her way to make her MC have blue eyes. I feel like Disney’s Aladdin is more accurate than this. What kind of message are we sending when we say that the only way for a main heroin to be ‘pretty’ or ‘special’ is to give her Eurocentric features.

The characters didn’t have much chemistry, and the plot was dragging.

Overall, this was, sadly, a meh read.

You can read this review and others on my website:

https://dearwildernessblog.wordpress….

or, you could follow me on tumblr:

https://www.tumblr.com/blog/hebhebheb

Daughter of Smoke and Bone

Author: Laini Taylor

Publisher: Little, Brown Books for Young Readers

Pages : 418

61czwgfs9pl-_sx324_bo1204203200_

 

2.5/5

This story is about a girl who was raised by demons.

Around the world, black hand prints are appearing on doorways, scorched there by winged strangers who have crept through a slit in the sky.

In a dark and dusty shop, a devil’s supply of human teeth grows dangerously low.

And in the tangled lanes of Prague, a young art student is about to be caught up in a brutal otherworldly war.

Meet Karou. She fills her sketchbooks with monsters that may or may not be real, she’s prone to disappearing on mysterious “errands”, she speaks many languages – not all of them human – and her bright blue hair actually grows out of her head that color. Who is she? That is the question that haunts her, and she’s about to find out.

When beautiful, haunted Akiva fixes fiery eyes on her in an alley in Marrakesh, the result is blood and starlight, secrets unveiled, and a star-crossed love whose roots drink deep of a violent past. But will Karou live to regret learning the truth about herself?

I really, really, really tried hard to like this book.
I mean the first half was splendid. The way that Taylor described Prague spurred me to google how much a flight would cost to go there (apparently, waaay out of my budget), and the way she wrote the unique family dynamic between Karou and the demons was nothing short of brilliant. If only the rest of the book was just as good.
Alas, it was not.
I think things started to descend downwards when the main love interest showed up. He was a completely forgettable character, to the extent that I don’t even remember his name and I just finished reading the novel. It seemed like his only purpose for living was for the main heroine. Everything else faded. And as a result, he was neither a compelling nor a strong character. Meh.
Although, admittedly, I did like Karou but I still felt like she suffered from the special snowflake syndrome. She was beautiful, artistic, a light in this otherwise dark, dark world. You get my drift. But, she was waaay more fleshed out than he-whose-name-I’ve-forgotten. She had fears, hopes, insecurities. She was a good character, and I enjoyed seeing the world through her eyes. Heck, she got me to purchase a watercolor notebook of my very own (I should never be left alone with 20 dollars in my pocket. It could only lead to disaster).
But don’t get me started on the Insta-love. Within the span of day, they’ve decided that they were soul-mates. COME ON!!! That doesn’t leave room for realistic character development, and it just seems like lazy writing. What bothers me the most is that Laini Taylor is NOT a lazy writer, her descriptions are both beautiful and mesmerizing. Therefore, she doesn’t have an excuse.
She also goes into painful details about their ‘special’ connections but I never felt that these people had any chemistry, let alone are fated to be with each other. I felt like the author fell into the trap of telling, not showing, and as a result their love was two dimensional at best.
But Laini Taylor is a great writer. I lived through her books, I walked alongside Karou in Prague, Morocco, and wherever else Brimstone send her. I was fascinated by the world of the demons, and the way the demons saw our worlds. I was intrigued by the mystery of the teeth, and charmed when I found out their purpose. I could clearly see that she had spend hours researching on different myths from all around the world, and it clearly strengthened her writing.The first half was one of the best books I read in awhile, the second half was not.
Overall, this was so close to being a favorite, if not for the countless pages (which I skimmed, I’m ashamed to say) wasted on the star-crossed lovers.

First thoughts:

I love the way that female friendship is depicted in this book, without the petty jelousies that seem to plague most fiction written about teenage girls. They’re just friends, laughing, talking, and supporting one another, without hidden agendas or betrayals that involve a boy. It saddens me that books like these are often the exception and not the norm.

Best Quotes:

“Once upon a time, an angel and a devil fell in love.

It did not end well.”

 

“Have you ever asked yourself, do monsters make war, or does war make monsters?”

 

“It is a condition of monsters that they do not perceive themselves as such. The dragon, you know, hunkered in the village devouring maidens, heard the townsfolk cry ‘Monster!’ and looked behind him.”

 

You can find this review, and others on my blog:
https://dearwildernessblog.wordpress….

Tumblr: https://www.tumblr.com/blog/hebhebheb
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/dearwilderness/

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/user/show/7939714-dearwilderness