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      • Get Genrefied
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John Belushi is Dead by Kathy Charles

September 21, 2010 |

Hilda and Benji are best friends forever. Maybe. Their interests seem to match perfectly, as both have a passion for haunting the most notorious places in Los Angeles: sites where celebrities have been murdered or where celebrities have taken their own lives. This fascination, while dark, is actually quite therapeutic for Hilda, who has had a lot of loss in her young life. Her mother and father were killed in a car accident that almost took her life, too.

Everything changes, though, when the pair end up investigating a suicide in the apartment of an old man named Hank. Although initially put off by the two crazy kids, one with pink hair, knocking at his door and asking to take pictures of his bathroom, Hank agrees and it takes little time for Hilda to realize there’s something special about this man. And soon after, he’ll begin calling her and she’ll find a connection with an adult in town.

Although Hilda and Hank begin growing closer, Hank’s downstairs neighbor Jack becomes concerned and tries to break it to Hilda that Hank has a lot of secrets and history that should make her wary. It won’t be until tragedy strikes Hank and Benji nearly kills himself that Hilda begins to understand her fascination with death means something deeper.

John Belushi is Dead was one of my favorite reads so far this year. This engaging, edgy, and boundary-pushing novel brings together the ideas of life and death in a city of lore and lust that just works. Hilda is a likeable character from the get go: we know she’s had a tough life, living with her aunt because of the death of her parents, and we know she’s a little wild, as seen from her romps around notorious LA places. She and Benji are quite a pair, and while outsiders to the rest of the world, they come into their own together and don’t quite feel like outsides, recluses, or losers. In the end we will find out that Benji isn’t quite what he seems, but since this story is told from Hilda’s perspective, this is a realization we will come to with her.

After Hilda and Benji initially meet Hank, I couldn’t help but draw the comparisons between this book and Paul Zindel’s classic The Pigman. While they aren’t perfect readalikes, I think that the quirky relationship building between generations is somewhat similar, and the realizations that happen between Hilda and Hank are similar to those John and Lorraine have with the Pigman.

Enter Jack.

Jack is the propulsion in this novel that really drives Hilda to think about who she is and what she loves. Her budding relationship with Hank is completely innocent, though much of it is based around death, much like her relationship with Benji. When Jack comes in and begins to push Hilda’s perception about Hank, though, things change. Hank, as it turns out, has a greater history in the world than he’s letting on, and it’s one that revolves around death. Big death — something greater than the death of John Belushi or Chris Farley. No, this is the death that changes history, the world we live in, and Hilda.

Kathy Charles’s novel was well paced and plotted, and the character development is absolutely spot on for me. That, in conjunction with the setting, came together to leave a not just a pretty story, but a strong message about life and living. This book published initially in Australia titled Hollywood Ending, and when it published in the US, the title changed to John Belushi is Dead. Both titles work, and they work for different reasons.

This is the kind of book I would hand off to fans of Perks of Being a Wallflower. The feeling of being an outsider and an insider simultaneously and the growth of the main characters are similar in both titles. Both push the boundaries of the reader’s expectations, and both convey quite an important message without being books that are about delivering a message. The quirky factor will work for fans of Steffan Piper’s Grayhound, Joe Nemo’s Hairstyles of the Damned, and other similar titles.

Because of the issues brought up here and the edgy factors (and let me tell you – calling anything edgy really bothers me, but it’s the best word to use here), this book is best for high schoolers and adult readers. This is the kind of book perfect for college students. While reading this title, I couldn’t help but think of my best friend from college the entire time who would eat this up in no time. She’s a huge fan of Francesca Lia Block, and I think it would be interesting to hand a book like this to a fan of hers. I suspect there would be a lot to like because of the language, the setting, and the character development. And of course, try this one who liked Zindel’s classic. They aren’t perfect readalikes, but the comparisons that could be drawn are great.

* Thanks to Kathy Charles for sharing this one with me. It’s going to be passed around!

Filed Under: Debut Author Challenge, Reviews, Uncategorized, Young Adult

Paranormalcy by Kiersten White

September 20, 2010 |

At only sixteen years old, Evie has worked for the International Paranormal Containment Agency (IPCA) for as long as she can remember. After being abandoned as a baby and shuttling through foster homes, she was finally taken in by Raquel, a mother figure of sorts and the head of IPCA, an international organization that seeks to find, tag, and contain (duh) the plethora of paranormal creatures that abound in plain sight in normal society, unnoticed due to their glamours. Key to the existence of IPCA is Evie herself, whose ability to see through these glamours and identify the vampires, werewolves, hags, and other creatures enables IPCA’s existence. However, when a mysterious creature starts breaking into IPCA bases and killing paranormal creatures across the world, Evie discovers that she is far more important than she had ever dreamed. After finding out that she is at the center of an ancient faery prophecy, Evie teams up with Lend, a shape-shifter (one who Evie had bagged and tagged herself), to discover the truth behind her past and save the lives of the paranormals.

Although Kiersten White debuted at #7 on the New York Times Bestseller List with Paranormalcy, I was still initially reluctant to pick this book up, due to my extreme burnout with the paranormal genre, which seems to be spawning more derivative clones than a Hollywood studio. Ironically, while I have avoiding most paranormal books, I have recently become obsessed with Buffy the Vampire Slayer, a show that I somehow missed in high school. Throughout the summer I’ve worked my way through Seasons 1-5 on Netflix Instant. Buffy’s snark, clever quips, and intrigue have found their match in Evie, whose straightforward, self-confident personality is well-fleshed out by first time author White. In fact, the character of Evie is what makes this novel, in my opinion. Rather than simply being a tale of a Mary Sue who falls in love with a ‘fill in the blank’ paranormal creature, Evie is a strong, kick-butt female heroine who glories in her femininity and seeks answers without whining.

The evolving romance between Evie and Lend is quite believable, as White shows the gradual progression of their initial attraction, growing flirtation, and subtle transition into love. One of my big pet peeves in YA literature is the ‘love at first sight, I must now sacrifice my entire life for you’ relationship. While Evie and Lend certainly don’t live a normal life, their romance is a believable mirror to real life teenage relationships. This romance, like the plot itself, is nicely paced–steady and not rushed, with just the right amount of exposition and illustration.

Also, simply put, Evie is real. She loves the color pink, is obsessed with the teen drama Easton Heights (who doesn’t love a character who loves TV as much as we do?), and yearns to experience the normal day-to-day life of a high school student. Most notably, she wavers between which path she should take, is vulnerable, questions herself, and isn’t perfect. This is incredibly refreshing to read.

One quibble I did have with Paranormalcy is the slight shrift that Evie’s relationship with the enigmatic Reth, one of the IPCA’s staff faeries, is given. However, since Paranormalcy is the first book in a trilogy, I feel sure that the details of the prophecy and both Evie and Reth’s role in it will be fully fleshed out in the later books.

Ultimately, Paranormalcy succeeds in its utter originality and will appeal to fans of Meg Cabot and Maureen Johnson’s hip, pop-culturally aware voices, along with those who enjoy Lisa McMann’s Wake series and Melissa Marr’s Wicked Lovely.

Copy borrowed from fellow blogger Kara at Not Just for Kids.

Filed Under: Paranormal, Reviews, Uncategorized, Young Adult

Girl, Stolen by April Henry

September 17, 2010 |

When Griffin hopped into the Escalade, he thought he’d just made the steal of a lifetime. Who leaves the keys to their expensive SUV in the car while they’re in the store? But when Griffin hears the shuffling around in the back seat and sees the face of 16-year-old Cheyenne Wilder staring back at him, he realizes he’s in a heck of a lot more trouble than he could even imagine.

Until he learns that Cheyenne is blind and cannot see who has taken her and the car far away from her step mother, her father (who just happens to be a big wig at Nike), and the shopping center where her step mother was picking up the medicine Cheyenne sorely needed to combat the pneumonia plaguing her.

April Henry’s Girl, Stolen reminded me a lot of the Janie series by Caroline B. Cooney, if for no other reason than the missing girl aspect. This was a very fast paced read, with alternating perspectives in each chapter. Although this technique is jarring at first since it’s not entirely clear who is narrating at first, it becomes clearer and clearer throughout the story and ultimately becomes what makes this story work so well. We get to see how Cheyenne manages to use her other senses to figure out where she is and who her captors are and we get to see Griffin and his family come to terms with what has happened.

Griffin as a character is much more complex than I initially gave him credit for. While he struck me as the guy after an easy steal, the story unravels such that Griffin is actually a product of an unfortunate upbringing, and he feels absolutely terrible for what he’s done to Cheyenne. His father and brother, on the other hand, are content in torturing the girl; Griffin instead feels horrible and does what he can to make the worst situation easier for Cheyenne. Where his father and brother are dead set on milking the accidental abduction as a kidnapping for ransom, Griffin is instead interested in just getting Cheyenne back to her family safely so she can get the medicine she needs to feel better. He doesn’t want the blood on his hands.

Cheyenne’s perspective was just as compelling for me. As readers, we know she’s blind, and we know through the reading that she relies heavily on her other senses to gauge where she is. Where Griffin’s family thinks she’s also deaf, it’s ultimately her superior hearing skills and her memory that aids in her figuring out where she is and the names of those holding her hostage.

April Henry’s newest title will appeal to fans of fast paced, realistic reads. This is the kind of book I’d hand to fans of Caroline B. Cooney, as well as those who like stories about those with disabilities. Cheyenne’s a strong willed character with a desire to survive, and I think she’s quite an inspiring character at that. The modern setting will appeal, too, to readers who are interested in the real stories that play out like this every day. Although the last chapter of this book was quite disappointing for me, as it felt quite rushed and a little out of the blue for this title, the book itself had just enough happenstance to feel quite realistic. There’s a little bit in the way of language and situations involving violence, so it’s probably best a read for older middle school and high school students.

* Review copy picked up at the PLA conference.

Filed Under: Reviews, Uncategorized, Young Adult

Dark Song by Gail Giles

September 16, 2010 |

Ames knows something strange is going on with her father when he becomes quieter and quieter every night and when her mother begins criticizing him more and more. When he spills that he’s lost his job, she’s disappointed, but she knows there’s something even deeper going on, and it’s not until a big blow out with her short fused and wicked mother does the truth come out.

This truth has ruined their once rich and lavish lifestyle. Ames and Chrissy can no longer go to their private school in Boulder. Then they’re going to lose their home. But where will they go? Mom doesn’t get along with her mother (who is living lavishly in a communiy for elderly residents only) and dad’s mother and father have been dead for a long time . . . or have they? The truth spills out when they are immediately yanked from Colorado to just outside Houston, Texas to a trailer park owned by dad’s parents who are in fact NOT dead. What else have Ames’s parents been hiding?

As if that wasn’t bad enough, they have one mattress to share among the four of them, and they have to do all of the rehabbing of the trailer. Ames will be the hard laborer, no doubt, but perhaps it won’t be as bad as it seems when she meets Marc, one of the boys who is helping fix up the trailer park. He seems cute, a little rough (like Ames likes), and something that her parents would utterly disapprove of. She wants it.

But she might regret that decision when the fate of her sister lies at his hands.

Dark Song is the latest release by well-known thriller/mystery writer Gail Giles. This fast-paced story begins in what seems to be the ideal setting amid wealth and power and quickly moves into the world of poverty, crime, and instability. Her signature staccato style doesn’t allow for as much character development as I’d have liked in this particular novel, but this is the kind of book that will draw in reluctant and weak readers with no problem. There is an exciting premise, and though I wanted more details and more of a realistic time frame, these are going to be the exact things that work for other readers. They want to get to the meat of the story and will have no problem with it here.

Ames is not a likable character, but compared to her mother, she is a saint. Ames’s mother is a downright wicked witch, despicable in every manner possible. And while we are immediately introduced to a likable father — the beginning pages start with a family vacation to Alaska out of the blue — we learn that dad may be an even more disgusting person than mother, but because this story is told through Ames’s perspective, we are never quite allowed to get that feeling in the same way we do with her mother. I wanted to hate her father more than I did, but Giles’s skill in developing Ames’s biases in the story did not allow me to. I think this is a good thing, too, as I would have had a different feeling about the outcome of events at the very end of the book had I hated her father more.

One thing that bothered me is the last line of the book. I won’t spill it for those who want to go in unaware, but it didn’t quite make sense to me in context of the book, though it did make me question my beliefs about Ames in the story. Because she’s not as developed as she could be, I didn’t buy her self assessment, unless it was in regards to her relationship with Marc. Even then, I needed to see more of who she became because of him, which I also didn’t get.

Dark Song is an easy sell to reluctant readers, fans of fast-paced thrillers, and both males and females. Although Ames is a female lead character, she will work for male readers. Fans of Ellen Hopkins will find a lot to enjoy with Gail Giles’s new title, as well. Although this title won’t work for hard core mystery readers, fans of lighter mysteries will enjoy the secrets embedded in this family and will find the unraveling of the truth something to relish.

*Review copy picked up at BEA.

Filed Under: Reviews, Uncategorized, Young Adult

Low Red Moon by Ivy Devlin + Giveaway

September 14, 2010 |

If you were to combine the romantic elements of Stephenie Meyers’ Twilight with the woodsy setting and werewolf lore of Maggie Steifvater’s Shiver, you would have the basic set up for Ivy Devlin’s quick read, Low Red Moon.

Avery Hood’s story begins when she recalls the murder of her mother and her father, blood lingering between her fingers. But their deaths were not at her hands; instead, she happened to stumble upon their bloody bodies and has no where to turn. She’s been in the woods, collecting edible herbs for dinner when the atrocity happened.

Now parentless, Avery must live with her grandmother, a strange lady that had been essentially cut off from her and her parents. There’d been family drama here, but it was live with her grandmother or be sent to foster care, and at least by living with her grandmother, Avery could stay at the school where people already knew she was “the weird girl.”Along with the family drama comes the fact that Avery is repeatedly asked what she remembers about the night of her parents’ murders from the local police chief and her constant fear that her childhood home would be taken or sold by an overeager realtor who has been aching to change the strange woods into something more profitable.

Enter Ben: a new boy at school who just happens to be a little different. Think Edward-meets-Bella scenario here — there’s repulsion and magnetism, and the little ol’ secret that Ben is really a werewolf. As the year progresses, Ben and Avery will grow closer and closer to one another, and Avery will have to come face-to-face with the murder as she puts together the memories she’s suppressed from that fateful night.

While Low Red Moon tread little new territory in the paranormal romance genre, the quickly paced, short book worked quite well for me. I had just enough character development of Avery Hood (and with a name like that of a girl who lives in the woods!), Ben, Avery’s estranged grandmother, and the local police chief. Although I found the ending entirely predictable, it was a little twist on the usual fare, which I also appreciated.

Ivy Devlin, as many savvy young adult readers know, is the pseudonym of a well-known ya author. This is her first foray into paranormal romance, and I think that she does a pretty good job. One of the elements that bothers me about her realistic fiction — girls who are sometimes too dependent on male counterparts for their personalities and their emotional stability — still plays out here, but it didn’t annoy me quite as much as it normally does. I felt Avery had enough of a history on her own, despite having nearly no hobbies or interests other than Ben and solving her parents murder. I guess we can forgive her for being a little distracted from typical teenage interests.

This book moves along at a nice clip, making it an appropriate choice for those who may be new to the paranormal romance genre. Although it is quite reminiscent of both Twilight and Shiver, Devlin combines the best elements of both story lines and still adds just enough mystery to make this one stand out a bit among the forest of similar titles. And while there is a murder and a burgeoning romance in this title, it is easily appropriate for those 12 and older. Adults looking for a glimpse into what their kids are reading but who aren’t interested in investing too much time would find this a nice glimpse into the world of paranormal romance.

Want your own copy of this title? Fill out the form, and we’ll pick a winner at the end of September. Good luck!

* Review copy received as part of the Low Red Moon tour, hosted by Center Stage Book Tours.

Filed Under: Reviews, Uncategorized, Young Adult

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