Monday, 8 July 2013

high time for reviews once more?



I know I haven’t written many reviews lately. This is because nowadays spare time is rare, and if I am given such precious time, I would love to spend it on reading not reviewing. Furthermore, when the books come into series (mostly the famous ‘trilogy’ format), I will simply exhaust myself by reading non-stop and spend time recovering and re-catching my sleep afterwards. 

But then, I look through my read books and realise that, if I don’t do any review properly, my thoughts and reactions towards particular books will be lost forever.

Maybe it’s such high time for reviews once more?    

Poison Princess by Kresley Cole (en)



Just realise I never post the English version!
---
It’s Kresley Cole and it’s YA .. thought I was slow to pick this up!


Series : Arcana Chronicles, Book 1

Genre : post-apocalyptic/ supernatural/ paranormal/ love-hate/ YA

The book talks about post-apocalypse, in which the leading character, Evangeline or Evie, has begun to see hallucinations and hear voices in her head. While she ignores them and tries to appear as normal as she can, her so-called vision becomes reality the strange light turns living beings into ash.

The situation goes from bad to worse as all plants as well as most animals are gone, and water bodies become arid! There are zombies attacking human and the remaining humans starving and killing one another. Evie herself is struck in her home until Jackson or Jack, her hated classmate, comes along and leads her on the road in order to find her grandmother, whom she believes to have an answer for the current world, and most of all… her power.

Overall, the book paces rather slow, not in terms of the adventure/ journey, but in terms of Evie’s transformation and adjustment to the new world. She can’t survive the world by herself, but depend on Jack in every single way, as we have seen her as delicate and sheltered. One obvious example of her naivety (among many!) is, despite preparing to escape the approaching vicious army, she insists to bury her mother before starting the journey (although she cannot complete her intention in the end). Still, her weakness is transformed to be the strength of the book is beginning the book and its several first chapters with the view of Arthur, the serial killer/psychopath who tries to lure Evie into the house to be his latest victim and asks Evie to talk about her life through her point of view. Indeed, this tactic perfects everything! (spoil) [Although Evie is reluctant to use her very power throughout the book because she does not even want that power nor to use it to hurt others, as she has been attacked and hunted wherever she goes (this is especially true that women and girls become rare),  it has become clear to her that the existing society is now exploiting the weak. Therefore, she slowly starts to change her mind and meeting with Arthur is the last straw that she decides not to be anyone’s victim ever again!

 “…Just like Jackson said, I am DONE!  …… I am sick of this world, sick of being attacked and kidnapped!”



“All I ever wanted was to be normal. But tonight I’ve accepted that’s not possible. Even without Death and the Arcana, I now know that I have no hope of it. As soon as I saw these girls chained down here, it suddenly hit me. I’m not like them. I’m not normal. I don’t have to be trapped. I just have to become the vicious Empress I was born to be….”]

This new attitude is so in contrary with her belief to see goodness in other people and in the world. “I’ve been good to people in the past, and even after the Flash, after all the times I’ve been wronged. I still nurtured this naive belief that people wanted to be good to me too.” In the book, she has seen a lady whom she names the Red Witch, with similar power of controlling the plants, uses that power to hurt others. But then, (spoil) [it reveals that that Red Witch is her in the past life (if not her so-called ancestor), and the words saying “The Red Witch is raising.” is meant as her changing emotions and attitude to darker side, rather than having Red Witch as another character to have more power.]

And so, the meeting between Evie and Arthur becomes another beautiful twist because, although the readers will read and get excited with whether she will become his victim or get away from him, it turns out that (spoil) [,from Evie’s point of view, she hears his voice and realises that he is one of the special kids in Major Arcana. So, she comes to see him and hopes to find someone who understands the situation and transfers it to her, rather than someone whom she has to fight with. This means being attacked by Arthur activates our girl to start getting on her ground and fight with another Major Arcana character, as she is fated.] Still, had Evie used her power in the last 1/3 part of the book, not in the last couple chapters, the book would have been more a read.

My personal last surprise is Jack himself. Before reading, I did think he would have supernatural power like Evie since, in the series, Cole emphasises on special kids. Still, he is normal and the book ends with his knowing and fearing her plant-controlling power and her ‘changed’ feature. The relationship between the two is that of hate-love because of class and attitude gap. While Jack is drawn to her, he can’t shake the idea of her mocking about his inferiority (thought Evie doesn’t even think about mocking him); Evie herself does think he has interest in her as the last girl, not as his dream girl. It is so uncertain about their relationship, especially when Evie’s secrets that drive them apart become clear to him all too well in last pages. 

I find that Cole writes darker and more realistic stories in YA as it is stressed by the destituteness and killing, and that she employs different writing style. But she writes and makes me believe that it is from a 16-years-old’s point of view, especially that on the world, love, relations and so on.

The book is given B-, and with B+ in the ending chapters. I can’t find the right one-sentence conclusion this time, but I want to see Evie change faster (at least in the last 1/3 of the book, not in the last chapter!) and can’t help comparing her to ready-made/ self-made characters like Katniss from the Hunger Games since the latter makes more satisfying story lines. Alternatively, it would have been more interesting with 10 chapters shorter (of 41 chapters). But I agree with Cole when she mentions “Readers approve!” Still, I do believe ending with cliff-hanger should not be done with once-a-year books at all. 


Waiting for the second one, Endless Knight, for my confirmed speculation on Death and Evie’s shared history … and for the ‘transformed’ Evie with her power.