Posted by Michael Cluff at 10:04 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)
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What do a maid, a street side musician, and an apprentice clockmaker have in common? Apparently nothing. But these three young people have personal problems that bring them together in ways that they never expected. Through mysteries and dangers Giuseppe, Frederick, and Hannah all find the answers they needed, but not necessarily the ones they wanted.
The Clockwork Three is Matthew J. Kirby’s debut novel and an enchanting one at that. Set in the late 19th century, the story takes place in a large city that is very diverse, almost like New York (but it’s not). The three main characters, Giuseppe, the street musician, Frederick, the apprentice clockmaker, and Hannah, the hotel maid, are all three young people that are experiencing their own problems and trying to find a way out.
Giuseppe longs to escape his cruel master and find a way back to his beloved Italy.
Frederick is making a clockwork man that will prove his skill as a clockmaker, but he is missing some crucial parts.
After her father became too ill to work, Hannah gave up her education so she could support her family. Life for her is tedious and happiness is hard to find.
With a little mysticism, a sprinkle of steampunk, and lots of adventure the lives of these three young people are completely changed.
What I enjoyed most about this book was the world that the author had created. It is a place that seems very familiar and I could picture the city and all of its pieces in my head without any difficulty. From there I was able to let Giuseppe, Frederick, and Hannah all tell me their stories. I read through this book very quickly, but that was because each page carried me to the next. I was sad when I finished because I wanted more.
I would have to say that this book is suitable for ages 10 and up. There is violence, but it isn’t unnecessary or overdone. There is no sexual content or profanity. At 386 pages it may seem long for younger readers, but like I said- it carries the reader through its pages very quickly and smoothly.
I give ‘The Clockwork Three’ 4.5 stars out of five and I anxiously await Matthew J. Kirby’s next book.
Posted by Michael Cluff at 09:23 PM in 4 Stars, Book Reviews, Books, Middle Readers, Young Adult | Permalink | Comments (1)
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Usually rules are created to help us get through life safely; rules are made to protect us. John Wayne Cleaver has rules; rules that he created for himself, but John didn't create his rules for his own safety. No, John created rules to protect us from him.
John Wayne Cleaver knows that he is not a normal teenager, he has only one friend, he loves to work with the corpses in his mom's mortuary. John's favorite pastime is studying serial killers, he knows all of their habits, he knows all of their patterns, but that is only so he can prevent becoming a serial killer himself. Yet when a string of gruesome murders happen and continue happening in his small town, John knows right away that these murders are the work of a serial killer. But this serial killer is different and John is going to find out why...
I have read about some pretty weird stuff in my life, things like prophetic demon teddy bears or crazed alien cows, but I have to say that I Am Not A Serial Killer
wipes them all out. Dan Wells has created a main character so complex that after two months since finishing the book I still don't know what to think. John Wayne Cleaver is oddly innocent in many ways, but probably the darkest character that I have ever read. He is not a villain, but to call him a hero would just be weird. The best way to describe him is that he is a kid that knows he could become a serial killer very easily but really doesn't want to.
I really have to tip my hat to the author. Dan Wells has to know a lot about serial killers, I hope that he learned it all in doing research for this book. There is a disclaimer that the author has at the beginning of the book that says this book is not autobiographical, but I still wouldn't want to know what goes on in Mr. Wells' head.
When I read a book it is important that I can empathize with the character. I want to feel what the character is feeling and experience the world from the perspective of that character. However, John Wayne Cleaver is a sociopath and is incapable of empathizing, but Dan Wells still puts you right into John's world and mind. I will be honest, at times I was very disturbed while reading this book. Remarkably, the book does have a glimmer of hope in it, but a very tiny one.
For those that think that this book might be just another horror/thriller, you are wrong. This book is a supernatural horror/thriller, and that is all I will say about that because I don't want to spoil anything.
This book is not for the faint of heart or people who get queasy stomachs. There is a high amount of graphic details and violence. Even more, the psychological issues at play in John's head are something that very young people shouldn't have to know about. I would recommend that this book not be read by middle readers or anyone younger than 15. There is no sex, very little profanity, and lots of violence.
I give I Am Not A Serial Killer 5 stars out of 5, and that is because the book was very well written and fun to read, but it still really disturbs me, which is the point I guess.
Posted by Michael Cluff at 11:22 PM in 5 Stars, Authors, Book Reviews, Books, Horror, Series, Young Adult | Permalink | Comments (0)
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Yet you are
not overcome by these minor set backs because where you are smaller you are
faster, more agile; sharp teeth are not necessary when you have a sharp knife,
and what the others call weird you know to be intelligence and cunning. You are
respected, revered, and feared. You are the mighty hunter of the jungle. You
are Tarzan of the Apes
.
When a friend recommended this book to me I thought “Oh great, another dime store novel with a cheesy man swinging around and saving his animal friends.” I thought that the book would be just like the old black and white Tarzan movies or, even worse, like the Disney cartoon.
I was wrong.
While the old b&w movies and Disney may have based their stories off of this classic by Edgar Rice Burroughs, they completely left out all of the “good stuff.” Not only is the language of the book extremely well written and the diction (vocabulary) higher than I expected (I even had to bust out my dictionary once), but the book itself is enthralling and full of all kinds of amazing insights and details. That might sound boring, but not when I say that many of those insights and details are fantastical and gory.
I admit that I did find myself humming “Strangers Like Me” by Phil Collins while reading the book, but I had to stop when Tarzan is torn between not eating or devouring his first human kill; you can figure out what happened on your own.
As a warning, I must remind readers and the parents of any young readers that this book was written in 1912 and that some elements of the book, such as the references to Africans as “blacks”, may be offensive to some. However, I strongly suggest that you don’t let this deter you from reading this book.
Additionally I must warn that there is violence in this book, but how could there not be with savage beasts and even more savage humans (not Tarzan) running around in the jungle. There are only two mild uses of profanity and no sexual content.
I give this book a high five stars out of five stars and recommend that everybody read this book. Not only is it entertaining, but Burroughs takes us into a primeval land and even further into a primeval mind. My only regret is that I didn’t buy the next books in the series… there are over twenty of them.
Thanks Jon for the recommendation.
Posted by Michael Cluff at 11:32 PM in 5 Stars, Book Reviews, Books, Classics, Film, Middle Readers, Series, Throwback, Young Adult | Permalink | Comments (0)
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Most people in Ancelstierre are not even aware that the Old Kingdom exists, many think it a myth, and those that know the truth wish they didn’t. For within the Old Kingdom technology does not function, but the dead do, and all that separates the dead from Ancelstierre is the Wall. And the Abhorsen.
So I know
that the last review that I gave for Garth Nix was not full of praise, and I
haven’t changed my opinions about The Ragwitch in the slightest, but The Abhorsen Trilogy
completely makes up for it. Nix has created two completely new
worlds, given them mythology, even a type of religion and then thrown it all
together with fantastical results. I have no doubt that Nix spent a lot of time
and effort developing all of the elements of this series.
There are two main tales within the trilogy, the first is within Sabriel, and the second story spans across the last two books. So I guess a person could be fine just reading the first book, but a lot of questions are answered if all three books are read. Plus, Nix’s writing improves with each book.
There a few different protagonists in the series, all of which are connected, and they are all very well written characters. By the end of the series you will find yourself wishing to know more about what happens to these people who were once strangers to you but are now intimate acquaintances.
Really the Abhorsen trilogy has something for everyone. There is fantasy, action, humor, horror, and history. I have met many people that have read the trilogy and all of them have loved it. The story was so compelling for me that I stayed up way too late, skipped lunch at my job, and skimped my homework just to finish the books.
I am not going to say much more about it because that would spoil the adventure for all of you. Just go read the books.
There is violence in the books and some disturbing descriptions. I can’t recall any profanity and there are some very very light sexual suggestions. I give the series 4.5 stars out of five (an average of the three books since I think that Lirael is a little too long).
Posted by Michael Cluff at 11:25 PM in 4 Stars, Book Reviews, Books, Fantasy, Middle Readers, Series, Young Adult | Permalink | Comments (0)
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A strange light hangs in the horizon, dampening the day and illuminating the night. Ships and whole towns are swallowed by the raging ocean, claiming hundreds of lives, innocent and not. Strange creatures hunt human prey in the dark. A strange foreigner offers salvation while a priest seeks world domination at any cost, even his soul. The very forces of Heaven and Hell are preparing for battle. The world will never be the same. Will a young boy and simple commoner named Thomas have the courage to face these horrors, will he have the faith to bring about miracles?
In G.P. Taylor’s Shadowmancer not only is the very fabric of
the earth at stake but Heaven as well. Set in Victorian England, or someplace
very like it, this story has a lot of biblical references and elements, as well
as a little Celtic mythology.
All I can really say is that this book left me wanting. I didn’t feel like it followed through with its implied promises. The title Shadowmancer has loose relevance to anything within the book and the cover has nothing to do with the story. I know that you shouldn’t judge a book by its cover, but if you put a picture of a ruined cathedral being struck by lightning on the cover of a book shouldn’t there be something to do with a ruined cathedral being struck by lightning within the story? I don’t know, maybe I am just being picky.
The only characters that I remotely liked in the story were the Boggart Family, but they are only in a couple chapters and then never seen again, which is really annoying because I wanted to know who and what they were. In fact, there are a lot of questions about different characters and creatures left unanswered. It is almost like Taylor threw in a lot of “cool” stuff just for kicks and with no relevance to the rest of the story.
The rest of the characters were flat and stereotypical. Thomas, the main character is a whiney little punk and his friend Kate and her melodrama could easily fit into the cast of a teenage soap opera. There are drunks, smugglers, a few old hags, and a general assortment of awful people. The majority of the characters are miraculously changed by Heavenly sources and then sadly lose most of what made them interesting. I am not saying that becoming “good” makes someone boring, but in this book it just makes the people sort of lifeless.
The final climax in the book is more like a hill than the mountain that it should be. It ends very quickly and is frankly quite cliché. The book wouldn’t even make a decent B-movie.
I would have to say Shadowmancer is appropriate for ages 12 and up, but I would strongly advise parents to preview the book first. While there may not be issues for some people, I know that I found the use of demonic possession (and preludes to demonic rape) and other odd interpretations of biblical topics to be disturbing. There is also a lot of needless death, abuse of alcohol, and mild language.
Supposedly this book is a big hit in England, there is even a graphic novel version, but I really did not enjoy Shadowmancer at all. I give it 1 star out of 5.
Posted by Michael Cluff at 10:39 AM in 1 Star, Book Reviews, Books, Christian, Fantasy, Middle Readers, Young Adult | Permalink | Comments (0)
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Follow the young boy, Garion, a farm boy of Sendaria raised by his aunt, in a battle to save his world. Witness his coming of age, and learn alongside him as he discovers he is much more than anyone expected.
Author, David Eddings, takes us on a wonderful exploratory adventure of a fantasy world so alive with culture and history and true-to-life characters, one cannot help but get lost in the tale. His characters are completely believable, and pull the reader along with their quirks, their yearnings, their fears, and with a humor and truth in dialogue that will make you laugh out loud.
Although I was bored at times with certain branchings in the story, I never wanted to put these books down. The Belgariad is a high quality series of fantasy fiction novels. The content is clean, aside from a very few mild—and period—curse words (maybe 10 in the entire series). There are no sexual references, and no sex; though there are a few mildly sensual scenes, scenes where we understand that there is some kind of sexual intent, but never actually see it come into being. These novels do contain moments of medieval combat, which, at times, get a little detailed and bloody. However, Eddings manages to keep these moments oddly lighthearted, even jovial at times—a fact I found slightly disturbing when I thought about it—but nothing that would scar a mature young mind.
I recommend The Belgariad
to mature youth, 12 and up, and to any adult who appreciates high quality fantasy literature. David Eddings is certainly one of the finest Literary Fantasy authors on the shelf. I rate The Belgariad 4 out of 5 stars.
Posted by Toby Reynolds at 07:20 PM in 4 Stars, Book Reviews, Books, Fantasy, Series, Young Adult | Permalink | Comments (1)
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Fablehaven
is an extremely entertaining book. The humor is witty but can be understood by all (and is usually at the expense of Seth.) The action is suspenseful and really brings a sense of urgency to the story that moves the reading right along. There are not many moments in the book where something important is happening, in fact I can't think of a single one.
The rich relationship between Kendra and Seth is very realistic. You can tell that Brandon Mull has developed these two main characters well and has portrayed them perfectly. At a conference, where he was doing a reading, Brandon had said something to the effect that he wrote Kendra and Seth with his own siblings in mind and that Kendra and Seth talk and behave toward one another just like Brandon and his siblings did at that age. By the time you finish the book, those two kids will seem like your own brother and sister.
All of the other characters involved at Fablehaven are dynamic and seem very real. Each character has a detailed history that is explained and is interesting, especially Lena's. Coupled with a lot of mythological creatures and a vast amount of crazy details, these characters create a new world within our own. In fact you will even forget there is another world out there while you go through this adventure with Kendra and Seth.
I recommend this book for middle readers and up. There are some intense scenes of action, but nothing gratuitous. There are no issues with sexual themes or profanity. It is a clean and fun book. I have shared this book with people from 8 to 50 years old and they have all loved it. Even though Fablehaven is considered Juvenile or Young Adult fiction, there is truly something for everyone in the book, including a handful of fun illustrations.
This is one of the best books that I have read in the last four years, if not longer. I give it 5 out of 5 stars.
I hope that when the movie comes out it will do the book justice.
For more info on Brandon Mull, check out the interview I had with him here.
Posted by Michael Cluff at 11:01 PM in 5 Stars, Authors, Books, Fantasy, Film, Middle Readers, Series, Young Adult | Permalink | Comments (1)
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Alchemy: the mix of science, metallurgy, and magic.
Summer vacations are supposed to be fun, even somewhat
adventurous. Josh Newman was just fine working in a book store, with his sister
Sophie working in a coffee shop across the street. That is until the owners of
the bookstore, Nick and Perry, turn out to be hundreds of years old and
magicians.
Nicholas Flamel is known as one of the greatest alchemysts ever. He lived in the 1300’s. According to record, he died in 1418. However, the tomb of Nicholas and Perenelle Flamel is empty and no one knows why; except for Josh and Sophie Newman. Now they know why all too well.
Now Dr. John Dee has stolen the key to Nicholas Flamel’s immortality, the Book of Abraham. The Book of Abraham holds the world’s most amazing secrets, and the most dangerous. Josh, Sophie, Nicholas, and Perenelle have to stop Dee before he unlocks those secrets and changes the world and not for better.
The Alchemyst: The Secrets of the Immortal Nicholas Flamel is a treasure trove of fun and knowledge. Michael Scott has crafted a masterful story full of history, magic, and mythology from all over the world. Still, if a person doesn’t know the difference between Osiris and Odin, that won’t matter; this book is great for anyone that loves adventure.
There is a point in the beginning of the book where Josh uses Wikipedia to learn more about Nicholas Flamel. I thought this a bit absurd, but then I looked Nicholas Flamel up on Wikipedia… Yep, he really existed. The fact that Michael Scott uses historical figures as some of his main characters makes this book even more fun. Seriously, read the book and have fun looking up the names in this book on the Internet, most of the names will have a lot of results. There is a wealth of knowledge in this book, and reading it is probably the most fun way to learn that knowledge.
While there isn’t any profanity or sex, there is violence and a lot of it, but not graphic violence. Still, the violence is enough to make The Alchemyst: The Secrets of the Immortal Nicholas Flamel is appropriate for Young Adult readers (ages 12 and up). There are battles, people die, and even a god dies, in my opinion these are issues not appropriate for Middle Readers (8 to 11 year olds). This book would and can be fun for younger children, but I strongly recommend that parents preview the book before letting any children read it.
I found the book to be compelling the whole way through and I never once was bored while reading it. The characters are unique and very realistic (well, besides all of the magic). I give the book 5 out of 5 stars.
There are three books in this series, with the fourth set to release May 25, 2010. I have only read this one book, but can't wait to get my hands on more.
According to IMDb there is a movie in the works.
Posted by Michael Cluff at 09:19 PM in 5 Stars, Book Reviews, Books, Fantasy, Film, Series, Young Adult | Permalink | Comments (0)
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Are there such things as evil, demonic dolls that consume your essence, your very soul? (And no, this is not about Furbies. And for those of you that had previously forgotten about those, you are welcome.) But what if there were such toys, or at least just one? Well, in the mind of Garth Nix there exists such a creature of pure evil. The Ragwitch.
Paul and Julia are on holiday and are strolling along the
Australian shore when Julia finds a rag doll. She
loves it. Paul thinks it is
evil and he is right. Julia is already under the control of the Ragwitch. Even
though Paul tells Julia to throw the doll away, it does no good. Julia,
completely consumed by the Ragwitch, enters into a new world, the Ragwitch’s
world, and Paul follows her. He must save Julia.
I really liked the other novels that I read by Garth Nix and
I thought that this would be the same quality of writing. I was wrong. While
not horrible, The Ragwitch
was not great. Nix does do a great job of creating a
new world and using a mix of traditional and new mythology to enrich that
world.
However, I didn’t buy the characters. These two children are forced into new worlds, Julia is in the mind of the Ragwitch, and Paul is in her old kingdom, and they don’t freak out one bit. I am 26 years old and if I suddenly found myself trapped in someone’s mind or surrounded by strange people and weird creatures, I would not be all calm and collected and think things like “Oh, what a strange forest, I must explore it.” No, I would start screaming or crawl up into a ball and suck my thumb. So why don’t these two young kids at least get scared? They don’t and that is not realistic.
Also, Paul barely thinks about his sister after he enters this new world, in fact he goes fishing and relaxes for three days. The kid has no urgency until people start dying.
Another thing that made the story sub-par was the use of time-lapse or “ellipses”. I don’t think I wanted to know every single detail of what was going on in the story at all times, but there really seemed to be some holes. I don’t like it when in mid chapter there is a sentence like “Three days later and after a lot of sleeping…” That doesn’t make for smooth reading.
I found this in the horror section of the library, but it wasn't really scary, even for ten year olds. There is violence and war scenes, but there are hardly any graphic details. So, this book would be fine for 10 +.
Nix is an excellent writer, but this isn’t his best work. I still strongly recommend his Abhorsen trilogy.
I give this book 2.5 out of 5 stars.
Posted by Michael Cluff at 09:30 PM in 2 Stars, Book Reviews, Books, Fantasy, Horror, Young Adult | Permalink | Comments (0)
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