#SPFBO9 : 2nd Review

Posted On 17 September 2023

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SPFBO71024_1

What is SPFBO 9?  This is  a competition where authors of self-published fantasy can enter their work. The objective to find a winner out of the 300 entries submitted.  Ten judges (or judging teams) each receive 30 entrants.  Each judge/team will eventually submit one finalist to the second round where a winner will eventually be decided upon. Check out Mark Lawrence’s post here to look at this year’s entrants, judges and allocations list.

My introduction post can be found here and also the Critiquing Chemist recently posted their first elimination post.  I posted my first ‘cuts’ last week.   My second elimination post can be found here.

This week I will be aiming to post a review a day (7 in total) followed by the announcement of my Semi-Finalists.

These reviews are in no particular order and have been randomly selected.

My second review is for Dark Innocence by PJ Alexander.

DarkInnocence

This is a book that I was very curious about as other reviewers mentioned it has Wizard of Oz vibes.

As the book begins we meet Liylah, living in hiding in a basement along with her sister Rorah, her best friend, and her boyfriend.  We soon learn that civil war has taken place leaving many casualties, the quaint village that the girls and their friends came from has been destroyed and they’ve been left orphans after the death of their parents.  Liylah has become responsible for her sister and seems to take on the burden of leaving the hideout to search for supplies for the others.  The sisters have a difficult relationship and after an argument Liylah leaves the basement.  She’s heard of dark magic and has decided to investigate. Unfortunately, her search leads her to a warehouse that is raided by security forces and during her arrest a strange magic transports Liylah to another place known as Sojor.

Regrettably, Sojor is also in the throes of unrest, dark forces are rising and nowhere feels really safe.  Liylah must make her way to the mountains so that the mystics who live there can help her get back home.

So, you can see the Wizard of Oz references.  An unhappy young woman (Dororthy), wishes to be anywhere else (apart from Kansas) and finds herself in an unfamiliar and strange new world that she must travel across (Oz), gaining companions (Scarecrow, Tin man, Lion) along the way, surviving dangerous situations and hopefully returning home with the help of magical beings (the Wizard).  And, whilst she isn’t accompanied by Toto she does have a soft plush dog that she carries with her constantly.  Also, something is following her, it wants what she carries (the Wicked Witch of the West and the ruby slippers).  There are other references sprinkled in but those are the main elements.

This isn’t a retelling of the Wizard of Oz though so much as a homage with nods sprinkled here and there.

There are two settings. The place that Liylah originated from.  This is a contemporary setting, there are buses, coffee shops, mobile phones, etc.  Civil war has taken place and strict control is maintained by harsh security forces.  Sojor on the other hand has magical creatures, horses that communicate telepathically, blood hounds that are under the control of a malevolent shadow person, violet mist, etc,  On the face of it the two places are very different but scratch the surface and their troubles are very similar.

I did have certain issues with Dark Innocence.  I didn’t really connect with Liylah which is a shame because she’s the central character. I found the relationship she had with her sister, for example, a little affected, they bickered but there was no real substance if you follow me.  The other issue that I had was you really have to go with the flow with this book.  For example, why was there a civil war?  Why does the modern world have dark magic?  It felt like things were thrown in and left very vague but I think that’s the nature of this type of story.  I also did have a pacing issue during the middle of the story, I think things could have been tightened.

Fundamentally, this is a story about family and friends.  Liylah is on a voyage of self discovery by the end of which she recognises many home truths that she couldn’t see until she’d undergone the journey.  I think this would appeal to a YA audience, particularly given the close character spotlight and the age of the MC.

I received a copy courtesy of the author for which my thanks.  The above is my own opinion.

Here’s my first review for Of Thieves and Shadows (The Heart of Quinaria #1) by BSH Garcia.

#SPFBO9 – Slight Change of Plan and 1st Review

SPFBO71024_1

What is SPFBO 9?  This is  a competition where authors of self-published fantasy can enter their work. The objective to find a winner out of the 300 entries submitted.  Ten judges (or judging teams) each receive 30 entrants.  Each judge/team will eventually submit one finalist to the second round where a winner will eventually be decided upon. Check out Mark Lawrence’s post here to look at this year’s entrants, judges and allocations list.

My introduction post can be found here and also the Critiquing Chemist recently posted their first elimination post.  I posted my first ‘cuts’ last week.   My second elimination post can be found here.

Today I was originally planning to post my next round of cuts.  However, I realised that the seven remaining titles are books that I read fully, and I also recalled that I undertook to provide a full review for all the books that I read fully.  Therefore, today I shall be reviewing the first of those seven books and, all going to plan, I hope to review a book per day this forthcoming week followed by an announcement about my Semi Finalists next Saturday.

My apologies to the remaining authors, I’m sure this will be frustrating as I originally anticipated my announcement in this post – but, I figure writing the reviews after the announcement doesn’t make as much sense.

These reviews are in no particular order and have been randomly selected.

My first review is for Of Thieves and Shadows (The Heart of Quinaria #1) by BSH Garcia..

OfThieves

Of Thieves and Shadows is a very promising start to a series filled with wonderful world building and a fine cast of characters.  This is epic fantasy indeed and lovers of multiple point of views and settings that step away from western society with castles and the like, not to mention the inclusion of multiple species, prepare to be happy.

The world here is well thought out.  Quinaria is a world poised on the brink of war.  The tentative peace is beginning to crumble, the catalyst, the dwindling supply of Nevethium, a renewable source of energy that also promotes health and well being – basically, one of the nations is over using the supply and promoting war in a bid to take over areas where the supply remains  – okay, that’s a very ‘in a nutshell’ motivation, there are politics in play here plus greed and the lust for immortality.  The nations all feel unique with different cultures and ways.  Elaysia’s people, for example live in a complicated network of homes based atop the trees and traversed by bridges, ramps and ladders.  Clearly, much thought has been given to the world and the author very thoughtfully includes maps and other material which is a definite bonus.

As the story begins (following a rather dark prologue) we meet first Konor and then Elaysia.   Konor is Nyrian, a long lived race (I think he was around 500 years old).  Konor is an advisor to Elaysia, the next, and reluctant, heir of Netharem.  Elaysia’s parents and brother have all died and Elaysia feels unprepared for the role now being thrust upon her.  Two of Elaysia’s close friends are also POVs, a young man called Zavik, who has lived with her tribe since his own was eliminated.  Zavik has romantic inclinations towards Elaysia although he keeps his feelings hidden and strives to be helpful always.  Jakki, also has romantic notions towards her best friend, although again, she keeps these in check and strives to be a strong and confident warrior. Our final two characters are Lumira, a tough nut thief who is given a second chance and a soldier of Az zar, sent by the All Sovereign on an underhand mission.

The story becomes a mission of sorts. Elaysia is visited by a Goddess who tries to guide her.  She searches for long lost storm bird eggs and missing scrolls.  Of course, at the same time, Az Zar set their sights on the same prizes.  Underneath all this there is darkness stirring.  And, on top of this, not everyone is to be trusted.

This is an easy to read story, the writing is confident and there is plenty to pique the interest.

I did have a couple of minor issues.  Obviously with a book of this nature with epic scope and multiple POVs it takes some time for the initial set up and in that respect I think in this instance the page count could have been increased to give more depth.  And, I sometimes found myself incredibly frustrated with Elaysia. Okay, I appreciate that she’s young, she’s taking a role that she never expected and she has lost her parents and brother, but, some of her decisions were so difficult to comprehend.

Small issues aside I had no problem with this one, there are plenty of characters so it’s more than likely that readers will have their favourites and I feel like the characters will have plenty more opportunity to grow as the series progresses.

I received a copy courtesy of the author for which my thanks.  The above is my own opinion.

Friday Face Off : Maude Horton’s Glorious Revenge by Lizzie Pook

FFO

Today I’m returning to the  Friday Face Off, originally created by Books by Proxy).  I’ve missed these for the past few months and so would like to get back to comparing covers (and hopefully I will be updating this page with a new banner.  This is an opportunity to look at a book of your choice and shine the spotlight on the covers.  Of course this only works for those books that have alternative covers (although sometimes I use this to look at a series of books to choose a favourite). . So, if you have a book that has alternative covers, highlight them and choose your favourite.  If you’re taking part it would be great if you leave a link so I can take a look at what you’ve chosen.

My book this week is a book that isn’t due out until next year but I love the sound of it Maude Horton’s Glorious Revenge by Lizzie Pook:  Here are the covers.

My favourite:

Maude2

Join me next week in highlighting one of your reads with different covers.

The Night House by Jo Nesbø

Posted On 14 September 2023

Filed under Book Reviews
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My Five Word TL:DR Review : Where Do I Even Begin

thenighthouse

This book.  I mean, what the heck.

Anyway, I find myself in the very unusual predicament of, even now, not knowing exactly how I really feel.  This book is so unexpectedly unusual.  The description mentions multi layered and also throws out the almost randomly innocent throwaway remark ‘Richard may not be the most reliable narrator’ – well, keep that in mind.

So, the book starts off with an almost 80s cheesy horror feel – Goosebumps style.  It’s got this kind of ‘pesky’ kids vibe.  A young boy (Richard) sent to live in the country with relatives after a tragedy, picked on at school he becomes something of a bully himself almost as a defence mechanism, and then, a fellow student goes missing in unusual circumstances and the last person he hung out with was Richard.  Already under the beady eye of the local law this is then followed by another very unusual disappearance.  Richard knows what happened to both kids but nobody believes him.  Then with another student he starts trying to find clues as to what is actually going on and this leads him to a strange abandoned house deep in the woods, a possible haunting, and an urban myth about a local boy.

We then move on.  Richard is older, he returns for a class reunion, now a successful author with a bunch of weird memories and a deep need to apologise to his former classmates for his behaviour.  Well, from here – things get very strange.  Psychedelic even.  His former classmates don’t seem to have the same memories as Richard, different explanations are passed around and as a reader you’re trying to weigh up what’s what but with an underlying feeling of ‘something is rotten in the state of Denmark’.  You feel like you’re reading, and waiting, for something to happen.  And, of course, it does.  That gut feeling eh.

Then we move on again, and take my word for it when I say this was an unexpected twist.  I won’t elaborate.

So, this leaves me with a whole bunch of mixed up feelings.  On the one hand, I was kind of enjoying the cheesy 80s horror, but as it happens nothing was as it seemed. That’s not necessarily a complaint to be honest.  I enjoyed the writing, the descriptions are good.  For each different element of the story I was literally there, I could easily picture everything. The dialogue is relatable, and this is a fairly short book that can be devoured in one sitting.  I admit at first I had a kind of ‘down’ moment with the ending, I felt almost cheated (what’s that all about – I don’t know – what expectations was I harbouring about the ending even), but now, in the cool light of day and having had the chance to mull considerably, well, I confess that the book still has its hooks in me and I have returned twice now to reread certain elements.  How do you measure success?  I kind of think if a book makes me keep thinking about it then really it’s work here is complete.

I think, with this book, (and without wanting to blurt out spoilers) it very much depends on your expectations going into the read. My advice, forget those expectations, go with the flow. This isn’t a chunkster, it’s an easy read, it defies expectations and is well written.  A  mind bendy-psychological-soft horror with a very unexpected twist.

I received a copy through Netgalley, courtesy of the publisher, for which my thanks.  The above is my own opinion.

My rating 3.5 of 5 stars

Can’t Wait Wednesday : An Education in Malice by ST Gibson

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“Waiting On Wednesday” is a weekly meme that was originally created by Breaking the Spine.  Unfortunately Breaking the Spine are no longer hosting so I’m now linking my posts up to Wishful Endings Can’t Wait Wednesday. Don’t forget to stop over, link up and check out what books everyone else is waiting for.  If you want to take part, basically, every Wednesday, we highlight a book that we’re really looking forward to.  This week my book is : An Education in Malice by ST Gibson.  I loved A Dowry of Blood and so was very excited to see which direction the author would take next.  Here’s the description and cover:

An Education in Malice

Sumptuous and addictive, An Education in Malice is a dark academia tale of blood, secrets and insatiable hungers from Sunday Times bestselling author S.T. Gibson, author of the cult hit A Dowry of Blood.

Deep in the forgotten hills of Massachusetts stands Saint Perpetua’s College. Isolated and ancient, it is not a place for timid girls. Here, secrets are currency, ambition is lifeblood, and strange ceremonies welcome students into the fold.

On her first day of class, Laura Sheridan is thrust into an intense academic rivalry with the beautiful and enigmatic Carmilla. Together, they are drawn into the confidence of their demanding poetry professor, De Lafontaine, who holds her own dark obsession with Carmilla.

But as their rivalry blossoms into something far more delicious, Laura must confront her own strange hungers. Tangled in a sinister game of politics, bloodthirsty professors and dark magic, Laura and Carmilla must decide how much they are willing to sacrifice in their ruthless pursuit of knowledge.

Expected publication : February 2024

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