Showing posts with label Angelfall. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Angelfall. Show all posts

Thursday, September 20, 2012

Book Review: Angelfall by Susan Ee



To summarize:  This is a post-apocalyptic, dystopian world in which angels have come to earth and basically demolished everything and everyone.  Not a lot of people remain, and those who do are left to scavenge for themselves while steering clear of marauding scary angels.  And the angels are kidnapping children for some secret, sinister purpose.  The main character, Penryn, has a younger sister, Paige, who is disabled and is taken away by the angels.  To try to rescue her sister, Penryn forms an unlikely alliance with an angel who has himself borne the brunt of his fellow angels' cruelty.

And now, my thoughts on this novel.

This book has it all:

  • A psychotic mother who stabs gang members in the chest with butter knives and then draws a pentagram on them with pink lipstick?  Check.  And who may or may not have been the cause of her younger daughter’s paralysis?  Check.  (And yikes!)
  • Angels, angels, and more angels.  They come in all sizes and colors.  Some are even tiger-striped.  And they carry off children, bringing them home to roost in their…aeries?  Like big, freaky humanoid multi-colored eagles.  Or something.
Stephenie Meyer would be proud:
To Susan Ee’s credit, she did manage to make it ¼ of the way through this book before she started channeling Twilight.  But when she does, she dives right in:

“Then warmth envelopes me.  Firm muscles embrace me from the space where the cushions used to be.  I’m groggily aware of masculine arms wrapping themselves around me, their skin soft as a feather, their muscles steel velvet.”

The word “velvet” cropped up a couple more times, which I thought was unfortunate (Stephenie Meyer has forever ruined that word for me!), but I did appreciate that Ee made the romantic tension a more gradual thing, rather than the “instant connection” that’s so pervasive in YA lit these days.

Seriously though, jokes aside, this was actually a really good book.  Because it’s gotten so much hype on Amazon, and because it comes from an independent publisher (although I publish through Create Space myself), I was a bit skeptical.  Other independent books I’ve downloaded from Amazon have been poorly written and serious need of editing.  I was pleasantly surprised by how well-written this book was.

The story was very engaging.  It got a little slow at parts, but at the end things got REALLY crazy. 

One thing I really liked about this book is the way Ee portrays good and evil.  Unlike a lot of books, the lines are very blurry here—the characters predominantly fall in that gray area between, which is how it is in real life.  Good people do bad things and bad people do good things.  And a lot of the characters themselves are hybrids.  I love how Ee subtly uses this to question not only the definitions of “good” vs. “evil,” but also to show how you can’t put people (or angels) in a specific box. 

This book has so many layers.  Ee even manages to weave in a satirical indictment of how reliant our current society is technology.

Ee does a good job with character development, especially Penryn.  As the story unravels, you can really see Penryn having to adapt to her surroundings, open her mind, and grow as a character. 

So why are the angels here, suddenly wreaking mass destruction on earth?
This is the big question.  As it turns out, the angels themselves don’t have a clue and would like an answer as well.

If you liked this book, you might also enjoy reading:  Daughter of Smoke and Bone by Laini Taylor, The Mortal Instruments by Cassandra Clare, Blue Bloods by Melissa DeLaCruz

Casting Call (just because):
As I read this, I tried to picture who I could see playing these roles if this book were made into a movie.  Here's what I came up with:

Ian Smolderhotter, I mean Somerhalder, as Raffe…for obvious reasons.

 

I’m kind of liking Troian Bellisario for Penryn.  I don’t know.  She’s got that scrawny underfed look but she’s also really spunky.  I’d love to see her doing something action-y instead of just being uptight and paranoid and well, a liar.
And wouldn't the two of them be fun together?  I think so.

Friday, September 7, 2012

Back on the Grid

It's been a long, long while since I've updated this blog.

As I am now employed full-time as the stay-at-home mom of a two-year-old and an almost-five-month-old, I haven't been able to find much time for writing lately.  But I've read some good books over the past couple of weeks, and they've inspired me to get back to doing what I love, even if it's only for a stolen hour or two, snatched during the kids' naps or after they are in bed for the night.

So what am I currently working on?  Well, lately, I've been sticking to the genres I love best (and consequently, write best): young adult and sci-fi.  I'm about to start tackling my 3rd pass of the novel I completely for NaNoWriMo last year, entitled Alternation.  (Although I'm not sold on that title.)  I was very pleased with how this novel turned out and thought it was one of my better efforts.  However, I just can't seem to get the voice exactly right.  It's told from the first-person point-of-view of a teenaged boy named Asher, and since I obviously have no idea what it's like actually to be a teenaged boy, I feel like the voice isn't coming across legit.  For my second draft, I experimented with writing in present tense, a technique I've noticed is very popular in YA these days.  But ultimately I decided my narrator's still just not convincing, so I'm about to tackle another rewrite, this time in third-person.  Hopefully I'll be able to engage the reader just as well but I'll be free to tell the story without having to worry about making sure I'm sounding enough like a dude.

I'm working on another YA sci-fi novel that I just started - randomly came up with the idea late one night.  I don't want to give away too much just yet and I'm still barely into the outlining/jotting-down-random-scenes phase, but it's of course going to be futuristic and techy and probably some flavor of dystopian.  All the usual YA suspects.

In the meantime, just to get myself writing more, I'm going to start using this blog to review some of the books I read.  I read a ton of books (heavy on the YA) and I always think to myself, I should really review this book, but then I never do.  But since reading is such a huge part of writing, I think it would be a good exercise for me to start doing some reviews.  And I'll probably start by reviewing Angelfall by Susan Ee.  I've heard a lot of hype about this book, and had snagged it for my Kindle once upon a time when it was $0.99.  I finally gave in and started reading it (I've found that I can read on my Kindle while feeding Ethan a bottle, so I've been read snippets of Angelfall whenever E. gets hungry) and so far I've been pleasantly surprised.

I'm also thinking about writing a memoir of sorts.  Not because I'm egotistical, but because I think it might be a nice thing to leave behind for my kids and their kids after I'm gone, so that if they're interested, they can learn about where they came from.  I'm thinking of a sort of combo memoir/genealogy with info about grandparents, great-grandparents, basically any info I can round up that I think might be interesting to preserve for posterity.  I even thought I could do some cool things with pictures (for example, my Granny who passed away a little over a year ago, was a painter.  I have one of her paintings, my sister has another one, and my dad has several.  I thought it might be nice to photograph some of her paintings and include that with a portion about her).  I am actually very excited about this project because it will be a completely different type of writing than I've tried before, and I think it will be very cool to learn more about my own family background and my husband's as well.