Showing posts with label wars. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wars. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 16, 2016

Salt to the Sea by Ruta Sepetys plus a Guest Blogger!

“Yet amidst all that, life has spit in the eye of death.” 


Dear neighbors,

Sorry for randomly crying at our most recent dinner party. This book is to blame.

Dear friend group,

Sorry for randomly hand flailing when mentioning this book.

Dear Barnes and Nobles,

Sorry for squeaking vaguely loudly when seeing this book at the shelf and considering running at everyone in the store and shoving it into their faces. 

I just really like this book.

(Also: Yay! First co-written review! With my favoritest and bestest friend-person, Emma, over at Bookishly Minded and also: Of Starry Knights and Lullabies)






Stats:


Genre:  Historical Fiction feat. pain
Feelings: Hahahahahahahahaa. Ow.
Cuteness: I went into this not wanting romance and came out with an otp don't judge me
Fast pacing:Oh yes
Series: HA. HA. HA.
Read if you like: Tragedy stories, ww2 books, or her previous book, Between Shades of Grey. THERE. ARE. CAMEOS.
Content: VIolence. Some very bleak things, and a few images that are very haunting. Some disturbing things regarding what humans do under that much panic and chaos. Some things that cast vague suggestions towards sex, but none actually happening.
Trigger warning? Violence. Loss of babies, siblings, children, pretty much every type of person. Suggestions at rape though it's never said outright.
In summary... Four teenagers. Four different lives. Millions of people on the coast during a soviet advance, trying to get aboard a ship that will take them to safety. One of those, is the Willhelm Gustloff. These characters paths will cross and their lives will never be the same.
Thoughts: Snow, rot, rough cloth and a hand tightly wrapped around yours
Messages: Forgiveness, prejudice, the powers of relationships, no matter the type. At it's heart, this book is about love and courage, but not always in the sense you would expect.


Rating: 5/5 stars


This is a spoiler free review, HOWEVER, if you know nothing about the Willhelm Gustloff, I suggest reading this book first, because I'll spoil that part. But it's history, so.....


I read Between Shades of Grey when I was like twelve, and it wrecked my life. Out of the Easy still remains unread, but when I found out that her new book was coming out....I freaked. Especially after hearing what it was about.


I don't really know what I was expecting. I wanted friendships, prose, fear and sadness. I definitely got it, and still somehow this book blew me away even though everything happened exactly as I expected it to.


This review will be broken up into the usual chunks, but will variate from me and Emma’s thoughts.


-The Characters-


My thoughts:


Books like these rely on you loving the characters. I mean, *SPOILER*, but the Willhelm Gustloff sinks. That event was the worst maritime disaster in history, even worse than the Titantic. So, characters are important.


I never thought I could fall in love with characters on page one. But I did. Each character's voice and personality was so vibrant. The contrast between them was so beautiful to see.


Joana, and her bravery and goodness....but so much grief. Her smile. Her bravery. . And Emelia, that child who persevered even when she looked weak. Her vibrant personality. The struggle.. Trying and trying. Florian, his bitterness and anger, but the tenderness that is shown, the care, and the forgiveness he needs and deserves. And Alfred. His determination, bravado, confusion.....madness. All of them were so brave in their own way. They fit in with the setting, and the wind and sea and I loved them.


Also: The side characters. Oh my goodness. Poet. And every single person you meet. Ruta has mastered the knack of making each character stand out, seem real and different and new.


And I cared.


I will note, that this book is told in very short alternating chapters, which means that for some it might be hard to fully connect. But I still do think these are some of the most well crafted characters, seeing as she had to spend so much time on history and keeping everyone straight but shaped....all in a barely 400 page book.


Emma on characters:

There are four points of view in Salt To The Sea: Joana, Florian, Emilia, and Alfred. It was really interesting to watch the story unfold from the different viewpoints and while in the beginning it was a little confusing to follow, I thought it worked really well.

Salt to the Sea opens up with Joana’s point of view. She’s the same Joana as in Between Shades of Gray, which was really cool. I loved getting to see her story and her point of view. Joana’s also a nurse, which I loved so so so much. Nurses in any capacity during World War II is one of my all-time favorite things to study, ever, and getting to follow Joana and see her struggle through war-torn countries with people who needed were was amazing. Joana is pushing past what you are afraid of to do what you know is right; she is fiercely protecting the ones who need it and holding out your hand to people who can’t stand on their own.
       
Florian is bitterness and sharp edges and somewhere past all that really caring. I love Florian so much. I will probably say that about everyone, but that’s because it’s true. Florian, though, he has a special place in my heart. He is such an interesting character, and his relationships with everyone else are beautiful. I love how his voice sounded. I love the dynamic between Emilia and him, and I a d o r e Joana and his relationship. In Florian’s POV we also get to see Doctor Lange, and the art that was stolen by the Nazis during World War II. I’ve always found that part of history super interesting so like, reading that made me internally freak out just a little.

        Emilia, okay? Can we talk about Emilia? She’s so much younger than everyone else, which really got me, and she is so strong and she’s been through so much. The first thing we see of her is when she is hiding, in the ice and the snow, in her pink woolen cap and it felt so vivid and real. Emilia is so brave. There are so many things about her that I can’t talk about because of spoilers which is sad but. Her story is so heartbreaking and beautiful and g a h. I loved her so so much. Emilia is hope that winter will end, and memories of home, and seeing the worst and the cruelest and the awfullest and then somehow seeing something more.

The last POV in Salt to the Sea is Alfred’s. I…spent most of the book kind of blinking at his POV and trying to figure out what was going on. However. He is a very interesting character. And watching his role in everything coming together at the end was definitely interesting. His point of view was also a complete change of pace; Alfred’s a sailor on the German ship Wilhem Gustloff, a marked difference from every other point of view in this novel. Above everything Alfred wants to be honored and celebrated and be a hero, at least I felt like. Alfred is fear and he’s confusion and wanting to be and belong.

There were also a lot of side characters , all of whom were intricate and interesting. Ruta Sepetys never disappoints with characters. I loved Poet, an old man who was once a shoe maker and whom they now call the Shoe Poet, and Sorry Eva, who has a tendency to say somewhat appalling things but prefaces it with an apology before she does so. There were a lot people who only played a small role and who weren’t even named , and somehow they still felt real. Ruta Sepetys excels at writing these sort of characters; the ones who you can almost believe were real, who are so firmly rooted in their settings and so complexly written their stories don’t feel like stories anymore. There are so many scenes where the crowds of people and families are described in passing and it’s these small little moments and phrases and pictures that bring this story to life.

Overall: amazing, complex characters that each show really unique and interesting parts of history. Although the four different first person points of view are a little confusing, I felt like it was done well and once I got into the book and got to know each character and their voice, that confusion faded.

-Plot and Writing-


My thoughts:


This book is thrilling. It's not a thriller, and they don't even get onto the boat till well to the end, but this book kept me turning pages rapidly. If I hadn't been doing a readalong with Emma I probably would've just finished it in one sitting.


Ruta. Sepetys. Can. Freaking. Write. Her prose is like wading through water. You stub your toe on a rock that stings for a good while, brush into seaweed that snakes around your ankle and you keep going until everything feels numb.


Yes. Wading through water. But ocean water. Because it's salty. FROM YOUR TEARS.


Anyway. I enjoy Ruta's writing a lot. Her pacing and plotting is wonderful, with the flashbacks tastefully thrown in. There are a few nitpickiy scenes that you might have to suspend belief for if you even notice that kind of thing, but who even cares. This was a good book, one that I have tabbed and marked and ready to look back at as a reference for a well paced historical.




Emma on Plot and Writing:

Ruta Sepetys writes and phrases words a certain way, or she describes a certain feeling or picture, and I look at it and it is absolutely beautiful. She somehow combines stunning prose with historical details and creates one massive story that leaves you breathless.

Reading this is intense. Like I said, it’s incredibly immersive, and even though she never goes into gorey details, Ruta Sepetys doesn’t shy away from the darker side of things, and the reality of war. Everything feels very real and very present. If I wasn’t doing a readalong with Mariesa and I also didn’t have to keep stopping said readathon to go do life things, this would have been one of the books that kept me up way too late reading. It would have been one that once I stopped there was no stopping. The way that Salt to the Sea is written keeps you needing to read the next page, needing to know what happens, even though for most of the book, we are just watching a group of people travel to the ship.

(I suppose this next part coulddd be considered a little spoilery, but guys. It’s history. This is like asking people not to spoil Titanic.)

(that was not a good example) (I’m going to stop talking in parentheses now)
Speaking of ships…
Before reading this book, I had never heard of the Wilhem Gustloff. Ever. I didn’t know it existed or what a tragedy it was. I didn’t know it sank.
ANYWAY. Salt To The Sea brings forth the story of the Wilhelm Gustloff, and of the thousands of refugees who sought passage on it to escape the Red army. Because I am me, I went and googled the ship after finishing STTS. I thought that this website was really interesting.


-Messages and other-



My thoughts:


I love history. My mind is forever stuck in the past rather than the present. I love learning about people who lived and breathed just like I do but somehow were so much that they have books about them.


But my favorite part, is wondering about those people who didn't get books written about them. Those people who know one even knows, who get on boats with dreams and hopes, who could've done something so big that they had books and movies centered around them but instead.... they sunk.


That's why I love historical fiction, because it takes these situations, and gives you fictional characters to love but also gets you thinking. Because Joana, Florian, Emelia and Alfred may have all be fictional....but there were people just like them on that boat and they're gone now, and we're left to wonder and dig up their stories.


This is an important book. It's about the things that haunt us, that follow us even in times of danger. I can really appreciate a book that doesn't spend so much describing the brutality of history that it forgets that these characters are still human. They still love and dream and struggle, even in the middle of disaster.


Ruta takes a lighter approach to these tragedies. While they're brutal to read, she doesn't go into so much description of the horror of war that leaves you drained. While there are times for those books, I love hers because they leave more for you to think, to see the times of glory that humans have even surrounded by harsh circumstances.




Emma on messages and other:




Salt to the Sea left me breathless. I read the last page and I didn’t actually do anything; I just sat there and looked at. It was so amazing, and even though I don’t really remember what I was expecting going into it, it was so much more. I adore history and I always have, and historical fiction – stories that take the past and the people who lived in it and bring them to us today, stories who are rooted in our history and teach us about who we are today – are my favorite. Salt To The Sea was all of these things.

Buy this book. Read this book. Read all of Ruta Sepetys’s books, while we’re at it, because Ruta Sepetys, okay. But read this one specifically. This is a story about a lot of ordinary people who saw and experienced things that I can only ever imagine, and it’s a story about their hope. This book is so raw and it hurts but it is hopeful. Everything about it screams that. Hope isn’t always pretty; it doesn’t always look nice. Sometimes hope is a sacrifice; sometimes it hurts. Sometimes hope seems a lot like being naïve or feels a lot like helplessness. Salt To The Sea is light in darkness; life from death; hope from some place that feels absolutely hopeless. There is hope in Joana and hope for Emilia and Florian and Alfred and in the unnamed thousands who died on the Wilhelm Gustloff, because their story is being told, and they are remembered.



What I Took from It.


It's been quite a while since I've read this satisfying of a book. While I can't depict what exactly it is that resonates so well with me, i'm pretty sure that it's the people. The mistakes and love and perseverance that these teenagers show. I have cried for them and laughed for them, and I've loved watching them grow on these pages. This book at it's heart is just the perfect example of what I love about history, and so it will forever be on my favorite shelf, the shelf of books that whispered to my soul in some way.


Humans, no matter how nasty and awful and prejudiced and blind....are capable of doing wonderful things, and books like this one show that in little snippets.

This book is hope and fear and sadness and relationships. With a good dose of realism.

Read it.





To see what Emma took from it, go see her review! Her blog is Here .

Tuesday, July 7, 2015

A History of Glitter and Blood by Hannah Moskowitz


There's a big difference between hating someone in peace and hating someone during war

This book comes out August fourth. I was hoping to review it way before it came out but I got so swamped with NaNo and life. But here we go! My first ARC review!






Stats:

Genre:  Fantasy
Feelings: Not really, actually
Happiness: Eh
Cuteness: Did not ship anything. Like. How many people is Beckan gonna make out with?
Fast pacing: Slow, but still it did a good job of engaging me
Series: Nope
Read if you like: ...Weird books. Unique fae type things,
Content: LOLOLOL what does this book NOT have.
a) cursing? Check. A lot of it.
b) Sex? Definitely. Nothing graphic and most of it off page.
c) Prostitute faeries? Why not.
b) Lesbian? Yep. Totally caught me off guard. Like. Wot.
c) Violence? You could say. It's just got some weird concepts
d) Thematic elements? lololol yes
In one sentence... Told back and forth from past and present, a very unreliable narrator tells the story of Beckan and her friends, and the struggles and conflicts with gnomes and other creatures, filling in the gaps with whatever he wishes.
Thoughts: glitter and dirt
Messages: It's kind of got some really neat family vibes here. And a lot about honesty. 

Overall:

Rating: 3/5

This review is SPOILER FREE


The Lovely Bits:

This was...a weird book. I am so conflicted about it. More so then I ever have been.

-Characters-

What was Beckan. See, I saw her from our narrators POV. And our narrator was...special. Beckan was spirited and crazy, but still realistic. She was a damaged, far from perfect character and I had fun reading about her. But I still don't think I'll really care about her.

Then there's Tier, the weirdo. Piccolo, who was random but totally fascinating. And Scrap. Scrap made me feel feelings.

See, there's no character that really stand out. I'll have to give it to Hannah Moskowitz. She knows how to write some crazy realistic damaged characters in a story with as many crazy concepts as this one did. Each one was so...human. Which was surprising, giving they were faeries, gnomes and tightropers. These were some nasty people. Nasty, sad, hurting. 

You have to give me a tiny break because I just got back from a writing workshop and I'm noticing more successes in books. This story had a very big struggle, a very good thing for a book.

-Writing and Structure-

The story just had...such cool concepts. Seriously. I love weird concepts. And this story had a lot of them. The worldbuilding, though sparse, was really fascinating. There was little description but there were just enough hints dropped that I could paint a picture of what I pictured it to look like and I loved that. This is one of those books where I am happy about the lack of descriptions.

The story had very little Big Events, but it did such a good job of getting into your head. I think it's good that it was short. It's hard to pull off a "no the writer did not write this the character did" book but Moskowitz did this so masterfully. It felt like someone had actually found this old notebook with the story in it and typed it up. I read this on a weekend trip and half the time forgot I was sitting curled up in a bunk bed at the beach because I was so tangled in this story.

-Messages and other-

This is a light-theme book, but the themes it does have were beautiful when you dug them out. There was a lot about redemption, and war, and recovery. All of it fit well with these characters.

The Less Lovely Bits

For as much as I loved it, there was a lot I didn't care for.

Okay. First off. It was just weird. I mean, I love weird books. I live for weird books. I write weird books. 

I think what happened is I really didn't know what to expect. I did not expect prostitute faeries that swear every single sentence. I did not expect this wacky world, these wacky characters. Everything was so random. And on one hand, it added to the texture of the story and the whole " a character wrote this not the author" vibe, but it also felt off.

There were definitely some scenes that just felt extremely random. As stated above, there is a gay scene towards the end. I didn't get it. I'm sorry, it's not that I had a problem, it was just that I really didn't get why it needed to be there. 

I don't know, man. This book is a weird one. I think a lot of people can really care about it. It's a concept and character driven book. But that's the problem.

You have to care about the characters to enjoy the book. If you don't, you'll hate the book. And if the character are impossible to dislike that's fine. But I can see how it would be easy to dislike this cast, which is what makes it a tricky book.

See, there was nothing blatantly bad about this book. Nothing that made me a Rage Monster and want to burn it. There was nothing truly wrong. The whole story as a whole just didn't sit perfect for me as a person. This can be different for everyone. 

I honestly thought this was a debut at first. Because I didn't know going in this was written as a character-written-book so it felt very off. As I got into it, I saw more clearly what Moskowitz was trying to do, but starting out it seemed like she had written a NaNoWriMo and published it without edits. (But I do seriously know that's not true because if all NaNo first drafts were like this then we'd be all lucky)



Overall, I did like it. I defintly found myself thinking about it a lot, even if it was less fondly then I wanted. If you can handle some randomness, I'd give it a shot. It really was a fun book.


Tuesday, June 2, 2015

An Ember in the Ashes by Sabaa Tahir

The field of battle is my temple. The swordpoint is my priest. The dance of death is my prayer. The killing blow is my release.



So. Picture this. I am in the bookstore, drowning in my sorrows because my best friend has 100 dollars given to her my her parents to buy books. Me? I am very much thoroughly broke. The worst thing.

We go to the used section. And bam. What's there? Flippin EMBER IN THE ASHES. The book I have been anticipating. Ten dollars. 

And of course she buys it and of course I cry because I want it so bad. Well yeah there was  a bookstorian there, and we start talking about books and I express my sadness about not having money to buy it and you know what this lovely lady does? She disappears and comes back with a free arc copy. A free arc copy. I mean, normally arcs are for pre-release but. Free books?? Yes. Bookstore lady, you are my hero.

So last night I started it and yeah let's just say I didn't go to bed until the last page was turned....at 2am. (No see, but that's super appropriate time to stay up reading. Given my blog title.)

I am really not sure what I was expecting. But whatever happened in this book was good. Not perfect, but really good.





Stats:

Genre:  Fantasy with almost a touch of dystopia
Feelings: Yes. This is a very gritty book
Happiness: Not a whole lot of fluffy feelings? But the book as a whole made me happy
Cuteness: Ehhhh. I thought I’d ship Elias and Laia but I was neutral on ALL the ships. Some of them came across insta-love even though it really wasn't? Just because the relationships didn't develop enough.
Fast pacing: It wasn’t straight action but it was a very BAMBAMBAM book and well…I stayed up till 2 to finish it.
Series: Yes thank god .-.
Read if you like: Ancient rome, gritty fantasy stories, and…pain?
Content: As stated earlier, this book is raw. It deals a lot with death, blood, torture, rape, etc.  None of these other than blood were outright described, so don’t be too concerned. There are some graphic fighting scenes, a lot of flogging and cutting and slashing and branding. There is one attempted rape but hero person stops it before it gets far. Some of the soldiers talk about “the docks”, and the brothel that is there. I found myself singing “Lovely Ladies” from Les Mis  in my head a whole lot, actually.
In one sentence... In the gritty roman-esque world, where the empire of soldiers with faces of silver scourge the land, there are two teens trying to find their way: Laia is a slave trying to save her brother, sent into an academy as a spy, and Elias is a unhappy soldier, chosen for a contest to be emperor, and both of them are tangled in a long web of lies and secrets.
Thoughts: Old crumbling buildings
Messages: There’s an big underlying message of hope, and the two characters fight so hard to do the right thing and become strong, even when it seems impossible

Overall:

Rating: 4/5

This review is SPOILER FREE


The Lovely Bits:

This was overall a very lovely book. I feel weird actually describing it as lovely, given all the blood, but shh.

-Characters-

I started out not really liking Laia, actually. But there is some very well done character development that goes on, as we watch Laia going from weak and scared, to stronger, and braver. It was very slow moving, but very interesting development.

Elias was a likable character, given he was written to be like one. Good, loyal, brave. I did enjoy his POV's more that Laia's for most of the book, because he really had some cool insight to this world, but I did like seeing both sides of the story.

The other side characters were more Meh for me. Keenan was Major Meh, but that is because there was very little development for him. Helene was freakin awesome. I normally don't like female characters that are so tough they seem fake, but Helene was so...bad ass. I couldn't help but like her. She did start to annoy me later on, because she came across close minded, but after you learn some things about her...it just worked.

The villains were successfully creepy. Marcus is a butt. Elias's mom is a butt. Cain made me feel uncomfortable and Cook made me very very sad. All the characters had a distinct voice, and very good development, and paired with the great prose made for an amazing read.


-Writing and Structure

I've been reading a lot of debut books, and one of the common elements I have seen is in the prose. Often times there types of lines and sentence structure that shows up a lot. There actually seemed to be less of that in this book. There was some really great descriptions, and the voice was so unique, and fit perfectly with the atmosphere of the story. Sabaa really has this great smoky voice that worked really well with the book. 

The plot was evenly spaced, which moved the book along at a steady pace. One event was over, there was a small chapter of character development and some sort of political drama, and them another big event. Sometimes books of this size can start to drag towards the end, especially in the calm before the climax, but Ember did not have that problem.

The plot itself was very interesting. Though confusing to follow at times, it kept me engaged. There are so many "Evil Leaders of the land, competition to be king, lots of rebellion, hidden resistances" books out there? Its very easy for them to be formulaic and boring. Ember didn't have that for me. 

The story context was just very...cool. The augurs and scims, and masks really painted a good picture of this world. It could have been easy to just say "Ancient Rome!" and leave it. While world building felt put aside at certain points, I definitely want to see more of this world.


-Messages and Other-

I really feel like Sabaa tried to give a big message in this book. In the opening letter she said herself she wanted to spread a message of hope. That was done very well without being preachy. I always appreciate writers who try to communicate something Big through their stories, especially since I know first hand how hard that is to do without being sappy. 

There was a lot of hope-less scenes in this book, especially the end. To spread the message of hope and strength through such a harsh setting is challenging, and Sabaa did a pretty good job.



The Less Lovely Bits:

(There's a lot on this section but don't freak out it really was very good. I'm just nit-picky)

This book is definitely far from perfect. There were actually a good amount of things I didn't like? But nothing that made me go Angry Squid. 

As I said earlier, I have been reading a lot of debut books. Normally, debut books have lest risky plot points, the same formulaic characters or plots, and similar beginning writing styles. There were parts and characters in Ember that felt underdeveloped and formulaic. Normally that wouldn't bother me, but I'm getting a bit tired of "That really jerky guy who uses girls...because he's a jerk". I want more developed side characters.

Elias was a tad "eh" at times to. Don't get me wrong. I loved him. This is a nit-picky thing, but sometimes it gets old to have the main character in such a "mean" setting be the only nice one. Of course our hero looks down at beating slaves while everyone cheers. Of course he looks out for lesser people. Of course he doesn't go to brothels. Of course he wants to run  away. I mean, it wasn't bad but part of me kinda wanted a really awful but lovable main character, and watch the change.  I wanted to be told more about how the felt and what they were thinking. There were parts where I was more caught up in what they were telling me about everything else, then their whole story.

(also tbh I wanted the second POV to be Helene not Laia, at times)

And then there's the rape thing. Over and over, this book talked about rape to further show that this place sucks. 

Laia is pretty, so people KEEP telling her she'll get raped. Marcus tried to attack her, because he is mean. Our Hero swoops in to save her! Further connects the two characters! The Villain is coming so Hero pretends that he was trying to get the Heroine to sleep with him so the Villain doesn't think they're plotting! Over and over it was used as a point to move the story along, and it started to hold less power.  I feel like it was only a plot device to tell how awful this world is. I kept getting reminded that females are at danger every second. 

Eh and then there was the love square thing. I don't even know. I couldn't resist. I drew a diagram.

That basically sums it up

I really wanted to SEE the relationships develop. Everything felt very insta love which was tragic, because it really wasn't.



Overall, I loved this book. It was a solid story.