Showing posts with label ya fantasy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ya fantasy. Show all posts

12/07/2012

Scepter of the Ancients (Skulduggery Pleasant) Review

Scepter of the Ancients (Skulduggery Pleasant)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Skulduggery Pleasant is a wonderful name, and the skeletal title character is a fun new addition to the children's fantasy genre. However, when I bought the book, the bookstore clerk told me she thought it read like a TV show, particularly because of its snarky dialogue, and she was right. After an early interlude in which main kid Stephanie seems like a relatively normal child, we discover that the rest of the book is written in that dialect known as Banter, herein practiced by a preternaturally adult child character having snippy-snappy conversations with a childish adult character (Skulduggery).
The clerk also said she's seeing more and more children's books written in this style. Is it because everyone's aiming for a movie someday, like the Harry Potter franchise? Or is it because we have a new generation of writers whose training stems as much from years of TV and movie watching as from reading--writers with an ear for TV-style dialogue and characterization?
The plotting, too, which other Amazon reviewers have described in some detail, feels like a movie or at least a Saturday morning cartoon, albeit a lively one. Evil-villain-takes-over-the-world-with-the-help-of-appropriate-traitors-and-henchmen has been done to death, but Landy does throw in a few fresh twists, though the character of Skulduggery remains his greatest accomplishment. I would like to tell you that I found Stephanie appealing, but her mall-speak didn't quite work for me.
That said, there's obviously a place in the world for rowdy, TVesque books--look at all these rave reviews! Skulduggery Pleasant will be an entertaining read for a lot of kids, and it may yet become a movie or at least a video game. Still, it isn't well crafted in a traditional (award-winning, vanishing-classic, literary) sense. Try Terry Pratchett's Wee Free Men, Tamora Pierce's Terrier, or Jonathan Stroud's Amulet of Samarkind if you want to see what I mean.

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8/28/2012

Nandi: Nandi & The Renewal Of Serenity Review

Nandi: Nandi and The Renewal Of Serenity
Average Reviews:

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This is a wonderful fantasy novel that even someone with a mild interest in the realm of fantasy would enjoy. The Egyptian elements were a nice touch that is rarely found in YA fantasy and will also help to perhaps make the reader more curious.
There were some missteps with wording but nothing that I found annoying or distracting. The tale itself held my interest from start to finish. The only thing that kept my review from being 5-star was the font. The font the author chose is one that can be difficult to read, especially for weak eyes. Yes, it goes with the tale but it makes it hard for the reader. The cover is excellent and the author has a wonderful book that should go far.

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From the scrolls of ancient Egypt a fable unfolds...CIVILIZATION has been gifted to earth, started in Egypt and now must be protected. However, being born first but in secrecy, Nandi's legacy--the protector of the secrets of civilization (the Oath of Serenity)--has been falsely claimed by an evil half brother she never knew she had... in a bizarre twist of fate, either can unleash it but only one may possess it. In Kemet, many do not believe in Mer Wer, a mystical land hidden in a rainforest of Africa, but it is about to surface quite literally. The urgent 'Calling of Charge' gongs and Mer Wer comes to collect one of its own--the non-believing thirteen-year old named Nandi.She is about to be initiated into an ancient and mystical society to prepare for in the coming fourteen days--just a fortnight--three realities bestowed by her coin (an aged coin that once belonged to her deceased mother) will be confirmed; the Runes are unprecedented, a resurrection from the Nile is possible, and her birth is the 'Promised Legacy' of Egypt. So to Mer Wer she shall go for she is the only one who can renew it honorably. NANDI AND THE RENEWAL OF SERENITY (trilogy) is an epic "sword and sorcery" quest taken by a peasant, two valiant friends, three apprentices and their seer, three heartless villains; a most unexpected ending and lots of mystical touches. Like The Hobbit it includes historical particulars, depicting the period's cultural respect for spirituality and echoes the themes of companionship and resilience of the human spirit when faced with adversity. Also celestial possibilities happen. Unlike so many young-adult fantasy books today that rely on sexual or violent innuendo, this novel offers a more suitable reading experience while bringing hair-raising adventure to the fore.

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