Frigging Awesome

Monday, March 22, 2010

Jamie of i suwannee has a frigging awesome blog. My very favorite part of it is the part where she spotlights beautiful bookcases.
Like these ones:





I don't know about you, but I ADORE bookcases. There is just something wonderful about seeing all of those books lined up on the shelves. It's like you're staring at a pile of endless possibilities.
AND here's another cool thing that I learned through Jamie's blog: You can buy books by the foot. That's right. Do you have some beautiful, empty bookcases that need to be filled? Well, then go here, and order yourself some books by the linear foot. You can also order them in bulk! It's only $150 for 1000 random tomes to fill your shelves. Isn't the Internet fantastic?

The Dead and the Gone - Review

Monday, March 15, 2010


The Dead and the Gone by Susan Beth Pfeffer
is the second installment in Pfeffer's Last Survivors series, a companion book to Life as We Knew it



About the book

Some of the things that I didn't like about the first book in the series were addressed in the second one. It's darker. It's grittier. And when you're talking about post-apoc fiction, the grittier the better, in my opinion. I don't want to say too much about the novel, because I don't know about you guys, but I prefer going in to a story knowing next to nothing about the plot. It's more fun that way. But I'll tell you this much:
The Dead and the Gone is set in New York. When the comet hits the moon, 17 year old Alex Morales is at work. His mom is working a late shift at the hospital, his father is in Puerto Rico for a funeral, and his two younger sisters are home alone. They are a devout Catholic family, and the disaster serves as a test of their faith. Will their parents make it home? Will Alex be able to provide for his sisters?

The Good

Like I said, this book is darker than the first. There is a bit more violence, and we see death that is much closer to the main characters. In many ways this book is the complete opposite of its companion. This installment has less of the everyday teenage angst that was present in Miranda's journal. Alex and his sisters are religious whereas Miranda's family was not. Alex lives in the urban sprawl whereas Miranda was in rural Pennsylvania. It was nice to see the disaster from a completely different perspective. I've heard some people complain that the piety of the teenage children, particularly Bri, was unrealistic, but (being Cuban) I have met my share of Hispanic Catholics and I don't think it's too much of a stretch.

The Bad
The book still wasn't as dark as I would have expected, though I don't suppose I can demand something on the same level as The Road from a YA novel.
There still wasn't as much chaos as I expected. Especially as this one was set in the inner city. The kids were able to get lunch every weekday from their schools, and there were food lines that gave out a bag of supplies every week. I WOULD like to have that much faith in the government and our society, but (call me a cynic) I just don't. There was only one instance when the line ran out of food while Alex and his sister where still waiting, and a mob formed. Just one.

I didn't quite understand Kevin's motivation for doing all that he did for Alex. He was a bit of an enigma, and not always in a good way. How can you relate to a character if you don't understand their motives? He seemed cynical and hard, and yet he was obviously well enough off. He had no reason to stand in line with Alex, and yet he did. Every week.

I was also confused as to why Alex wasn't able to get into any of the other apartments in the building. It seems that since his father was the Manager, there would be keys to EVERY apartment in the office somewhere. Am I wrong about this?

My Rating
The book was good. I like the series, so far. I will read the third one as soon as it's available to me. I would recommend it to people who like Disaster/Post-apocalyptic fiction and Young Adult novels. But the series doesn't quite do it for a serious Post-apoc Junkie.

I give it a 7/10

Upcoming books and mini-review of Vampire Academy Series

Thursday, March 11, 2010

Even though I haven't been posting reviews, I HAVE been reading. There are reviews in the works for the following novels-

Fantasy and Supernatural:



The Dark is Rising series (5 books in all) by Susan Cooper







The Goose Girl by Shannon Hale






Dreaming Anastasia by Joy Preble





The Dark Divine by Bree Despain





Dystopian and Post-Apocalyptic:




The Dead and the Gone (Book 2 in the Moon series ) by Susan Beth Pfeffer





The Declaration by Gemma Malley






Brave New World by Aldous Huxley






The Knife of Never Letting Go by Patrick Ness






And a Mini-Review:
I got the Vampire Academy audiobooks from a friend and decided to give them a chance, despite having seen them compared to Twilight. I am not a Twilight fan. I DO, however, have a soft and warm place in my heart for vampires, since I was obsessed with them from ages 10-15 or so. And, although I am sort of ashamed to admit it, the books sucked me in. I mean, these novels have next to no literary merit. The series is basically a trashy, high school romance novel with vampires thrown in. But gosh, I sure had fun reading it. I've read (or, rather, listened to) three of the four available novels in the series. I think the fifth book comes out this year.

The Good

Mead has created a very interesting vampire culture. In her world there are two different kinds of vampire, the Moroi and the Strigoi. The Moroi are the 'good' vampires. The blood that they drink is offered to them by humans, and they never drink enough to kill someone. The Strigoi are closer to the vampires from classic cannon; undead creatures that kill to stay 'alive'. The Strigoi become stronger if they drink the blood of Moroi. There is also a hybrid breed called Dhampirs, which were created when the Moroi mixed their genes with human genes. The Dhampir are not really vampires, as they don't drink blood to survive, but neither are they human. They have super-human strength and reflexes, and generally choose to become bodyguards to the Moroi.

The Bad
The characters were pretty one-dimensional throughout the first novel.
There was a lot of casual and gratuitous sex, which I don't approve of (do I sound snobby?) , though nothing was described in explicit detail.
I could see most of the 'plot twists' coming from a mile away.

But, all in all, they served as a nice distraction while I washed dishes and folded laundry. They were a fun bit of fluff, and I'm sure I'll finish the series, .