03 junho 2011

In my Mailbox (15)

E mais uma "In my Mailbox". Esta semana foi uma aventura, em termos de livros. Só esperava dois (Enclave e The Cursed Ones) e afinal, tenho estes todos. O Deus das Moscas e A Filha da minha Melhor Amiga comprei no Continente (ai as grandes superfícies... nem sei como tinham o Deus das Moscas!), o primeiro porque é uma edição de bolso e há muito que o queria ler e o segundo porque fiquei com bastante curiosidade após ler a crítica da Jen no Cuidado com o Dálmata. Quando vi que era o livro do dia no Continente e tinha 40% de desconto, veio também para casa! :D Quanto à Nação Prozac, foi uma total surpresa! Tinha pedido este livro no Winking Books há meses mas depois acabei por fechar a minha conta e claro, já não contava receber este livro; no fim a antiga dona ainda honrou o pedido! Yay! :D

The Cursed Ones - Nancy Holder & Debbie Viguié (ganho no Goodreads)
Enclave - Ann Aguirre
O Deus das Moscas - William Golding
Nação Prozac - Elizabeth Wurtzel

E vocês o que receberam na vossa Caixa de Correio (What did you get in your mailbox this week?)?
"In my Mailbox" is hosted by The Story Siren.

02 junho 2011

Review: Eona: The Last Dragoneye

Publisher: Viking (2011)
Format: Hardcover | 650 pages
Genre(s): Young Adult, Fantasy 
Description (Goodreads): "In this standalone sequel to Eon: Dragoneye Reborn, Australian author Alison Goodman (Singing the Dogstar Blues) tracks the perilous adventures of Eona, the first female Dragoneye in many centuries. Unfortunately, our heroine finds no time to rest on her laurels: She and her fellow rebels are racing frantically to find a potent black folio while they also attempt to elude High Lord Sethon's pursuing army. Eona: The Last Dragoneye brims with romance, suspense, and surprises. Definitely worth recommending."
Warning: contains some spoilers for Eon.
It's a rare thing for me, but all I really want to write about "Eona" is how much I loved it. I really did. I wanted to continue reading it and at the same time didn't want it to end (so I forced myself to stop reading). For me, that's a sign I'm really enjoying the book.

Still, like most (or all) books, "Eona" isn't perfection in literary form, so there were a few things that I thought needed work. I guess I'll start with those.

As with "Eon" I thought the length of the book was excessive. Again, Goodman dragged the story. The book is huge (almost 700 pages) and not that much happens. I get many of these pages are spent with character development but it's still too long. On the plus side, the pacing was good, so although it's a big book it was never boring.

Another thing that bothered me was the ending. It was rushed and abrupt. I felt like it needed an epilogue or something. It felt incomplete.

These are my two main complaints as, in everything else "Eona" is better than it's predecessor: the story is more intricate and much less predictable with a well-constructed plot and the character development is.... amazing in most cases.

One of the exceptions would be Kygo (the Emperor) who didn't really appeal as a character; his development was weak, he didn't really seem like someone one would like to follow. Yuso's conduct was very blah and Sethon was just evil (minus the evil laugh), which was a surprise since all the other relevant characters were so layered and realistic. That Eona's adversary was a simple cookie-cutter villain disappointed me a bit.

Eona and Ido were two of the best characters ever. They were portrayed realistically and it was amazing how the author made me root for Ido right until the end of the book!
Eona still wasn't your typical selfless heroine; she spent the entire book dealing with lies, half-truths, forbidden feelings and the worst parts of herself. She had to struggle to reach that heroic mindset that comes so easily to most heroes in books. And I loved (I'm saying this world an awful lot) it; the fact that she was human and had her shortcomings.

I was kind of disappointed that, again, there wasn't much information about the dragons. But it was still a great read.

Engrossing, sensual, with great world-building and very human characters, "Eona" is an epic tale of a woman in a world of men, who is given the ultimate power. A different tale in a different fantasy world. Recommended for fans of fantasy and even people who don't like the genre much. :)

Booking Through Thursday: Críticas


Tens o hábito de ler críticas a livros? Se sim, quais tens mais em conta? Afectam os teus hábitos de leitura ou as tuas compras?
Sim, claro. Como boa bibliófila, costumo ler críticas ou opiniões em alguns blogues e no Goodreads. No Goodreads leio uma ou outra mas centro-me mais na classificação do livro. Geralmente uso o site para ver se determinado livro está ou não bem cotado (logo, se vale a pena comprar). No blogues procuro mesmo a crítica ao livro em si e não tanto a classificação. Não leio críticas de todos os blogues, mas as que leio influenciam muitas vezes as minhas decisões de compra, pois as opiniões estão bem escritas e fundamentadas.

30 maio 2011

Esperando por... (6)

O livro desta semana é bem conhecido de muitos leitores portugueses e de todos os amantes de Fantasia. "A Dance with Dragons" está quase a chegar! Estou mesmo com muita vontade de o ler, até porque as "Crónicas do Gelo e do Fogo" é uma das minhas séries favoritas. Eu já fiz a "pre-order" da minha cópia, mas mesmo assim espero ansiosamente as edições da Saída de Emergência. :)

A Dance with Dragons - George R. R. Martin
Editora:  Voyager
Data de Publicação: 12-07-2011
Páginas: 1040
Idioma: Inglês
Descrição (Goodreads): "In the aftermath of a colossal battle, the future of the Seven Kingdoms hangs in the balance once again - beset by newly emerging threats from every direction. In the east, Daenerys Targaryen, the last scion of House Targaryen, rules with her three dragons as queen of a city built on dust and death. But Daenerys has three times three thousand enemies, and many have set out to find her. Yet, as they gather, one young man embarks upon his own quest for the queen, with an entirely different goal in mind.

To the north lies the mammoth Wall of ice and stone - a structure only as strong as those guarding it. There, Jon Snow, 998th Lord Commander of the Night's Watch, will face his greatest challenge yet. For he has powerful foes not only within the Watch but also beyond, in the land of the creatures of ice.

And from all corners, bitter conflicts soon reignite, intimate betrayals are perpetrated, and a grand cast of outlaws and priests, soldiers and skinchangers, nobles and slaves, will face seemingly insurmountable obstacles. Some will fail, others will grow in the strength of darkness. But in a time of rising restlessness, the tides of destiny and politics will lead inevitably to the greatest dance of all...
"
 

29 maio 2011

Reciclagem nas Capas (9)

Este fim de semana (ou início, suponho) traz de novo uma rubrica que já não fazia uma aparição há algumas semanas, muito por culpa da minha preguicite aguda. *sigh* Mas pronto... aqui temos mais algumas capas. O motivo de hoje é *drumroll* olhos!  Sim, leram bem! Popularizado em Portugal pela capa de "Sangue Furtivo" (Saída de Emergência) livro da autoria de Charlaine Harris, este motivo é já utilizado com alguma frequência no estrangeiro.

E nenhum deles tem uma cor natural... :p

28 maio 2011

Review: Eon: Dragoneye Reborn

Eon: Dragoneye Reborn by Alison Goodman
Publisher: Firebird (2010)
Format: Paperback | 570 pages
Genre(s): Young Adult, Fantasy
Description (Goodreads): "Sixteen-year-old Eon has a dream, and a mission. For years, he's been studying sword-work and magic, toward one end. He and his master hope that he will be chosen as a Dragoneye - an apprentice to one of the twelve energy dragons of good fortune. But Eon has a dangerous secret. He is actually Eona, a sixteen-year-old girl who has been masquerading as a twelve-year-old boy. Females are forbidden to use Dragon Magic; if anyone discovers she has been hiding in plain sight, her death is assured. When Eon's secret threatens to come to light, she and her allies are plunged into grave danger and a deadly struggle for the Imperial throne. Eon must find the strength and inner power to battle those who want to take her magic . . . and her life."
Warning: Contains Minor SPOILERS!
Another book for which I had high expectations, "Eon: Dragoneye Reborn" by Alison Goodman left me somewhat disappointed, although I did enjoy it a lot. Confused? Well, me too.

Originally published as "The Two Pearls of Wisdom" in 2008, this fantasy novel had everything to make me love it: a fantasy world fashioned after the Ancient Civilizations of China and Japan, dragons and some gender bender. What more could I ask? Well, I could ask for a more creative story, that's what.

When I started reading I immediately remembered the Story of Saiunkoku since that anime was also set on a fantastic kingdom based in Ancient China and there were also guardians represented by colors (in Eon you have colored dragons). 

Don't get me wrong, "Eon" was a pleasure to read most of the time. I loved the world building, the careful construction of a fictitious kingdom based on several Eastern cultures (mainly China with some Japan thrown in). The attention to detail was amazing, with all the rituals and complicated court protocol presented to the reader.

I also liked the 'magic system', it seemed to be unusual and I thought it was creative that magic practitioners had to be linked with the dragons. Basically I loved the world Goodman built with it's fantastic mythology and great attention to detail (as mentioned before).

I would have liked to have known more about the dragons, their magic and their personal designs (if they had any). They seemed like mere magical beasts sometimes, but there were glimpses of intelligence. I thought it quite odd that the dragons were basically used to further human ambition when it was clear they were sentient.

So, having established that I loved the world created by the author, what failed? The story, of course. Since the beginning the entire plot involving Eon and the Mirror Dragon was very (and I mean very) predictable, so it was kind of frustrating to see Eon battle for more than 500 pages to understand what was going on when the reader was aware of the solution since almost the first pages. It made me not like Eon very much, I thought he was too clueless and naive at times. He definitely did not enter the role of "hero" from the first which was good because it made him realistic but also bad, because it made him unlikable sometimes.
Another thing I thought deserved a little more 'book time' were Eon's strange powers (as the book opens Eon already knows about the powers and is on his way to be tested to see if he can be a Dragoneye apprentice); they just weren't explored well enough. The author could have focused some part of the book on that instead of trying to drag the story.

As for the other characters, I liked Lady Dela and Ryoko, but the rest weren't that developed and as a reader I didn't care much for their fate.

The ending was a little rushed and unrealistic, especially what happened to Lord Ido. It just didn't seem probable that he would have such a reaction. It was like he was a different person at the end.

Overall, "Eon" was a fascinating read within the fantasy genre mainly because the world was atypical and very well constructed. But I also thought the book was too long and the story dragged a bit too much for the complexity of the plot. Still, I enjoyed this read and recommend it for fans of fantasy looking for something a little different (a crossover of Saiunkoku Monogatari with Mulan, perhaps?). And well, it does have dragons. I am definitely reading the sequel. :)

27 maio 2011

In my Mailbox (14)

Agora que os CTT finalmente me entregaram todas as minha encomendas, começam a chegar as "pre-orders". Ah, mesmo a tempo. Aqui está o que recebi esta semana (até vão ficar admirados eheh). :)

Blood Magic - Tessa Gratton [YA, UF]
Magic Slays (Kate Daniels, #5) - Ilona Andrews [Adult, UF] (*squee*)

E vocês o que receberam na vossa Caixa de Correio (What did you get in your mailbox this week?)?
"In my Mailbox" is hosted by The Story Siren.