14 setembro 2012

Aquisições da Semana (20)

Nesta vigésima edição do "Aquisições da Semana" apresento-vos um dos livros mais esperados (por mim, claro) este ano: Stormdancer de Jay Kristoff. Quer dizer, steampunk japonês e criaturas mitológicas, tudo no mesmo livro? Contem comigo! :)




Stormdancer - Jay Kristoff
Embers & Echoes - Karsten Knight

Baseado na rubrica In my Mailbox.

13 setembro 2012

Opinião: Long Lankin (Lindsey Barraclough)

Editora: Corgi Children's (2012)
Formato: Capa mole | 464 páginas
Géneros: Lit. Juvenil, Mistério, Terror, Fantasia Urbana
Descrição (GR): "In an exquisitely chilling debut novel, four children unravel the mystery of a family curse - and a ghostly creature known in folklore as Long Lankin. 
When Cora and her younger sister, Mimi, are sent to stay with their elderly aunt in the isolated village of Byers Guerdon, they receive a less-than-warm welcome. Auntie Ida is eccentric and rigid, and the girls are desperate to go back to London. But what they don't know is that their aunt's life was devastated the last time two young sisters were at Guerdon Hall, and she is determined to protect her nieces from an evil that has lain hidden for years. Along with Roger and Peter, two village boys, Cora must uncover the horrifying truth that has held Bryers Guerdon in its dark grip for centuries - before it's too late for little Mimi. Riveting and intensely atmospheric, this stunning debut will hold readers in its spell long after the last page is turned."
AVISO: Alguns SPOILERS.
Geralmente não costumo escrever opiniões em português de livros que não estão publicados por cá, mas Long Lankin foi uma leitura tão surpreendente que decidi que valia a pena dar a conhecer este livro aos leitores que gostam deste género.

Quando comecei esta leitura não esperava muito da obra. Este livro é geralmente classificado como "juvenil" (ou YA - jovem adulto) pelo que depreendi que se tratava de mais uma obra na veia de Sangue Ruim. Com fantasmas e casas assombradas e uma heroína metida no meio de um imbróglio sobrenatural. Provavelmente com um romance adolescente lá pelo meio.

Devia ter lido melhor a sinopse.

Primeiro, Long Lankin não se passa na actualidade, mas sim nos finais dos anos 50, em Inglaterra. A autora pinta um retrato assustadoramente real da vida numa pequena aldeia pouco mais de dez anos após a Segunda Guerra. Não há qualquer tentativa de sanitizar a realidade: Barraclough descreve a situação de miséria em que tantos ingleses se encontravam; as diferenças entre classes e entre o campo e a cidade; a dor sentida pelas famílias ao perderem os seus filhos. Os protagonistas desta história - um grupo de crianças de idade indeterminada - comem mal (por vezes comem mesmo pão bolorento), brincam em abrigos contra bombas e têm muitas vezes de se desenvencilhar sozinhos. São crianças muito auto-suficientes, com preocupações diferentes das actuais.

Tudo isto nos é descrito em pormenor pela autora, nas primeiras 200 páginas. Este é outro aspecto a reter em relação a este livro: o ritmo é lento, quase demasiado lento a princípio. Barraclough leva o seu tempo a descrever os locais de interesse na aldeia onde se passa a trama, a vida quotidiana das pessoas, os passatempos das crianças protagonistas, entre outras coisas. A parte sobrenatural do enredo vai-se insinuando lentamente em conversas e suspeitas vagas, mas nada de significativo acontece durante quase metade do livro.

Este ritmo e esta demora em chegar ao ponto central da história tornaram a leitura aborrecida. Mas quando Cora (a heroína) e Roger (o herói) começam a investigar a lenda de Long Lankin, o livro torna-se tão interessante (apesar de igualmente descritivo) que é quase impossível largá-lo. Queremos sempre saber mais.

Long Lankin é, de certo modo, a personagem central deste livro. Trata-se de um espírito maléfico baseado numa personagem de uma balada inglesa ('Long Lamkin'), que é também várias vezes apresentada ao longo do livro (na sua versão de 1968, cantada por Martin Carthy). Os nossos heróis vão ter vários encontros com esta personagem e terão de tentar descobrir as suas origens.

No geral, gostei deste livro. Custou-me um bocado entrar na leitura porque muito pouco acontece de início, mas assim que o Long Lankin aparece, o livro torna-se mais interessante. Algumas partes são perturbadoras, quer devido ao realismo que influi por esta obra quer devido à mestria da autora em criar uma personagem maléfica e repulsiva. Apesar do seu começo lento, Long Lankin é um livro que fica connosco muito depois de terminarmos a leitura. 
Penso no entanto que dificilmente agradará aos leitores de YA mais tradicional não só pelo nível de exposição, mas também porque as personagens são mais realistas e consequentemente mais 'infantis' do que é normal dentro do género. A inexistência de um romance poderá também desencorajar alguns leitores.

10 setembro 2012

Review: Imaginary Girls (Nova Ren Suma)

Imaginary Girls by Nova Ren Suma
Publisher: Dutton Juvenile (2011)
Format: Hardcover | 348 pages
Genre(s): Urban Fantasy, Young Adult
Description (GR): "Chloe's older sister, Ruby, is the girl everyone looks to and longs for, who can't be captured or caged. When a night with Ruby's friends goes horribly wrong and Chloe discovers the dead body of her classmate London Hayes left floating in the reservoir, Chloe is sent away from town and away from Ruby.
But Ruby will do anything to get her sister back, and when Chloe returns to town two years later, deadly surprises await. As Chloe flirts with the truth that Ruby has hidden deeply away, the fragile line between life and death is redrawn by the complex bonds of sisterhood.
With palpable drama and delicious craft, Nova Ren Suma bursts onto the YA scene with the story that everyone will be talking about."
This book is beautiful. And it's ugly, sometimes, even. And it's definitely weird.

I was in a reading slump. I didn't feel like reading anything at all and that is a very scary feeling for a book lover as all book lovers know. I started reading Imaginary Girls in this mindset, and at first I wasn't interested. Not much really.

But then the pace of the book picked up and I wanted to know more and more and I just had to read. And I also had to stop because I wanted this book to last, if that makes sense.

Ruby and Chloe are sisters. They might as well be orphans because they have different fathers and their mother loves her bottles more than she loves them. But it's all right, because Ruby takes care of Chloe. Ruby can get anything she wants, from anyone.

And so Ruby raises Chloe and tells her stories about the town that was there before their town but was destroyed by water when New York City decided to make a reservoir. And that the townsfolk didn't leave and now live in the underwater city.

One day an accident happens. Chloe is swimming and she finds a dead girl. She is sent to live with her father but after two years, Ruby wants her back. And Ruby always gets what she wants.

Imaginary Girls was... well, I can't even say. I really liked it because it is just so... strange (but good strange). There's a main character who isn't the main character, there is love that is more obsession than love but in the end it is love and the emotions portrayed in this novel turn everything around and make us doubt our assumptions about the characters.

I can't even describe this book properly. It has that ethereal quality of otherness that so many paranormal books try to achieve but can't. It is truly compelling and beautiful, not because of the writing being poetic or anything. It's just the story, the overall subtleness of the plot and of the characters that make it so. And Chloe's unique and flawed perspective is what makes this book so magical.

Imaginary Girls is the story of two sisters that had a hard time growing up. It's about love so strong it ends up destroying instead of nurturing. The characters were spellbinding and interesting. The story was haunting and the paranormal elements were subtle and so well placed you never really know if there is something supernatural.

The plot is well constructed and keeps you guessing. But what really makes this book shine are the characters. They seem so real and at the same time so... other, so different. I must say I didn't much care for Chloe's "love interest", though.

Overall, a great read. It is a mysterious book that will keep you reading just to find out what is real and what is not. Recommended.

07 setembro 2012

Aquisições da Semana (19)

Esta semana foi bastante boa, em termos de livros. Recebi a sequela de "Fury", uma livro de que gostei bastante.

What I did for a Duke - Julie Anne Long 
The Queen of Attolia - Megan Whalen Turner
The Thief - Megan Whalen Turner 
The Iron Knight - Julie Kagawa 
Long Lankin - Lindsey Barraclough 
Cold Kiss - Amy Garvey
Envy - Elizabeth Miles 

Baseado na rubrica In my Mailbox.

05 setembro 2012

Waiting on Wednesday (12)

Esta semana voltamos aos livros YA. Este é de uma autora bem conhecida no género do romance paranormal, que, como tantas outras, decidiu lançar um livro direccionado para o público "young adult". "Poison Princess" é o primeiro livro de uma nova série pós-apocalíptica, e parece-me bastante interessante (se bem que confesso ter algum medo que acabe por resvalar para os clichés habituais do romance instantâneo e o foco na relação adolescente).

Poison Princess - Kresley Cole
Editora: Simon & Schuster
Data de Publicação: 2 de Outubro 2012
Páginas: 384
Idioma: Inglês
Descrição (GR): "Sixteen year old Evangeline “Evie” Greene leads a charmed life, until she begins experiencing horrifying hallucinations. When an apocalyptic event decimates her Louisiana hometown, Evie realizes her hallucinations were actually visions of the future—and they’re still happening. Fighting for her life and desperate for answers, she must turn to her wrong-side-of-the-bayou classmate: Jack Deveaux.
But she can’t do either alone.
With his mile-long rap sheet, wicked grin, and bad attitude, Jack is like no boy Evie has ever known. Even though he once scorned her and everything she represented, he agrees to protect Evie on her quest. She knows she can’t totally depend on Jack. If he ever cast that wicked grin her way, could she possibly resist him?
Who can Evie trust?
As Jack and Evie race to find the source of her visions, they meet others who have gotten the same call. An ancient prophesy is being played out, and Evie is not the only one with special powers. A group of twenty-two teens has been chosen to reenact the ultimate battle between good and evil. But it’s not always clear who is on which side…" 
Waiting on Wednesday is hosted by Breaking the Spine.

04 setembro 2012

Review: The Lost Prince (Julie Kagawa)

The Lost Prince by Julie Kagawa
Publisher: Harlequin Teen (2012)
Format: E-book / ARC | 379 pages
Genre(s): Urban Fantasy, Young Adult
Description (GR): "Don't look at Them. Never let Them know you can see Them.That is Ethan Chase's unbreakable rule. Until the fey he avoids at all costs—including his reputation—begin to disappear, and Ethan is attacked. Now he must change the rules to protect his family. To save a girl he never thought he'd dare to fall for.
Ethan thought he had protected himself from his older sister's world—the land of Faery. His previous time in the Iron Realm left him with nothing but fear and disgust for the world Meghan Chase has made her home, a land of myth and talking cats, of magic and seductive enemies. But when destiny comes for Ethan, there is no escape from a danger long, long forgotten."
WARNING: SPOILERS for the Iron Fey series
The Lost Prince is book 1 of a new series set in the world of the Iron Fey.

Ethan Chase could always see Them. The Good Neighbors, The Gentry, more commonly known as faeries. He considers it a horrible curse, one that destroyed his family and threatens anyone and anything he loves. So he keeps people away with his attitude. That way, he's the only one that gets hurt by Them.

When Ethan transfers to yet another school, everything changes. He meets MacKenzie, a persistent girl that isn't intimidated by his bad-boy facade. And Todd, who is half-human and half-faerie. Todd wants Ethan's help... because something terrible is chasing him. Ethan doesn't want anything to do with faeries of any kind, but when unknown ghostly faeries start following him, he realizes he is already too involved in whatever is happening. And that he will have to finally confront his past and his nightmares.

Ethan Chase's first appearance was in The Iron Fey series. He was a little boy then, a boy who could see faeries. He was kidnapped by the strange and deadly Iron Fey and taken to the NeverNever so that his sister, Meghan would rescue him.

In The Lost Prince 13 years have passed and Ethan is now seventeen. He has been haunted and hunted by mischievous fey all his life, because when They know you can see them, that's what happens. Plus, his older sister, Meghan is now one of Them, a queen of Faerie and she stopped visiting. His family watches him like a hawk, afraid they'll lose him like they lost Meghan. So no, everything did not end fine. Meghan's sacrifice didn't ensure a great life for those left behind.

I found it very interesting that the author decided to write a book about Ethan. Generally is it implicit by the end of a book, or series, that "all is well" or at least as well as could be expected. At the end of The Iron Queen, Meghan Chase left the real world to rule the Iron Kingdom and save the whole of NeverNever from annihilation. But that had a price and not only for her. That's what it's shown to us in the The Lost Prince. Ethan wasn't automatically fine. He was traumatized by the whole thing and grew up to be a lonely, paranoid (young) man. Because faeries still pursue him, try to trick him and play pranks on him.

Ethan was an interesting character for the reasons mentioned above. He was rude and contrary, one of those male characters one would usually be 'booing' at for being an ass to the heroine. Knowing his motives made it a bit easier to forgive his "jackassery", as he calls it (although he was still an idiot). But at least he was consistent with his bad attitude, meaning he didn't send mixed signals to his love interest (yes, there is one).

I also liked the fact that he could defend himself. The introduction of Kali, the martial art, was intriguing (I'd never heard of it before). I loved how Ethan was scared but also prepared and didn't run into everything blindly (as happens frequently in YA books). It emphasized the fact that he is in fact, only human and his enemies are deadly and supernatural. I always liked heroes that fight against all odds.

The plot is pretty much structured in a similar way to the other books of the Iron Fey series. The hero encounters weird faeries; the hero ends up in the NeverNever with Grimalkin (yes, there is Grimalkin!!) as his guide; Leanansidhe makes an appearance. Puck makes an appearance. Ash and Meghan too (again, yay).

Still, even if the plot was mostly predictable (Keirran's identity was clear as water from the first moment he 'appeared'), the engaging writing style and the charismatic characters made me want to continue reading almost compulsively. The imagery and descriptions are beautiful and "cinematic" as always and who can resist the talking cat and the famous Puck?

Kenzie was sweet, but lacked development almost until the end. I hope we see more of her, but I must admit she didn't add much to the story (maybe she will, in the future) and that it would have been as good without her. Keirran was also interesting, but as several characters remarked in the book, his love story was too similar to that of Meghan and Ash.

Another thing I thought could have been different: the POV. Somehow, I think a narrative in third person would have worked better in this book. Not that Ethan was a terrible narrator (he wasn't even girlish, which is great and something that could happen easily, since the author is female), but I felt it would have been a bit more intense in third person, because there are perspectives that I thought ought to have been taken into consideration as well (Keirran's for example, he was a very important character).

Overall, The Lost Prince was a nice, entertaining read that will certainly appeal to fans of the Iron Fey series (or even just faeries). I'd have liked a bit more originality plot wise, but I was still surprised once or twice and I am looking forward for more on the Forgotten. Who are they? And who is their mysterious queen? Will they have strange powers other faeries don't have? Will we recognize them from ancient legends? I can't wait for the next book!

I received a digital copy of The Lost Prince from Harlequin Teen through Netgalley. Thank you.

02 setembro 2012

Aquisições da Semana (18)

Mais alguns livrinhos para as estantes. Esta semana recebi finalmente o "Angelfall" da Susan Ee. Estou com expectativas elevadas em relação a este livro!

Anna Karenina - Leo Tolstoy 
Angelfall - Susan Ee 
False Memory - Dan Krokos 

Baseado na rubrica In my Mailbox.