• Tag Archives Romance
  • To Die; Selena Alvarez/Regan Pescoli

    This series by Lisa Jackson starts out intriguing, if busy, and becomes rather rote and familiar before long.

    Left To Die kicks things off with what amounts to two separate stories stapled together, one better than the other. There is a lot going on here. Most of it is good, but a significant portion starts trending toward the ridiculous and before long you may end up finding yourself wondering exactly what you’re reading. It also ends on a cliff-hanger which Chosen to Die picks up shortly after. Chosen ends up much better than Left for two reasons; it’s much more focused and the romance aspects are nowhere near as ill-fitting.

    That’s not to say it’s perfect however, as it does still contain a couple of extraordinarily improbable events. Which brings me to the main issue I had with this series as a whole. The central ‘problem’, as it were, is that the plot developments in these books are actually less realistic than the fantasy/urban fantasy books I normally read. This came as a shock initially, but after some thought it makes sense; since fantasy uses up most of the audience’s suspension of disbelief on its universe mechanics it doesn’t have anywhere near as much wiggle-room in the plot and character behavior departments.

    Born to Die continues the twin themes of serial killers and spontaneous romance. It’s more or less on par with Chosen, with its oddly convenient plot developments staying fairly subdued for the most part and the romance at least making an attempt to blend into the overall picture. Afraid to Die is where things become to get overly fabricated, essentially eviscerating most of what makes Alvarez a semi-interesting character. Followed up as it is by Ready To Die, which is practically dripping with melodrama and contrivance, results in a one-two punch that effectively kills any further potential this series may have had.

    I think I’ll just stick with fantasy from here-on out. Fantastical settings and abilities are much easier to deal with than fantastical plot developments and character behavior.


  • Possession, Twisted, & Exposed

    Possession is the eighth installment in Kat Richardson’s Greywalker series. After the reading sixth book, Downpour, I wasn’t planning on continuing this series… then Sea Witch arrived out of nowhere (apparently I blindly pre-ordered it) and it was enjoyable enough to reverse that decision. This one is much more like Downpour than Sea Witch; dry, not very interesting, and fairly detached. It feels more like reading a history student’s dissertation than a fantasy novel.

    I picked up two of Laura Griffin‘s Tracers novels basically on a whim, hoping a change from the urban fantasy genre might open up some new avenues. Sadly, both of these books (Twisted, Exposed) are structured remarkably similar to your generic one-shot paranormal romance novel. I was getting flashbacks to Gena Showalter‘s novels while reading them, and that’s not really a good thing if you’re looking for something on the realistic side.

    If you just want some spontaneous/forced romance (Twisted‘s isn’t as bad as Exposed‘s in this regard) tinged with a bit of excitement though, in the form of racing against the clock to stop a killer, then these books are pretty good at delivering just that.


  • Divergent, Silver Shark, & The Damnation Affair

    The first two books in Veronica Roth‘s Divergent series (Divergent & Insurgent) are an interesting window into an attempted utopian community that ends up dystopian in the extreme. You can clearly see both the good intentions behind the society’s structure as well as all of the myriad ways that they can (and do) get corrupted and ultimately fail. So; so far so good. Hopefully the areas outside the city limits (which the third book will presumably focus on to some extent) will end up just as believable as the city itself.

    Silver Shark is a short novella by Ilona Andrews set in the Kinsmen universe. As with Silent Blade this story has a wonderfully detailed background setting that you really wish you could spend more time in. Where that lack of time really hurts though is in the romance arc, which ends up feeling incredibly contrived/rushed.

    Lilith Saintcrow’s The Damnation Affair supposedly takes place in the Bannon and Clare universe. To me, it did not feel even the slightest bit attached to that series… and it’s not just the genre switch from Steampunk to Western either; the supernatural bits seemed to work completely differently. Putting that aside, I didn’t like this story for two reasons. The first is that it turns out I strongly, strongly dislike ‘cowboy talk’ while the second is that the female protagonist is extraordinarily strong-headed while lacking any real power or skill to back it up. While not exactly helpless, against what this book throws at her she may as well be.