Showing posts with label Caster Chronicles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Caster Chronicles. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 5, 2013

Review: Beautiful Creatures by Kami Garcia & Margaret Stohl

Beautiful Creatures by Kami Garcia and Margaret Stohl Beautiful Creatures (Caster Chronicles #1)
By Kami Garcia & Margaret Stohl
Publisher:
Little, Brown and Company

To Sum It Up:

Ethan Wate has been having strange dreams lately, but he doesn’t suspect how real they’re about to become with the arrival of Lena Duchannes to the small town of Gatlin, South Carolina. Lena comes from a family of powerful magic users, a family that also carries a dark curse with it. Despite how quickly Lena becomes the target of gossip among the Gatlin locals, both for her appearance and her family connections, Ethan finds himself intrigued by her. As Ethan and Lena are about to discover together, Gatlin is a town steeped in magic and secrets, and their two families have been forever linked by both.

Review:

Whenever I set my eyes on books that are of considerable girth like Beautiful Creatures is, the question that springs to my mind is, are all those pages justified? If I’m about to invest my time in a nearly 600 page tome, I expect to be entertained from start to finish. The verdict on Beautiful Creatures? It was worth a read, but there were quite a few lulls that made me wish the book were shorter by several chapters.

I liked the book’s take on magic. Its users are called Casters here, and Lena is one of them. On her sixteenth birthday, she’ll either be Claimed for the Light or for the Dark. Thanks to a curse placed on her family during the Civil War, Lena fears that she’ll be Claimed for the Dark. Lena got on my nerves quite often. I mean, I did feel sorry for her because all she wanted was to be able to attend school and be a normal teenager, but the citizens of Gatlin were determined to make life hell for her. I did, however, think that she spent way too much time brooding over her impending birthday. She could have made better use of her time trying to find a way to avoid turning Dark. Instead, Lena mopes a lot while Ethan does all of the work, poring over books from the Caster Library (which sounds like an amazing place) in search of a solution.

Ethan, our narrator, was an all-around good guy, though perhaps a tad too perfect a hero for my tastes. I prefer protagonists who show some flaws, and Ethan is more of the knight in shining armor type. Really, his only flaw is allowing Miss Mopey to carry on with her pity party instead of telling her to snap out of it and lend a hand in saving herself. I’m sorry, but Lena’s attitude seriously annoyed me.

I found some of the secondary characters better drawn than the main ones. Ethan’s great aunts, collectively called the Sisters, were a riot. I also liked Amma, the Wate family’s housekeeper, who’s pretty much become a parent to Ethan since his mother died and his grief-stricken father sank into a deep depression. But my favorite character in the novel by far was Lena’s uncle, Macon Ravenwood. He’s just incredibly cool and mysterious and has this presence that commands your attention. Nobody crashes a school board meeting like Uncle Macon does.

The novel has a wonderfully eerie vibe to it. You know that something sinister is lurking under the idyllic portrait of small town life that Gatlin goes to painstaking lengths to display. The book’s tone reeled me in from the start, but the same emphasis on how a small town can hide big secrets also hindered the book. It’s very firmly established in the beginning of the novel that Gatlin is the kind of place where everyone knows each other’s business and outsiders aren’t exactly welcome. Small town with small-minded citizens—got it. No need to reinforce this idea over and over and over again. This repetition, combined with the seemingly interminable countdown to Lena’s birthday and the book’s length, caused me to lose some of my interest in the story about halfway through the novel.

I feel like I’ve been rather critical here, and Beautiful Creatures really isn’t a bad read at all. It definitely has its moments and some intriguing characters. The catch is, though, you have to wade through pages and pages to reach the next interesting bit. That was my experience, at least. Every time I gathered some reading momentum, I’d hit a slow stretch in the story, which I think could have benefitted from some reining in.

All in All:

Although I wouldn’t call Beautiful Creatures a page turner, it didn’t bore me to the point where I wanted to abandon reading it, either. I’m not always the most patient reader, and I do believe you need to be reasonably patient with this book, so that was probably a contributing factor in my overall enjoyment of the novel.

• Ally's Review of Beautiful Creatures

Thursday, May 10, 2012

Review: Beautiful Creatures by Kami Garcia & Margaret Stohl

Beautiful Creatures by Kami Garcia & Margaret Stohl Beautiful Creatures (Caster Chronicles #1)
By Kami Garcia & Margaret Stohl
Publisher:
Little, Brown and Company

To Sum It Up:

Ethan Wate has lived in the small town of Gatlin all his life. Nothing changes in Gatlin; Ethan knows everybody and everybody knows him. Except the new girl, Lena Duchannes. As if being the new girl isn’t different enough, Lena is also the niece of the town shut-in, Macon Ravenwood. Despite knowing that associating himself with Lena is social suicide, Ethan can’t help but feel drawn to her. And when Ethan realizes that Lena is the mysterious girl haunting his dreams, he becomes further determined to uncover their obvious connection. But their intertwined lives aren’t the only secret in Gatlin. With paranormal powers and a century old curse, the small, boring town of Gatlin isn’t as normal as it seems.

Review:

Beautiful Creatures is a stunning novel that keeps readers guessing the whole way through. There were so many secrets and mysteries that even the best sleuths couldn’t have caught them all. Although it took me forever to read, which is highly unusual, I found myself really enjoying the book. I went in a little skeptical because I had heard that this paranormal romance was written from the male protagonist’s perspective. I remember thinking oh, here we go, a hormonal teenage boy falling for the poor paranormal creature/girl.

Unfortunately, I had condemned the book before giving it a chance. Imagine my surprise when I started reading and Ethan turned out to be the perfect Southern gentleman. I actually really enjoyed reading from Ethan’s perspective; it was a fresh twist and I’m not sure if I would have liked the book as much with Lena as the narrator. Ethan was a very interesting, funny character. Being able to see into his head was a fun experience. He’s just this average guy trying to mix into the life of an above average girl.

Although I liked Ethan, I didn’t care for Lena much. I mean, I tolerated her for Ethan’s sake, but alone she was kind of melodramatic. I know she had a hard life, but Ethan did too, and he didn’t whine half as much as Lena did.

My favorite character in this book was Macon Ravenwood. For the longest time, Garcia and Stohl paint this guy as some barbaric illiterate, but when you meet him he’s like Southern gentleman meets English scholar! Macon was above all the most interesting person in this book. The whole time I was like, what’s up with this guy? What’s his issue? For the life of me I couldn’t figure out what this guy was. And when I did, I was still a little perplexed.

Although I did like this book, I do have a few bones to pick with it. For starters, Beautiful Creatures has so many To Kill a Mockingbird references that I’m not sure I would have understood the book if I hadn’t read the classic already. Sure, a lot of books make allusions to popular works, but to me Garcia and Stohl went a little overboard. My other little annoyance was the whole paranormal part of the book. At first I was bending over backwards trying to figure out what type of paranormal creature was going to have the starring role in the novel. But there were no clues. You had no idea what was going on until Lena outright told Ethan. For me, that was a little disappointing. I love figuring out those kinds of things but Garcia and Stohl didn’t give me the chance. Then again, it’s only my personal preference. Aside from my minor grievances, I really did enjoy the book and can’t wait to get my hands on the sequel.

All in All:

This is the kind of book where if you do have the extra money, yeah, why not, you would buy it. But if you’re like me and don’t have full pockets, then a library borrow is sufficient.