Hi there! I’m Kay: an opinionated book blogger enamoured with the world of novels. Reader of Speculative Fiction (the posh word for Sci-Fi/Fantasy) and Young Adult novels. Believer in the many uses of the towel, the science of deduction and other fandom in-jokes.
This blog has been closed since early 2016. To the publishers and writers: thanks for all the support over the years. To my readers and fellow bloggers: keep in touch!
Monday Reading (Sept. 20th, 2010)
- A Madness of Angels by Kate Griffin – This is pure-UF written by a very, very skilled author. But I can’t give a firm opinion yet, as I’m 15 pages in and have no idea what the book will be about!
Finished this week:
- Captivate by Carrie Jones – Not a good as Need, but still really enjoyable. Zara is such an unusual character, that one can’t help but enjoy her on principle!
In My Mailbox (Sept. 19th, 2010)
In My Mailbox is hosted by Kristi at The Story Siren (inspired by Alea of Pop Culture Junkie) and explores the content of your mailbox.
This has been a seriously stressful/busy week for me (as the lack of posts demonstrate!) but it has all been made right by a few new gems I got. I just wanted to say Hello! to the few new followers from this week, and let you know there is usually more going on!
I have not bought any new books in, say, 3 weeks? So this week – even though I only got a few – was absolutely fantastic. Not to mention they are books I have wanted for a while! Soo… here they are:
- 13 to Life by Shannon Delany – I Hmmed and Hawed over getting this at full price at Foyle, but the Ann Aguirre quote at the back sold it!
- Raised by Wolves by Jennifer Lynn Barnes
- Dark Life by Kat Falls – Has a lovely quote on the cover by Jenny over at Wondrous Reads!
- Doubleblind by Ann Aguirre
- Wanderlust by Ann Aguirre – Yay for Sirantha Jax! I absolutely adored Grimspace, and just had to get the next books. The covers are so flippin’ gorgeous – whenever they get around to making the UK editions, I hope they keep them! Wanderlust is in my bag as we speak!
I also got a fantastic Book Journal made by Moleskine that keeps track of thoughts about the books you read. My motivation for getting is that – although I review books on DBD – I don’t always remember my off-the-bat opinions about the book. Also, for the books that I read that I think y’all might not be interested in, I have a place to keep a review for myself! It is really nice – and while I do see some potential issues with the alphabetization system that it has – I am looking forward to filling it up!
So, that’s this week! What did y’all get?
Monday Reading (Sept. 13th, 2010)
It’s Monday! What are you reading this week? is a weekly event now hosted by One Persons Journey Through a World Of Books where we discuss our week of reading!
Currently Reading:
- Captivate by Carrie Jones – Not as good as Need… not sure why exactly, but there is something off about it that I can’t put my finder on. Still – has possibly the sweetest feministy heroine ever. ♥
Finished this week:
- The Devil’s Kiss by Sarwat Chadda – Really enjoyable with a very London vibe. I loved knowing which tube stop Billi was getting off at. hehe
- Linger by Maggie Steifvater – OMG. I forget how lyrical and tragic her writing is. I cried ALOT while reading this. It was cathartic and terrible and just… fab read.
Reviews:
- Kiss of Death by Rachel Caine – Great series. OK book.
- TimeRiders by Alex Scarrow – OK book. Great series (potential).
Review: Time Riders by Alex Scarrow
Time Riders by Alex ScarrowSeries: Time Riders #1
Published by Puffin
Pages: 432
Genres: Science Fiction YA
Source: Received for review from publishers
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Rating:
Liam O'Connor should have died at sea in 1912. Maddy Carter should have died on a plane in 2010. Sal Vikram should have died in a fire in 2029. Yet moments before death, someone mysteriously appeared and said, 'Take my hand ...'
But Liam, Maddy and Sal aren't rescued. They are recruited by an agency that no one knows exists, with only one purpose - to fix broken history. Because time travel is here, and there are those who would go back in time and change the past. That's why the TimeRiders exist: to protect us. To stop time travel from destroying the world...
Thoughts: This book has two things that usually make me stop reading: short chapters and Nazis. They are serious pet peeves of mine because a) I am capable of an attention span greater than 5 minutes, thank you very much, and b) haven’t you heard the war is friggin’ over???
And yet… TimeRiders was awesome. Awesome in that kind of action-packed, bad-ass, yes-we-may-kill-off-your-favourite-character sort of way. This book felt like a blockbuster movie – but with a superior script. Alex Scarrow writes action scenes with handful of main characters and ten dozen extras zooming across the page without breaking a sweat – a talent I seriously admire.
Scarrow also created some fantastic villains. I read an interview of his where he described his desire to make 3D characters who – one could argue – were merely misguided. He lived up to his claim in TimeRiders, writing a villain with pure intentions that became twisted by circumstance and insanity. A villain who is trying to save the world, just in a somewhat psychopathic way. It is a welcome relief from the typical twirling-moustache villain!
However, I found the main characters a bit flat. Although perfectly enjoyable, they were rather secondary to the plot. So much crap happened to them, but there is very little emotional payoff. I also found a couple of the time-travel sequences rather… convenient. The sequences that took place over two times – but appeared in the book simultaneously – felt somewhat contrived. Just one of the many dangers of time-travel, I guess!
Bottom line? TimeRiders is a fun, action-packed, addictive book. Will likely appeal to teenage boys as well as girls – just don’t expect too much emotional depth. I think Scarrow is saving it all for the sequel.
Review: Kiss of Death by Rachel Caine
Kiss of Death by Rachel CaineSeries: Morganville Vampires #8
Published by Allison & Busby, Penguin on 2010-04-27
Pages: 256
Genres: Paranormal YA, Young Adult
Source: Purchased myself
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Rating:
Also in this series: Glass Houses, The Dead Girls' Dance, Midnight Alley, Ghost Town, Bite Club
A new chapter in the New York Times bestselling Morganville Vampires saga. Vampire musician Michael Glass has attracted the attention of a big- time producer who wants to cut a demo and play some gigs-which means Michael will have to enter the human world. For this, he's been assigned escorts that include both a dangerous immortal as well as Michael's all-too-human friends. And with that mix of personalities, this is going to be a road trip from hell...
Thoughts: I remember reading that Rachel Caine had had a 6-book plan set out for the Morganville series when she started out. Kiss of Death is book 8 – and her lack-of-overarching-plan is kinda starting to show.
Don’t get me wrong, I really enjoyed Kiss of Death. Caine’s verse is as addictive as ever. I love these characters and their angst – so, really, how could I not enjoy another visit into their world? But Kiss of Death was definitely a step down from some of the other Morganville books. If I weren’t such a fan, I probably would have been less than impressed.
Kiss of Death takes place outside of Morganville. This is a first for the series which had had the characters literally confined to the city in previous books. Whilst a road trip might sound like a happy-go-lucky time for the gang, things never work out that way for Claire and co. So, there are plenty of new vamps, some kidnapping and, oh, a car chase or two.
Pretty cool… but also pretty pointless. Kiss of Death felt very episodic and monster-of-the-week. A cool monster, sure, but I couldn’t help thinking “… so?” It was a far cry from the epic cliff-hangers of the first 5 books that literally stopped your heart.
Not to mention the most important failure: the epic lack of Myrinn. *cries softly whilst wearing vampire bunny slippers*
However, I do have hope for Morganville books of the future. Fade Out was friggin’ fantastic (and with plenty of Myrinn goodness) and managed to remain self-contained to a single book.
Bottom line? The Morganville Vampires series is fantastic – I highly recommend it. That said, Kiss of Death was not it’s greatest instalment.
Note to the UK publishers: Did something break when publishing Kiss of Death? My cover was in pieces after one light read – not to mention the book was littered with typos. Not cool.

















