Showing posts with label 2. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2. Show all posts

Monday, January 30, 2017

Recently Read: Viper Wine

Author: Hermonie Eyre
Genre: Historical Fiction
Page Count: 410
Rating: 2/5

Add on Goodreads


Venetia Stanley was known for beauty and the art and poetry it inspired great men to write. She has since married and the greatest tragedy known to human kind has befallen her: she has aged. She attempts to convince her alchemist husband to make her an anti-aging serum, which is all the rage in the court of Charles the I, but he refuses. Venetia is forced to find the tonic on her own in order to restore her beauty.

I had super high hopes for this book. I loved the cover and the premise, but I was disappointed with this one. This was such a slow read. It took me ages to read and I ended up just skimming the last one hundred pages because I just wanted it to be over with. There wasn't much of a plot in this novel, which can sometimes work out just fine as I love character driven novels, but in this case, it just didn't work.

Eyre attempts to weave together magic, science, and superstition into this novel by allowing glimpses of the future into the past. Sir Digby (Venetia's husband) can see glimpses of the future of science and serves as a somewhat 'enlightened' figure. I found that this element of the novel just disrupted the historic setting Eyre had built and really didn't add anything to the story. I think Eyre approached this novel with a unique storytelling voice and some very original ideas, but they just didn't match up with my reading style. 

However, this novel did make some interesting and relevant comments on how society views aging women and what women are willing to do to hide their aging. Women have always gone to drastic (and less drastic) lengths to change their appearance. In this novel, women paint their faces with lead paint as makeup and try a variety of superstitious and off-the-wall beauty remedies to hide their aging. It is easy to draw parallels between the market for Viper Wine (a beauty serum made from viper's venom and pregnant mare urine, among other unsavory ingredients) and today's market for diet pills, beauty creams, and surgical enhancements all aimed at women who are attempting to defy their age. I found this element of the novel to be intriguing, but it was not enough for me to enjoy the slow reading experience that this novel provided. 

I would be willing to check out Eyre's future works though, as I think she some very original ideas and a unique voice. 

If you liked this book, I think you would also enjoy All the Birds in the Sky by Charlie Jane Anders because the writing style and magic/science elements in Viper Wine really reminded me of this novel.  

Wednesday, September 16, 2015

Recently Read: The Blood of Olympus

Author: Rick Riordan
Genre: Young Adult/ Fantasy
Status: Fifth book in the Heroes of Olympus Series
Publication Date: 2014
Page Count: 516
Rating: 2/5

Add on Goodreads





This is the final book in a series so I will skip the synopsis to avoid spoiling you wherever you may be in the series!

I must say, I was very disappointed with this finale! I loved The Percy Jackson series and the rest of this series, but I had a lot of issues with this book! I will also say that I seem to be the minority and lots of people loved this book, so it's definitely still worth a try if you have read the rest of the series.

I thought this book was too long and unnecessary! Nothing crucial to the over-all plot that has been building for four books happens until the last one hundred or so pages of the book! All of the little battles and quests seemed to be there just to take up page space before the big show-down. I found the climax to be a little, well anti-climatic and I knew how the book was going to end so I didn't understand why it took five hundred pages to get there. 

I also thought it was odd that Riordan chose to tell this final book through Jason, Leo, Nicco and Renya's POV. The other characters who didn't have a POV were pretty much non-existent for the entire book. In fact, I forgot Frank was even a character in this series until about two hundred pages into the novel! I enjoyed Nicco's POV, but I would have loved for the series to end with either Percy or Anabeth's POV.

I must admit, I skim read the last thirty or so percent of this book because I just couldn't get into it. I just wanted to know the end and then move on. I thought this series finale was a little safe, as Riordan had been dropping hints before the book's release that made it sound like the ending was going to be revolutionary and devastating. The humor was still great, and I really loved the first four books in this series, but I think this series was just one book too long for me. I think you should still read it if you have read the rest of the series, and like I said, a lot of people really loved this conclusion.

Part of it may have been my mood, I was feeling impatient and wanting to move on to other things on my shelf because this just wasn't holding my attention. I may come back and revisit it in the future. But for now, I am looking forward to Riordan's newest series which starts this year.  

What did you think of this finale? Are you excited for Magnus Chase?