Showing posts with label gothic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gothic. Show all posts

12 November 2016

Review: What The Dead Want

What The Dead Want | Norah Olson
Published by: Katherine Tegen Books, July 26th 2016
Genre: YA, Paranormal, Gothic, Ghosts
Pages: 320
Format: Ebook
Source: Katherine Tegen, via Edelweiss

16 -year-old Gretchen takes photographs to understand the world around her, a passion her mother Mona fostered and encouraged when she was still around. Since her mom disappeared years ago, Gretchen and her dad have lived on their own in New York City, haunted by Mona’s absence.

When Gretchen’s great aunt Esther calls unexpectedly to tell her that she has inherited the pre-Civil War mansion on her mother’s side of the family in upstate New York, Gretchen understands nothing except that her aunt needs her help. But what she finds there is beyond her imagination. The house is crumbling apart, filled with stacks of papers and journals from decades, even centuries past, and it’s crawling with rodents. It’s also full of secrets and a legacy of racism and violence so reprehensible that the ghosts of the past are exacting revenge on the living.

Somehow the mystery of Mona’s disappearance and the atrocities that happened on the land during the Civil War are inextricably intertwined, and it’s up to Gretchen to figure out how…before even more lives are lost.
 


This is a damn good ghost story. When I went into this book I expected a run-of-the-mill horror. Flat characters, bland relationships, a tonne of unanswered questions, a bit of tense spookiness to keep me going. But it was Halloween, and What The Dead Want seemed suitably creepy. 

This is not run-of-the-mill. This is stand out, well written gothic paranormal and it has memorable, likeable (what?!) characters. The story was not predictable at all. I LOVED the element of photography, how spirits could be captured on film, and how integral it was to the end of the story. There's a perfect blend of ghostiness (that's a word!), history, mystery, danger, and plucky and brave characters trying to uncover secrets. I also loved how it confronted the racist history of the house and the church, and how Gretchen accepted her own link to her predecessor's horrific actions. How she never shifted the blame or responsibility and was determined to get justice for the victims.

Multi-faceted, horrifying in unexpected ways, and driven by passion and heart. You won't find a better ghost story than this.

Characters 
Setting/World 
Writing 

29 July 2015

The October Faction, vol 1 (ARC Review)

The October Faction, volume 1 | Steve Niles & Damien Worm
Published by: IDW PublishingAugust 11th 2015
Genre: Graphic Novels, Gothic, Supernatural, Thriller
Pages: 128
Format: Ebook
Source: IDW, via Netgalley


The creative team behind Monster & Madman would like to introduce you to the ongoing adventures of retired monster-hunter Frederick Allan and his family… which include a thrill-killer, a witch, and a warlock. Because sometimes crazy is the glue that binds a family together.




October Faction has probably my favourite art of every graphic novel I've ever read. It has everything else too - iconic characters, great plot, awesome monsters -but the art is just stunning, and for some reason I can't explain, I really, really love it. It's gritty and dark, sparse with its use of light, and I want to stare at every single panel for hours because there's always so much happening, even when there isn't plot-wise.

Once I sat down and found proper time to read this, I flew through it. There's something massively compelling about the characters, that I don't even know how to describe. They're interesting, and extraordinary while retaining a sense of being so human, so normal, doing things like school and working (and, admittedly, seeing ghosts and summoning nasty things in circles painted on their bedroom floors.) Everyone has a secret, or at least that's what it feels like. How they're drawn, and written, it just feels like every character is a great mystery, and it made me never want to stop reading.

I'm pissed the volume ended because I want to know the rest of their stories.

Characters ★
Art ★
Writing ★★

25 April 2015

A Magic Dark and Bright (ARC Review)

The Asylum Saga: A Magic Dark and Bright | Jenny Adams Perinovic
Published by: Bookish Girl Press, April 28th 2015
Genre: YA, Gothic, Paranormal, Ghosts
Pages: 368
Format: Ebook
Source: Author

She meant to help a ghost...not unleash a curse.

Amelia Dupree hasn’t seen the Woman in White since the night her brother died. 

The ghost seems to have disappeared from the woods surrounding Asylum, Pennsylvania—that is, until Charlie Blue moves into the creepy old MacAllister House next door. Amelia can’t help liking him, even though she spent her childhood thinking his grandmother was a witch. And she definitely can’t ignore the connection between his arrival and the Woman in White’s return. 

Then Amelia learns that the Woman in White is a prisoner, trapped between the worlds of the living and the dead. Devastated by the idea that her brother could be suffering a similar fate, Amelia decides to do whatever it takes to help the Woman in White find peace--and Charlie agrees to help her.

But when Amelia’s classmates start to drown in the Susquehanna River, one right after another, rumors swirl as people begin to connect the timing of Charlie’s arrival with the unexplained deaths. As Charlie and Amelia uncover the dark history of Asylum, they realize they may have unleashed an unspeakable evil. One they have to stop before everything they love is destroyed.




Oh man, this book is good. Crazy, mind-blowingly good.


I knew from page one that I was going to like A Magic Dark and Bright. It had that tense atmosphere that just makes a gothic novel. The combination of suspense, mystery, and contemporary magic hooked me right away. Parts of the book had me on edge, parts had me desperate for answers, and the romance that built between Amelia and Charlie added the perfect amount of light to balance it all.

I loved the characters, fell for them instantly. I hated the villain (and, trying not to spoil anything, it is SO obvious who the sketchy bad guy is.) I even liked one of the parentals, which never happens in this genre for me. A Magic Dark and Bright has everything I love: a string of unexplained murders; a lush setting; a creepy old house rife with secrets; interwoven history; and romance to die for. 

This book is Beautiful Creatures meets Anna Dressed In Blood meets something you've never read before. A perfect gothic mystery. Highly recommend.

Characters ★
Setting/world building ★
Writing ★★

17 October 2014

Beware The Wild (ARC Review)

Beware The Wild | Natalie C. Parker
Published by: HarperTeen, October 21st 2014
Genre: YA, Fantasy, Gothic
Pages: 336
Format: Ebook
Source: HarperTeen, via Edelweiss

It's an oppressively hot and sticky morning in June when Sterling and her brother, Phin, have an argument that compels him to run into the town swamp -- the one that strikes fear in all the residents of Sticks, Louisiana. Phin doesn't return. Instead, a girl named Lenora May climbs out, and now Sterling is the only person in Sticks who remembers her brother ever existed.

Sterling needs to figure out what the swamp's done with her beloved brother and how Lenora May is connected to his disappearance -- and loner boy Heath Durham might be the only one who can help her. 

This debut novel is full of atmosphere, twists and turns, and a swoon-worthy romance.


I've been looking for a good southern gothic book for as long as I can remember. The ones I've read, hoping for brilliance, all fell flat.  But I finally found a diamond in Beware The Wild. Set in the heart of Louisiana, this book tells the story of Sterling, a girl whose brother waked into the swamp that is more than a swamp, and the town that forgot he existed when a swamp girl took his place as Sterling's sister.

From the get go, there was just something about this book. Something enchanting and gripping and unnerving. I was sucked into the story in much the same way Phin was sucked into the swamp. I found myself rooting for Sterling, believing in her and her quest to save her brother, and I also found myself suspicious of everyone. I didn't trust Lenora May, or Darold, or Fisher - which turned out to be good instinct - and it kept me on edge, not knowing who was evil or not.

I loved the romance, too. Heath was pretty sweet, and tortured, and easy to love. He has a charm about him that reads as effortless, and I can see how Sterling fell for him. The other relationships in this book, between Sterling and her family, and her best friends, felt so authentic, like I could walk into any school and find them there, speculating about the swamp's magic and boys. Everything in Beware The Wild just felt so real.

Beware The Wild is just a wonderful book, all around, with an tensely atmospheric story of a determined girl, a lost brother, and a swamp that's as dangerous as it is miraculous.

Characters ★
Setting/world building ★
Writing Style ★★




---
(from galley:)

"Fear doesn't protect anyone. Fear only makes us more vulnerable when we should be finding ways to be strong."

4 October 2014

Unmade (Review-ish)

The Lynburn Legacy: Unmade | Sarah Rees Brennan
Published by: Simon & Schuster, September 25th 2014
Genre: YA, Gothic, Urban Fantasy
Pages: 370
Format: Paperback
Source: Purchased

Powerful love comes with a price. Who will be the sacrifice?

Kami has lost the boy she loves, is tied to a boy she does not, and faces an enemy more powerful than ever before. With Jared missing for months and presumed dead, Kami must rely on her new magical link with Ash for the strength to face the evil spreading through her town.

Rob Lynburn is now the master of Sorry-in-the-Vale, and he demands a death. Kami will use every tool at her disposal to stop him. Together with Rusty, Angela, and Holly, she uncovers a secret that might be the key to saving the town. But with knowledge comes responsibility—and a painful choice. A choice that will risk not only Kami’s life, but also the lives of those she loves most.

This final book in the Lynburn Legacy is a wild, entertaining ride from beginning to shocking end.


I had hoped to gif review this book, as I did the others, but it's just too hopeless. I finished it days ago and I still don't know what my feelings are doing. This book was wonderful and awful, it made me laugh and sob and shout at these dumbass characters. I can't review it in gifs because that would require me to be sarcastic and humourous and I feel numb and hollow. I can barely review it in words. I love this series. *lays on the floor to contemplate an existence with no more Lynburn Legacy books*

If I had to pick one gif though...



Characters ★
Setting/world building ★
Writing Style ★★




24 September 2014

The Fall (ARC Review)

The Fall | Bethany Griffin
Published by: Greenwillow Books, October 7th 2014
Genre: YA, Gothic, Mystery
Pages: 400
Format: Ebook
Source: Greenwillow, via Edelweiss

Madeline Usher is doomed.

She has spent her life fighting fate, and she thought she was succeeding. Until she woke up in a coffin.

Ushers die young. Ushers are cursed. Ushers can never leave their house, a house that haunts and is haunted, a house that almost seems to have a mind of its own. Madeline’s life—revealed through short bursts of memory—has hinged around her desperate plan to escape, to save herself and her brother. Her only chance lies in destroying the house.

In the end, can Madeline keep her own sanity and bring the house down?The Fall is a literary psychological thriller, reimagining Edgar Allan Poe’s classic The Fall of the House of Usher.


The blurb says this book is psychological thriller, so after reading Feral I was extra excited for this. But it turned out to be a gothic novel. The tone of the book, the house, the villainous love interest, the curse, the creepy doctors in their tower ... yeah. Pure gothic. That's not to say I didn't like it, because I sorta did. Sorta.

I LOVE the atmosphere of this book, I like the writing, the set up, and I'm very fond of the premise. I love Poe so of course I would like this. I even liked the set up of the book, how it flipped between different years of Madeline's life but still managed to keep some semblance of sense. I was confused by the story but not by the book itself.

But that's where my like affair with this book ends. I was interested in the curse but I wasn't attached to any of the characters enough to wish for a cure. I liked the story enough to read the whole book but there wasn't enough oomph (can't think of another way to describe it) for me to be truly interested. The Fall was flat. It was on one level all the way through. I got bored several times but I wanted to reach the end to know what happened. But that ending - was it even an ending? I'm so miffed (though happy the dog was alright in the end.)

My favourite parts of this book were Lisbeth Usher's diary. Had The Fall had more of her parts, I might have liked it much more. To sum: an okay gothic novel with a creepy atmosphere.

(as a side note, I appreciated the inclusion of a same sex relationship, even if it was only hinted at)

Characters ★
Setting/world building ★
Writing Style ★★



22 June 2014

Madly, Deeply (ARC Review)


Madly, Deeply | Erica Crouch
Published by: Patchwork Press, June 17th 2014
Genre: Gothic, Romance
Pages: 182
Format: Ebook
Source: Patchwork Press, via Netgalley

It was many and many a year ago,
In a kingdom by the sea...

Annaleigh Wells and William Calloway had a love even the angels envied. It was as if the universe spun them toward one another, like the stars crafted their souls to fit perfectly together.

With a wedding on the horizon, fate had a change of heart. Whispered warnings from phantoms and morbid nightmares darkened every night—but even visions of the future couldn’t save Annaleigh.

Inspired by Edgar Allan Poe’s poem Annabel Lee, Crouch’s period romance Madly, Deeply tells the tale of love so great, it cannot be contained in just one life.


Madly, Deeply tells the story of Annaleigh and William, childhood sweethearts whose love is emotional, moving, and doomed. It's based on Annabel Lee by Edgar Allan Poe and is as eerie and wondrously gothic as you'd expect.

I loved the atmosphere and the anticipatory tension Erica Crouch set up, how it built and built, the sense that something was very wrong. There's a great unease in this book, and it was that, coupled with the aching loveliness of the romance and the lyrical quality of the writing, that made this book something special.

I've been searching for a book like this for so long, and I'm very happy to have found Madly, Deeply. The story itself is sadness from beginning to end, the setting and world building subtle and vivid, and the characters so easy to love that you feel their pain along with them.

I didn't enjoy the end as much as the rest of the book. I found I was more invested in Annaleigh and William's relationship,  than in William's recovery ad acceptance. I was hoping, right up to the end, for a conventional happy ending, which was dumb on my part, especially since this book is based on Poe. But I enjoyed the story overall.

This book is a powerful love story sure to haunt every reader.

Characters ★
Setting/world building ★
Writing Style ★★