Showing posts with label ishbelle bee. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ishbelle bee. Show all posts

27 May 2015

The Singular and Extraordinary Tale... (ARC Review)

The Peculiar Adventures of John Loveheart, Esq: The Singular and Extraordinary Tale of Mirror and Goliath | Ishbelle Bee
Published by: Angry RobotJune 2nd 2015
Genre: Adult, Fantasy, Historical
Pages: 194
Format: Ebook
Source: Angry Robot, via Netgalley

1888. A little girl called Mirror and her shape-shifting guardian Goliath Honeyflower are washed up on the shores of Victorian England. Something has been wrong with Mirror since the day her grandfather locked her inside a mysterious clock that was painted all over with ladybirds. Mirror does not know what she is, but she knows she is no longer human.

John Loveheart, meanwhile, was not born wicked. But after the sinister death of his parents, he was taken by Mr Fingers, the demon lord of the underworld. Some say he is mad. John would be inclined to agree.


Now Mr Fingers is determined to find the little girl called Mirror, whose flesh he intends to eat, and whose soul is the key to his eternal reign. And John Loveheart has been called by his otherworldly father to help him track Mirror down…
 





I enjoyed this book, but not as much as I thought I would have from reading the first chapter. The title set me up for a book 100% about Mirror and Goliath, and while it is, it's all in a very roundabout way. Example: the policement main characters are investigating a girl who was killed by the man who made the clock that Mirror's grandfather stuffed her into. The story this book told wasn't the story that the title made me expect, but it was still very, peculiarly good.

I loved the parts about Mirror and Goliath the most. Mirror's sharp, inquisitive manner and Goliath's big-bear safety made them a truly unique pair. I didn't enjoy the parts that involved other characters as much as I enjoyed M&G's chapters - this would 100% have been a 5 star rating if it'd been all those two. There's something purely interesting about them. I want to know everything about their lives, their whole stories with nothing left out.

There were a lot of things I loved about this book. I've already touched on my two favourite characters. The setting is the Victorian Era brought to life with wonderful words and lyrical similies. I highlighted huge swaths of text on my kindle - it's that good, entirely, exquisitely quotable. The story is dark and twisty and exciting, too. But I just didn't connect with a good portion of the characters, and at some parts I was reading and thought 'why are we hearing about this person? can we go back to the main story now?'. The similies, while lovely and evocative, got a little too repetitive after a while. Everything was fairy tale, or from a fairy tale, or reminiscent of a fairy tale character. This was more than likley intentional on the part of the author but it got a bit tedious towards the end. Still would 100% recommend, though.

A solid, original fantasy with writing that overflows with imagination and magic.

Characters ★
Setting/world-building ★
Writing ★★



13 April 2015

Reading round up (73)


Reading round up is a weekly journal where I record my daily reading progress, my thoughts on each book as I read it, and any books I've acquired during the week.



6th April

I read a further 24% of The Singular and Extraordinary Tale of Mirror and Goliath by Ishbelle Bee, which is amazing. I'm at 39% and loving it, even if it is getting a little repetitive with certain words (everything is fairy tale in the past few chapters) but I can forgive that because it might be changed in the final version.

7th April
Continuing my trend of random reading, I read 58% of Suicide Squad, vol. 1 by Adam Glass, Ryan Benjamin and Federico Dallocchio, which is SO GODDAMN GOOD. Probably my favourite team ever. Now that I've seen them on TV, and in graphic novel form, I am buzzing with excitement for the film!!!! Heads up: it's like 50p on kindle, so if you 1) love comics and 2) own a kindle, GET THE THING NOW.

I also read 17% of Mirror & Goliath, which I'm enjoying a little less now the novelty has worn off, and sad about it. For a short book, there's an awful lot of story threads and so many characters!

8th April

I read the last 42% of Suicide Squad which was SO COOL until the last 2 comics. Didn't enjoy them so much. There's something about what they did with Harley that, while I enjoyed the back story, made me feel really iffy.

I also read 26% of The Singular and Extraordinary Tale of Mirror and Goliath and I'm getting bored-er.


9th April

I skimmed the last 18% of Mirror & Goliath and it was okay but the first half was better than the last, and started Magonia by Maira Dahvana Headley (11%) So far I'm not sure about Magonia but I'm fair interested in the ship in the sky. Waiting for it to all kick in.

10th April

Read 19% of Magonia, bringing me to 30%, and I'm liking this a bit more. I can see where it's going and I'm fairly interested in getting there. Also Jason is a cutie and his frantic disjointedness resounds with me for a reason I'd rather not think on too thoroughly.

I also read Lois Lane: Cloudy With A Chance of Destruction by Gwenda Bond, and I continue to love Lois so so much. She's likable and unlikable at the same time and I love that. I like to think I'm the same.

11th April


Pushing Magonia aside for today, I read Rat Queens, vol 1: Sass and Sorcery by Kurtis J. Wiebe & Roc Upchurch in its entirety. IT WAS AWESOME.

12th April


Read 28% of Magonia which is really making me feel stuff. SHIPS IN THE SKY! ALOOF AND ATTRACTIVE FIRST MATES! 

Books finished this week: 4
Books DNF'd this week: 0


For review:

Lois Lane: Cloudy With A Chance of Destruction | Gwenda Bond
Another Lois Lane short! I LOVED the first one and can't wait to read more of Lois's vibrant energy.

I also got a bunch of Harper September galleys but I'll put those in the next one because lazy.

I also got these AMAZON FREEBIES:
The Singular and Extraordinary Tale of Mirror & Goliath (scheduled for 27th May)