Tuesday 16 August 2016

TOP 5 | Books I'd Immediately Buy Myself For My Birthday

Hello guys!

Since it's my birthday today (yay, I hate every second of being an adult), I decided to make a little selfish post about the books I'd buy for myself immediately if I had the chance.


Erin Morgenstern

This story about a circus that arrives without warning and opens only at night is something that's been on my TBR list for ages.


Patricia Highsmith

The story about Carol and Therese that was made into an award winning film simply had to make this list.


Naomi Novik

I cannot even describe how I long to read this fantasy novel. It's been up high on my TBR list for months now.


Colleen Hoover

Does this choice even need explaining? I simply live for CoHo novels, and I've read so many positive reviews on this one that I just need to read it.


David Levithan

This LGBT book about two boys trying to set the world record for the longest kiss simply couldn't not be on this list, right? Especially when I know how good Levithan's writing is from Will Grayson, Will Grayson.


So, now that I shared my birthday wishlist with you, I have to ask you! What are the TOP 5 books you'd buy yourself for birthday? And have you read any of the ones on this list?

Tuesday 9 August 2016

REVIEW | Lost and Found by Nicole Williams

Nicole Williams
Genre: YA, NA, romance
First published: 2013
Pages: 354
Language: English
Type: e-book

Rating: 4/5

In this novel, we meet eighteen years old Rowen Sterling who is the epitome of a bad girl. She smokes, drinks and sleeps around more than she, according to the opinion of her mother, should. Her dream is to study at an expensive art school, which her mother agreed to pay for under one condition—she is to work at a Willow Spring Ranch in Montana during her summer holidays. And as it always goes in these kinds of books, she meets the literal god sent on Earth, Jesse Walker.

This book is seriously all I could ask for from a romance novel. A troubled girl that meets a perfect boy and it ends in a love that could move the mountains. Excelent content for someone like me. I have to say, though, it was really, really predictable at times. I just knew exactly what was going to happen next, I've seen it all before. Love triangles (even though in this case it was more like a hexagon) and terrible dark secrets from the past, perfectly cliché. And yet, this cliché story made me feel things that I sure didn't sign up for.

Jesse Walker is the typical romance novel boy. Unrealistically perfect in every way. From the way he looks to the way he talks, you just can't help but love every single thing about him from the very first second of his appearance in the story. He doesn't only look absolutely gorgeous, with his blonde hair and big muscles and cowboy hat and white shirt, he also somehow treats everyone with kindness and always seems to have literal rays of sunshine shining out of his butt and always knows the right thing to say. Guys like him are the reason I will die alone surrounded by a pack of angry chihuahuas, because guys like that are setting me unrealistic expectations on mankind. 

Rowen is a great character, too. I mean, in the beginning, I was kind of really not into the way she was behaving, but then I somehow really started understanding the why's of her actions (even though I cannot say I would approve of them). I'm just really glad things worked out the way they did for her in the end.

Other notable characters are definitely Rose, Jesse's mother, who's full of wise words and knows exactly when to let them out (much like her son). Josie, Jesse's ex-girlfriend who gives the city girl a chance and becomes her good friend. And then there's Garth, this dark kid who seems to have no soul. He was actually one of the best character developments I've seen, cliché as it was. I actually kinda liked him the whole time, but he had shown he's not the soulless thing everyone thinks he is, and I loved that about him. Yes, please, let me drown in this kind of cliché. It never really gets old, does it?

So, what I was trying to do by writing this review was to get all of you to read this. Go give it a chance. I'm almost positive you won't regret it. Everyone needs this kind of romance in their lives. I'm definitely going to continue reading the Lost and Found series.

Do you know this book/series? Have you read it? What are your thoughts? Share them with me in the comments!


Tuesday 2 August 2016

REVIEW | If You Find Me by Emily Murdoch

If You Find Me
Emily Murdoch
Genre: YA
First published: 2013
Pages: 314

Language: English
Type: paperback

Rating: 3/5

In this book, we meet Carey, a fourteen-year-old who had spent a huge amount of her short life living in the woods with her drug addict of a mother. She also had to take care of her little sister for six years, from feeding her to teaching her clock and reading.

Their lives completely change when two strangers arrive at the place they call home and take them away. One of them turns out to be Carey's father, who, as Carey's mother claims, had beaten both her and the little Carey, which ended in the drug-addict bipolar mother taking her daughter away. The girls find themselves in a house with real beds, real food and, most importantly, real family, consiting of Carey's father, his wife and her daughter Delaney.

This book is really powerful. The whole concept is giving me chills because it could as well be a real-life story. Children disappear every single day, most of them are never found, and then there's Carey, who finds enough strength not only to survive, but to take care of another tiny human being as well. The story is absolutely amazing (I mean, if it's even possible to call such a tragic thing amazing), and even though I would have welcomed if there were mentioned more scenes from the girls' lives in the woods, I cannot really complain about the complexity of the story.

Another absolutely great thing are the characters. They're real. Like, real real. Their actions are in a way apt (according to the circumstances) and — even though I'm absolutely not justifying their actions — understandable. There's, for example, Delaney, who at first despises Carey for coming into her life, but is, in fact, a really nice girl who just basically feels like she comes second after her new stepsister — and, undestandably, doesn't like it. In overall, the few characters that appear in the book are well thought through, even though some of them would maybe deserve a bit more of page-time. It's the same like with the woods scenes. The book was kind of too short.

Now, you may be wondering: 'If she praises the book so much, why did she only give it four stars?'

The answer is pretty simple. (I actually considered giving the book three stars, but then I changed my mind.) I had a few issues with it. One of them being the writing style I couldn't somehow click with, even though there wasn't anything remotely bad with it. We just all have writing styles that don't fit us perfectly, and this was the case for me. 

The second thing is, Murdoch somehow managed to confuse me at the beginning about the girls' ages and parents. All I could think of for the first seventy pages — which absolutely distracted me from what I was reading — was 'who the hell is Nessa's father?' because Emily made it clear there were a few years between Carey leaving her father and Nessa being born, but then Carey said something about the three of them sharing DNA, and maybe I'm just not as bright, but it actually did confuse me and I had to read the actual line confirming my theory before I believed it was true. There's a difference between giving readers space for deducation based on facts they're presented and confusing them by not telling them things straight away. (Wow, I sound really bitter, don't I? I'm not, I liked the book, really.)

So. I recommend this book to all of you. It's a really nice read full of wise words, pretty words and much, much more. Have any of you read this book? Are you planning on reading it? What are your thoughts on it? Share them with me in the comments!