Showing posts with label the girl at midnight. Show all posts
Showing posts with label the girl at midnight. Show all posts

Sunday, September 10, 2017

Review: The Savage Dawn (The Girl at Midnight #3) by Melissa Grey

Firstly, thanks to Date a Book for this review copy <3



Date Read: August 15 - 20 2017
Date Released: July 6th 2017
Publisher: Hachette Australia (Atom)
Source: Review copy via publisher
Genre: Fantasy
My Rating:

Synopsis:
"The sides have been chosen and the battle lines drawn.

Echo awakened the Firebird. Now she is the only one with the power to face the darkness she unwittingly unleashed . . . right into the waiting hands of Tanith, the new Dragon Prince. Tanith has one goal in mind: destroy her enemies, raze their lands, and reign supreme in a new era where the Drakharin are almighty and the Avicen are nothing but a memory.

The war that has been brewing for centuries is finally imminent. But the scales are tipped. Echo might hold the power to face the darkness within the Dragon Prince, but she has far to go to master its overwhelming force. And now she’s plagued by uncertainty. With Caius no longer by her side, she doesn’t know if she can do it alone. Is she strong enough to save her home and the people she loves?

Whether Echo is ready to face this evil is not the question. The war has begun, and there is no looking back. There are only two outcomes possible: triumph or death."

---

It’s always so hard to review the last book in a series. There’s so much to say and yet I can’t talk about most of it because it would spoil the journey that was taken. And what a journey The Girl at Midnight has been. From the moment Echo first appeared on my doorstep back in 2015 to the very last page of her saga in 2017, I have been invested in her story.

Once upon a time Echo was just a simple human girl in an Avicen world and all she wanted was to eat sweets. But then prophecies, destiny and an ages old war swept her up in magical mayhem and Echo is no longer simple human girl stealing sweets. Watching her become this increasingly selfless heroine was an interesting progression. It was a bit jarring seeing her throw everything down to save a friend with no hesitation at all; she hit the ground running from the first page of the book. Echo continues taking on more of the burden, the responsibility of needing to save the world solely resting on her shoulders. It was definitely exhausting reading from her POV sometimes because she wanted to do everything herself, not letting others around her in to help. But can we blame her when she’s the Firebird?

Grey has done an absolutely stellar job of including a cast of wonderful and diverse characters with their own storylines. I can tell you that a number of books I’ve read have included diversity for the sake of having it, like the author felt it had to be included to tick off a box. Those occurrences come off as forced and unnatural and honestly those books would’ve fared better without the so called ‘diversity’. This series though? Done so well. We’ve obviously got the glaring race issue of Avicen versus Drakharin but amongst that there’s LGBTQ representation throughout. And you know what? These characters aren’t cast aside, they’re front and centre, with their own stories and perspectives and HUGS ALL AROUND. I loved Ivy’s gentleness, Dorian’s steadfast and unending loyalty, Jasper’s confident façade that hid his vulnerabilities.

I’m biting my lip just thinking about the romance. So much build-up throughout the series and MY SHIPS. I just… nope can’t even with the feels. Sweet and lovely and bittersweet and fleeting and enduring. I’m sorry I can’t really string together proper sentences so I’m just flinging adjectives at you. These are my emotions in full swing *massive sigh*.

The plot continues with the Kucedra’s wrath threatening the world and the Firebird racing to stop it. I’m not going to lie and say it’s anything mind blowingly complex but it’s a story that we’ve heard a lot and doesn’t tire – giving one’s people a chance, of being sick of needing to hide and the ambitious means to be great. Execution style? Not graceful or ideal but in the eye of the beholder’s clouded judgement well… Do I even make sense? I’m just going to carry on now.

ANYWAY. I love Grey’s writing style. She’s not flowerly but there’s a poetic ease in the way she writes that gets her point straight across. It’s effective and she uses that technique of bringing together many meanings that can’t be expressed by a single word in the English language, through a foreign word. I loved it and was scrambling to commit these lovely words to memory as they rolled off my tongue.

It’s a story filled with magic and heartache, lives are lost and sacrifices made. With Grey’s lovely writing directing Echo to the end we experience happiness, love, loss and in those final pages, a bittersweet edge that for now it’s the end.

Saturday, July 16, 2016

Review: The Shadow Hour (The Girl at Midnight #2) by Melissa Grey

Firstly, thanks to Hachette Australia for this review copy <3

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Date Read: June 15-27 2016
Date Released: July 12th 2016
Publisher: Atom (Hachette Australia)
Source: Review copy via publisher
Genre: Paranormal
My Rating:

Synopsis:
"Everything in Echo's life changed in a blinding flash when she learned the startling truth: she is the firebird, the creature of light that is said to bring peace.

The firebird has come into the world, but it has not come alone. Every action has an equal and opposite reaction, and Echo can feel a great and terrible darkness rising in the distance. Cosmic forces threaten to tear the world apart.

Echo has already lost her home, her family, and her boyfriend. Now, as the firebird, her path is filled with even greater dangers than the ones she's already overcome.

She knows the Dragon Prince will not fall without a fight.

Echo must decide: can she wield the power of her true nature--or will it prove too strong for her, and burn what's left of her world to the ground?

Welcome to the shadow hour."

---

The Shadow Hour is one of my most anticipated releases of 2016 because The Girl at Midnight was one of my favs of 2015. I’m not sure what to say about TSH – while I certainly enjoyed it, I didn’t think it wow’d me enough. I think this is because it took me so long to read it, partially because as I had so much going on in my life, but also because the story didn’t progress in a way that had me going “just one more chapter” whilst reading before bed.

The story opens with our gang hiding after the ending of book 1. The new threat that looms is the universe’s way of balancing Echo’s power and it’s basically this that drives the plot of book 2.

Whilst Echo is still witty in TSH she’s definitely a lot more subdued – which is expected given the circumstances. Don’t get me wrong, it’s the perfect character progression on Grey’s part but at the same time I missed her sarcasm and banter which brought so much life to TGaM. Echo is suffering internally – with what she’s become, with new responsibilities heaped upon her, and what’s to come. It’s a lonely ride for her as nobody really understands what she’s going through. I liked the way slowly accepts many things but is also willing to fight for what she hopes she can change.

I quite liked the glimpses into the Avicen and Drakharin worlds through Ivy, Rowan, Jasper, Caius, Dorian and even Tanith. They may be slight, but through slips in conversation and thoughts between these secondary characters I felt like I understood a bit more of their way of life prior to the mess. I loved the bonds of friendship that deepened between our gang, especially the understanding that developed between Ivy and Dorian.

Speaking of Dorian *bites lip* ohohoho MY SHIP. Dorian and a certain Avicen in this book had me smiling so much. Seeing these two trying to find a comfortable common ground was so endearing. At times it was a little too much push and not enough pull. But at some point, our shy Drakharin begins to slowly come out of his shell and our flamboyant Avicen responds in kind. FLAILLLL. As for my other ship? Well Echo is quite rightly indecisive in this book and my heart hurt for the guy I’m rooting for and I’m holding out hope in The Savage Dawn for them. I am so appreciative of Grey for writing a swoony romance in lieu of my other ship.

I think the plot in the first half of the book was what dragged it down for me. Not enough was happening – there were attacks, there was plotting but for some reason the pacing was off for me. I felt like there was something missing that gave TGaM that extra oomph. However, the book really picks up in the last quarter and the ending is INTENSE. Like knocked me off my feet and had me like omggggggggggggg what I NEED THE SAVAGE DAWN intense. There’s like darkness and pew pew and pow pow and boom and POOF ohmygod who died (did somebody die? You’ll have to read to find out). Whew that ending was so awesome. IT’S A CLIFFHANGER *cries* Can I please have the last book now?

My favourite aspect of this series though, is Grey’s writing. It’s descriptive and lush in an unassuming way. The way she teaches the reader words in foreign languages and puts in the definitions fits the situation so well. It’s not pretentious – it feels so natural and really adds substance to the story. The way she utilises 3rd person POV to describe character emotions too, adds dimensions to characters that, from Echo’s POV may seem unreadable. Grey’s style is definitely a highlight and what makes this series really standout.

While faltering in pace at the beginning, the strong character development, exploration of relationships and cliffhanger ending wrapped up in Grey’s elegant prose, makes The Shadow Hour an enjoyable sequel.

Tuesday, April 28, 2015

Review: The Girl at Midnight (The Girl at Midnight #1) by Melissa Grey

Firstly, thanks to Hachette Australia for this review copy <3

(Also, my sincere apologies I never got the time to paint my nails for the competition.)



Date Read: March 15 - 19 2015
Date Released: April 28th 2015
Publisher: ATOM
Source: Review copy via publisher
My Rating:

Synopsis:
"Beneath the streets of New York City live the Avicen, an ancient race of people with feathers for hair and magic running through their veins. Age-old enchantments keep them hidden from humans. All but one. Echo is a runaway pickpocket who survives by selling stolen treasures on the black market, and the Avicen are the only family she's ever known.

Echo is clever and daring, and at times she can be brash, but above all else she's fiercely loyal. So when a centuries-old war crests on the borders of her home, she decides it's time to act.

Legend has it that there is a way to end the conflict once and for all: find the Firebird, a mythical entity believed to possess power the likes of which the world has never seen. It will be no easy task, but if life as a thief has taught Echo anything, it's how to hunt down what she wants . . . and how to take it.

But some jobs aren't as straightforward as they seem. And this one might just set the world on fire."

---

"But war makes monsters of us all, and the people who least deserve it pay the highest cost."

I’m happy to say that so far, 2015 is a really good year of YA debuts. I’ve been pleasantly surprised by so many releases and The Girl at Midnight doesn’t disappoint! I will warn you though that The Girl at Midnight DOES hold some similarities to Daughter of Smoke and Bone by Laini Taylor and I think it’s marketed that way. That doesn’t mean tGaM doesn’t have its own unique qualities.

I really wasn’t sure what to expect when I started tGaM but I knew that I immediately liked the MC. At just 7 years of age, Echo left her family which is hinted abused her. She resides in the New York Library when the seer (the Ala) of a species called the Avicen finds her and takes her in. Ever since, she’s called these bird-featured people her family but she still feels out of place as a human. These Avicen have been in a centuries old war with dragon-featured people (like humans but with scales on their cheeks) called the Drakharin and supposedly something called the Firebird can stop the war. And what do you know, it’s Echo’s journey to find it!

I immediately fell in love with Echo and her voice. She is so sarcastic and snarky but also an extremely loyal person with morals. Despite being a thief she actually does try to do the right thing (steal from the rich give to the poor?) and I loved the way she protects her friends. The best thing about Echo is she knows when to run. That is so important in books like these. More often than not, the protagonist tries to act the hero and plunges herself into a situation that she can’t get out of because for some unknown reason, even though she can’t fight, she thinks her jumping in will help… Yeah no. As a thief, Echo has honed her skills for running and she can run FAST. Sticky situation? Echo doesn’t stick around to find out how she’s going to get pummelled, she runs! I also loved her motives for finding the Firebird what with her need to fit in. She tries to use humour/sarcasm when the situation is too serious/deadly and I loved that because it’s her coping mechanism. I can relate to this because I do it too and I think sometimes people in real-life don’t get that about me. She’s just a great character overall.

I really loved the secondary characters and friendships in this. The Ala who is like a mother-figure to Echo, Dorian whose loyalty to his prince goes beyond that of a Captain of the Guard, and Echo’s best friend Ivy who is so sweet and just this constant in Echo’s life no matter what. Add on the flamboyant Jasper who adds some colourful flavouring and Grey really has me invested in this motley crew!

Cringe time. Love triangle. Yup. I’m sorry to break it to you but there IS a love triangle but to be honest I could easily see who was the clear love interest. I thought it was awesome that there was no real bad guy that made it so easy for Echo to choose. Either way, there was one clear winner and he made me swoon so much. So he might be a little cliché with regards to male love interests of this genre but oh he’s lovely and beautiful and sweet and gosh WHERE DO I FIND ONE?

The plot was very well thought out with these clues placed throughout for Echo to follow. Yes it may have been a bit coincidental but the way Grey writes is so fun and action-packed you just speed through and overlook all the flaws. I couldn’t put this down and I’ll admit that while one of the major plot points was very predictable, I did get a bit of a shock at another.

Overall, I enjoyed The Girl at Midnight so much! Grey’s writing is fun but also beautiful, Echo is a fabulously snarky protagonist, the love interest is swoony, the friendships are so great and add in an action-packed plot and you have a recipe for a wonderful book one in a series. What a great debut!

"Schwellenangst... The fear of starting something new,"