Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Review: Beautiful Creatures by Kami Garcia and Margaret Stohl



Set in the lushly drawn deep south of America, Beautiful Creatures is the tale of forbidden love between a mortal and a ‘Caster’. It’s Bella and Edward with swamps, voodoo, and confederate history, and the not-so-subtle twist that the whole story is told from the male mortal point of view with the dangerous supernatural love interest being female.
Ethan Wate, the sixteen year old, only son of a recently deceased professorial mother and a writer father who has surrendered to grief, is ticking off the days until he can graduate from school and leave the stifling environment of small town, Gatlin. Lena Duchannes is the mysterious new girl at school, niece of Macon Ravenwood, Gatlin’s mysterious shut-in, who lives in the town’s oldest building, which also happens to be one of the only two buildings that survived the fires that wiped out the rest of the town in the American civil war.
Ethan and Lena are drawn inexplicably to each other: he has solid southern antecedents and is accepted without question into the local community of Daughters of the American Revolution and their quiescent husbands; she is shunned, an outsider, who neither dresses nor acts the right way and drives a hearse to school.  Why they should be connected is a mystery, until, piece by piece they discover their common history and another tale of forbidden love played out as Gatlin burned.
This is a heavily textured book. The sounds, smells, humidity of the south are almost tangible. Anything seems possible in this claustrophobic hothouse and it takes little suspension of disbelief to be swept away by the outrageous actions of the town’s bigots, the voodoo charms and prayers used by Amma (who looks after Ethan), and even the spells cast by Lena’s Caster family.
 I found it harder, though, to be swept away by Ethan. This is a basketball jock who reads. Now, I confess that I don’t know how one of these would sound, but I can’t help but think that he would be more likely to opine on who should play point guard than the quantity of taffeta comprising the cheerleaders’ prom dresses or the number of bobby pins in their hair. Ethan just doesn’t come across as a sixteen year old boy, which makes the very end of the book, when the point of view switches between him and Lena, quite difficult to follow: their voices are just too similar.
Bizarrely, the love story still works in spite of this, possibly because Lena is very well drawn and the environment and atmosphere are so convincing. Essentially this is a reworking of the Romeo and Juliet story, but with large amounts of Confederate history and something akin to race hatred thrown in. As such it prompts interesting analogies with the civil rights movement and is undoubtedly revealing about the psyche of the deep south.

Originally written for writeaway.org.uk

Monday, February 1, 2010

Review: Everwild by Neal Shusterman

The fate of Everlost is at stake. Nick, the ‘Chocolate Ogre’ wants to help the children reach the light at the end of the tunnel, but Mary Hightower wants to trap them forever, and joins forces with Pugsy Capone, a death boss, who gains subject children in a terrible way. Meanwhile, Allie has gone in search of her parents and joins a group of ‘skinjackers’. But as her search takes her further away from Nick and the children of Everlost, Allie uncovers a shocking secret: it seems that ‘skinjackers’ are not actually dead.


Everwild is the second novel in a trilogy which started with Everlost a couple of years ago and will finish with Everfound next year. Readers of Everlost will welcome the reappearance of that book’s quartet of protagonists: Nick, Allie, Mary and Mikey McGill. Readers who come straight to Everwild, on the other hand, will have no difficulty in finding their bearings, courtesy of the ‘Read Me’ placed at the very beginning of the book. Both will enjoy the fast plot, character developments and revelations about the world of Everlost.
This is not a simple book. The world created is complex and raises thought-provoking questions about what it means to be alive, and what, if anything, might exist after life. And we find out about it all through the viewpoints of a group of antipathetic but well-drawn and irresistible characters. This enhances the depth of our understanding of Everlost as well as driving the pace of the plot by leaving us wondering what has happened to one group of characters whilst reading about another.  Add to this some gruesome details and spine-chilling imagery, delivered via a witty writing style, and supported by a website where the nerdier reader can immerse themselves, and you have a novel which will please a good number of teens, boys and girls alike.

Originally written for writeaway.org.uk