Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Doctor Sleep- Spoilers!

(Mom... you may not want to read this one... )

Alright! I finally finished "The Shining" so I can do my review of "Doctor Sleep". Doctor Sleep just made me think so much of The Shining, that I had to read it first! Plus I wanted to do this review by being able to talk about both books and reference both books, so I had to remind myself of the realy story, and not the movie version! But with all the wedding stuff going on and work being stressful, I am exhausted lately so it took me a while to finish.. but now! Here is my review of Doctor Sleep!

First off, I should say that I am slightly biased when it comes to Stephen King books.. I own every single one of his books (including the non fiction ones) and he is one of my favorite authors of all time... with that said, however, there are one or two books of his that I did not like so I will try and be as objective as possible! =)

Secondly, the cover to this book is just amazing.. If you have not seen it yet, go look right now! I'll wait...  Welcome back!
Stephen King is pretty well known for getting good artists for his books anytime he wants pictures (which isn't very often and mostly just in the Dark Tower series) so whoever he got for this cover outdid themselves. It is just so intriguing and eye catching! I love it!

Anyways! This book is a sequel to "The Shining". Stephen King has never done a sequel before, which was another reason I was so excited about this book (besides the fact that it was done by Stephen King). It follows Danny Torrance as he is all grown up. It shows a pretty realistic view of Danny, after living through what he did when he was just 5 years old. In "The Shining", Danny's dad, Jack is an alcoholic trying to "get on the wagon", as he likes to say in the book. He had broken Danny's arm when Danny was just three years old and lost his job because of drinking so he takes a job at the Overlook Hotel to try and sober up. Once there, they meet Dick Hollarran, who tells Danny about the shining and what exactly it is. He also points out that Danny is the most powerful shining he has ever seen, so to watch out for the ghosts at the Overlook. There are dark and evil things in the hotel and they tend to crave the shining. Dick was not wrong and soon the hotel starts making their lives a living hell. Danny suffers from nightmares, sees the hedge animals moving and senses something dark lurking for him around every corner. It is Jack, however, that gets the worst of it. The hotel gets to him so that they can get to Danny. At first, Jack tries to fight it off but eventually he gives in. At the end, the spirit of the hotel takes over Jack, almost killing his wife, Wendy and Dick, who had come to help. Danny, however, gets the better of him and the hotel blows up because of a faulty boiler, taking Jack and (they hope) the evil spirit with it.

Cut to 25 years later, Danny has now become the alcoholic. Again, this is understandable. His father was one, his mother was crippled and was hardly able to work for most of her life because of what Jack did to her (he beat her with a rogue mallet) and Danny himself had never really found a place in life. He was mostly just drifting, getting into bar fights, going from town to town.  He could never stay in one place for very long because of the drinking. He still has his shining, just not as powerful as it once was. He tries to keep it mostly hidden because he is still haunted by the ghosts from the Overlook. He mostly worked in retirement homes because with his shine, he could help those that were dying over to the other side. He could see the shine in other people as well, just like Dick was able to. He had also kept in contact with Dick throughout the years, as best he could. The alcohol, however, got in the way of that as well. His low point was when he woke up one morning with a girl he barely remembered. He had spent all this money the night before on a bag of coke and getting completely wasted with this girl. When he woke up in her apartment, he met her son, who thought the bag of coke was candy. After deflecting the son from the coke, Danny takes the last of the girls money and bolts. This memory haunts him for the rest of his life and he starts to realize that he may need help. Danny finally stumbles into the town of Frazier and he feels like he is home. He immediately knows that he wants to stay there and is able to get a winter job working at Frazier's "Teenytown", a replica of the town itself, working for Billy Freeman. Danny instantly notices that Billy is able to shine a little himself, though he does not know it. It is this that keeps Danny in this town and Danny now knows that he needs to get help for his alcoholism so that he can stay in Frazier. Danny goes to his boss, Casey Kingsley, to get help. Casey had been an alcoholic himself and was currently going to AA meetings, which he gets Danny to go to. With the help of his work and his new friends, Danny does get sober. It is, of course, a hard task but he does it and he maintains it. He also gets a job at the local hospice, where he becomes known as "Doctor Sleep" (see what Stephen King did there?) because, as he has done before, he helps people cross over. Anytime he knows someone is going to die, he tells them to "Go to sleep", and he helps them die peacefully. It is because of his sobriety and because of the town of Frazier that Danny is able to help our heroine, Abra.

So! Enough about Danny. That is his life in a nutshell. I really like how Stephen King got the reader up to speed on Danny. We really didn't need to know much more about him, just that he was an alcoholic because of his father and everything that went down, that he found a town he could thrive in, that he was able to get sober (so we know that he can fight the good fight), and that he still has the shining, albeit not as powerful as before. He also shows Danny meet people that will come into play later in the story: Billy Freeman and Dr. John Dalton (who happens to be Abra's physician). All important in knowing the type of man that Danny is going to be for the rest of the story. It does show Danny struggling with alcohol the whole story, but that is the life of any alcoholic. So all in all, King did a really good job with Danny!

I have always loved how King interweaves his stories together. As we are getting to known the grown up Danny, we are also getting to know the other two important figures in the book. One is Rose, the leader of the True Knot. The True Knot is a group of people, banded together by their powers. They each have a unique power that helps the group in their quest of living forever (for example, one girl, Andi, can make people fall asleep. One can sense children with the shining, etc.) For lack of a better term, they are vampires. Instead of stealing blood, however, they steal essence. They seek out children who have the shining and steal it from them. They call it "steam". In order for them to get as much of this steam as possible from one child, they have to torture the child. The more they torture them and hear them scream, the more steam they can get from that one child. The more steam they have, the younger they look and feel. Because of their ability to get steam, they also don't get diseases and they do not get sick in any way. However, since irony is a bitch, one of their last victims, (and it is this victim that sets Abra on their path) had the measles. It festers in their blood stream for a couple years but as they run out of steam and run out of children to feed off of, the disease starts to infect them. I really love how King makes sure that the bad guys get what's coming to them. Sometimes in his stories the bad guy wins, but more often than not, the good guy wins and the bad guys get the worst punishment ever. That is so nice to see! I have always loved how good King is at writing his characters. He really makes you hate the antagonist so that when they get their comeuppance, you feel justified.

These True Knot people are just the worst kind of people. They are, of course, not really human, but they act that way. They disguise themselves as one big, happy, traveling family, traveling in winnebagos across the country as they look for kids that shine. Abra is on their radar early on. They can sense her from many miles away and Rose knows that she has to have that power. They have a few bottles of steam saved up, so they are OK for a while. But they finally start to run out of steam (pun intended.. ha), which is how they start getting sick and the measles start affecting them. As the disease progresses and starts killing off members of the True Knot, Rose tries desperately to find out where Abra is. Rose knows how powerful Abra is and knows that if she were able to get to her and torture her, the True Knot would survive forever. Abra, however, being as powerful as she is, is mostly able to keep Rose out of her mind and away from where she is. Abra is still a 13 year old girl and slips up, especially with her special ability to (what Danny calls) "turn the wheel" so that she is looking through Rose's eyes and Rose is looking through her eyes. It is because of this that Rose is able to find out where Abra is and they are soon on their way to find her and kill her. Because Abra is a 13 year old girl, I was terrified for her the whole time. I thought for sure they were going to find her. They were a powerful group, after all. And there was a lot of them, compared to just her. Of course, Abra had Danny's help and Danny had enlisted the help of Billy and John, but I was just waiting for Danny to start drinking again or to think it was too much. He had dealt with so much as a 5 year old that I didn't think he would do it again.

As I mentioned before, Abra was very strong with the shining. She had been since she was born. Since she was so young, she was never able to really control her powers and they came out in strange ones, like plastering all the spoons to the ceiling or playing the piano when she was in a different room than the piano. Her parents were never really sure what to do with her, but they loved her and were told it would pass. Abra's grandma, however, knew differently and knew that one day this ability of Abra's would get her into trouble. Abra had a special, meaningful relationship with her Grandma and it was her grandma's essence that helped to save her in the end. Because of Abra's ability, she is able to find Danny because of his shine. They become tentative friends through chalkboard messages and images flashed through their minds. Neither one is sure of what the other is and it seems to be more of a passing friendship than anything. Then the True Knot kill the "baseball boy" and Abra senses it, senses his death and is able to somewhat feel the torture he goes through. She tells Danny about this and tells him that the True Knot must be stopped. Danny and Abra meet where Abra tells him about her shine and Danny sort of becomes her teacher about it, just like Dick was to him all those years ago. I also thought it was really funny how King addressed the fact that Danny was a 40 something year old male and she was just 13, so they had to be careful who saw them. It just made me laugh that he had to address that, and when I thought about it I thought it was smart of King. I am sure if King hadn't had Danny say something about it, I would've thought to myself "well what happens if someone sees them talking? Aren't the police going to be called?" Oh what a world we live in! Of course, later in the story, King has Abra plant a thought in a friends head that she hadn't seen them, but at least King addressed the fact that it could seem odd to anyone to see an older man talking to a young girl. In any case, at the end of the story it turns out that Danny is Abra's biological Uncle so it all works out!

Anyways, Danny and Abra hatch a plan to make sure the True Knot is stopped. They of course have to get Abra's parents involved. I think that most parents would have given up with much more of a fight, but Danny and Abra (and even John) convinced them that there was no choice. These people were coming to kill Abra and they had to be stopped. It also helped that Abra was actually going to be at home, watched over by Billy while Danny, John and Abra's father did all the leg work. Abra would just "turn the wheel" and look through Danny's eyes (essentially be in his body and not really in her own) so if the True Knot sensed her, they would sense her where ever Danny was, not where she really was.

The plan works, at first, and Rose sends a team of people out to where she thinks Abra is. This team, however, is ambushed by Danny, John, and Abra's father. They kill the whole True Knot team and Rose feels each one of their deaths, getting more angry per death. Rose then thinks of a little trap of her own. She makes the seeker watch a porno so that when Abra tries to sneak a peek into where the True Knot is, she will only see that porno. This disorients Abra, not knowing what she is looking at, so much so that she is momentarily in her own body. This moment, however, allows the True Knot to see exactly where she is and Rose sends her right hand man, Crow, to go get her. Crow finds where she is, gives a powerful sedative to Billy and is able to find her at her. He kidnaps her using the same sedative, which also stops Abra from using any of her shine on him. He brings Billy with him as well because any steam will do and starts heading to where the True Knot is so they can finally have their steam. After a while the drugs wear off and Abra asks to use the restroom so she can try and contact Danny. Her head is really fuzzy and it takes a great effort, but she contacts him and tells him what is happening. She can barely function because of the drugs but is able to "turn the wheel", right as Crow drags her from the restroom back into the car. Danny is now inside Abra's mind and, as the book states, he flicks on all her thought processes. She is now as wide awake as she can be and with the help of Danny, they put an end to Crow. I really loved this scene. They make Crow shoot himself with the gun he stole from Billy and the way King wrote it, you can just feel the struggle. You can really sense what each character was going through and how hard each one pushed to try and win. In the end, of course Abra won and it was so gruesome and awesome! Good job Abra!

It finally comes down to the last battle scene. Abra and Billy make it to a hotel to sleep the drugs off and they come up with a plan. It is time to end Rose and the rest of True Knot. Rose knows that they are coming for her and Abra goads her into a final battle. Of course, of all the places it has to be, it is going to be at the remains of the Overlook Hotel, the place that has haunted Danny his whole life. It is a place called "Roof O' the World", a stair case leading to a platform about three stories up to take in the view that used to be the view from the third floor of the Overlook. He knew since that was where it started, that was where it had to end. This was, of course, fitting to any King book. If something haunts a character through the whole book, then that is definitely where it has to end. It has to be there so that the character can grow and finally move on with his life. So it is here where Rose and Abra agree to meet. Of course, it is not really Abra, but Abra through Danny's eyes. They have to do this trick again so that whenever they sense Abra, they sense that she is actually there and not back home. Rose thinks she has the advantage because as part of the final meeting, Abra had asked  her to bring the rest of the True Knot group with her, all into one room. This would be the death of all of them. Before the final show-down, King shows Danny going to Abra's grandma and helping her die. The grandma had been sick with cancer for a while and it was finally her day. Danny puts on his Doctor Sleep role and helps her pass over. Something different seems to happen in this pass over, but the reader is not really sure what. Then, when the final fight begins, the reader sees what happened.

While Danny is visiting the grandma and helping her pass over, he engulfs her essence, making it a part of himself. He traps it in a box in his mind, to be used later. That later is when he gets into the room where the rest of the True Knot is waiting. He releases grandma's essence onto the True Knot and it immediately starts to kill them. It is sort of a last hoorah for Abra's grandma, plus it is the last thing she can do to help her granddaughter. It slaughters the True Knot, infecting them with her cancer and making them all cease to exist. Rose feels every one of these and becomes a monster. She pries into Danny's mind, making him relive all his worst moments. She then takes over Danny's mind, turning him on Abra, who is also still in his mind. She makes Danny strangle Abra, doing all she can to destroy Abra. Abra, however, is much too powerful and puts a stop to Rose and shoves her out of Danny's head. Rose is then facing Danny, out in the open, on the Roof O' the World, not in their minds. She tries to make him choke himself but Danny fights it. When he was 5, he had the most powerful shining anyone had ever seen and some of that power stayed with him. He uses his shining to fight her with all his might. Rose, however, is the more powerful opponent and starts to win. She has almost won when Abra comes full force into Danny's mind. Just like when they had to fight Crow, they put their minds together and push at Rose with all their might. They push at Rose until finally, she falls off right onto her head, killing her almost instantly.

What a good story! I loved it so much! A lot of the time, Stephen King bores me at the beginning and I just have to grin and bear it because I know the ending will be good, but this book started off at a full run. It was exciting from the very beginning (starting off with Danny still young, still being haunted by the Overlook) to the very end. The characterizations were great, as they always are. That is the main thing, I think, that I love about King. He is just so good at characters. He knows how to write them well so they grow up before your eyes. So that they change, become mature and better people. There is also the opposite: he shows them weakening, becoming worse people, terrible people. King is just really great at showing any sort of progression in characters. I also like how he showed (in The Shining and Doctor Sleep) that they were still children. Even though they had to deal with all the adult stuff, he showed them crying, freaking out, not sure what to do. But he showed them being brave. I like to think that there are kids out there that would be like that in the face of danger. I loved Abra as a character. Even in the end, when it showed her bratty teenage years, I still liked her. I don't think King will ever do a trilogy, but I would love to know more about Abra and see her become and adult and see what she does with her shine. I would recommend this to anyone, not even just King fans. You don't really have to read The Shining to understand it, either. It goes into Danny's past a lot in this book, so you are aware of what happened and what kind of father Jack was. It was also a moving story, Danny shows his love to Abra before and after he finds out he is her Uncle. It shows that he really is a good man, despite the bad things he has done. He is trying to make up for them as much as he can. He just wants to be there for Abra and to help protect her and he does the best he can.

 Definitely 5 stars (shines?) in my book! (another pun totally intended!)

Up next: "The Meaning of Night: A Confession". by Michael Cox

(I've decided that I can't read The Coldest Girl in Cold Town... the title really bugs me and it has bored me so much with just the first few chapters that I am over it. I have read too many good books lately to want to read that.. so if you were really curious.. go read it yourself! )

Happy reading!






Friday, October 11, 2013

Just a heads up!

Hello those of you that read this! =)

Sorry it has been a while since I have done a review, but I did finish "Dr. Sleep" and I love love loved it! So I had to read "The Shining" right afterwards and it is so fun seeing all the connections and what not! So I was going to wait to finish "The Shining", then I was going to review the two of them together! So yay!


Monday, September 23, 2013

The One I Left Behind- Jennifer McMahon (spoilers!!!)

Alright I have read a few books by Jennifer McMahon and they are normally pretty good books, but I was disappointed in this one. Out of her books it was the one I liked the least.

The main character of the book is a woman named Reggie. She is a world famous architect who has a problem being in any sort of relationship because of how she was raised. The book goes back and forth between Reggie at age 13 and Reggie as an adult. The reason the book jumps back and forth like this is because the book circles around the story of the "Neptune" killer and how it affects Reggie. A few chapters of the book are also excerpts from "Neptune's hands", which is a book within the book about the Neptune killings. These chapters seemed very pointless to me. They didn't move the story along at all and did nothing for the plot. They just seemed unnecessary and the book would have been the same without them.

The book starts with Reggie getting a call from her aunt, Lorraine, telling Reggie that her mom, who had been missing for 25 years, had been found. Reggie is reluctant to go home because of bad memories from her childhood, but knows she must. When she gets home, her mom, Vera, is mentally gone. She remembers some names and some faces, but mostly just repeats the same few lines over and over again. It's in this chapter that we learn that Vera was Neptune's last victim. Neptune's normal MO was to kidnap the victim, cut off her right hand, leave that at the police station, the. Due days later leave the naked body out in public for everyone to find. Vera's body, however, was never found; she had just disappeared.



Alright sorry everyone but I can't do this.. ha I just did not care for this book at all. In a nutshell, Reggie can't sustain a relationship because her mom, Vera, slept around a lot. Reggie never knew her father and when Vera was kidnapped, Reggie was raised by her bitter aunt, Lorraine, and Lorraine's significant other, George. George holds a candle to Vera and takes care of Reggie as if she were his own. Reggie was also a cutter as a child and never told anyone and never for help for it... however as an adult she is totally fine and basically got over it. Is that even possible? How does someone get over something like that without professional help?

So 25 years later, Vera is found and the Neptune killer returns. Reggie returns back home to help her mom and once the Neptune killer targets Reggie's old best friend, Tara, Reggie decides to find the killer on her own (of course because she knows way more then the cops). She looks through old clues and talks to people who were involved in the previous case and thinks she has solved it. There is, of course, a twist ending. After telling, George her theory, we discover that George is the Neptune killer by such a mundane detail that he had carved a trident into a wooden duck he had made. We also find out that George is Reggie's real father. Once again, of course he is. I knew that once the author started talking about him and about how nice he was to Reggie. Of course he was. Why else would be speak sweet nothings to Vera and try to get her attention. He also paid a lot of attention to Reggie; more so than an uncle would normally pay to his niece. In the end, Reggie saves the day and uses her architect super powers to get her and her friend Tara out of the clutches of Neptune. Yes... architect super powers...

All in all it was just a very predictable story. The characters have no growth and Reggie seems to get better after this new set of tragedies. It was just so strange that all this happened and she was all of a sudden "I can totally have a relationship now! I'm an adult!"

So I would recommend Jennifer McMahon's other books (promise not to tell, island of the lost girls) but this one was def meh compared to those.


2 mehs

Up next! "The coldest girl in cold town" by Holly Black or "Dr. Sleep" by Stephen King (squeeeeee!!!!) Whichever one I finish first!



Friday, September 6, 2013

Melissa Marr: "Graveminder" (spoilers!)

Ok I just finished this book yesterday, so I thought I could start off my review blog with this one!

This is a book about a small town called Claysville that has made a pact with Death. As long as the people in the town keep the dead in the ground, Death will keep them safe and healthy.,there are, of course, a few catches. There has to be a "Graveminder", who (as the name suggests) minds the graves.  They have a bond with the dead and want to be a part of the world of the dead. They also tend the graves to make sure the dead don't rise. It is always a woman and it is always passed down through the same (in this case the Barrows) family. The woman, sadly does not really have a choice: they either die or they become the next Graveminder.  No one born in the city can ever leave, either. They are destined to live and die in that one place. I liked this concept for the story; the fact that a town can make a deal with death was very intriguing to me. One usually thinks of deals with the devil, not deals with Death.

The main character of the story, Rebekkah, is basically an outsider; her and her mom moved to the city when Rebekkah was in high school. Her mom fell in love and married Jimmy Barrow. Jimmy's mom, Maylene, and Rebekkah became really close, Rebekkah deciding to adopt the last name Barrow. Maylene did have a biological daughter, Cissy, and two grand daughters but did not trust them with the task of grave minding. Maylene treated Rebekkah as one of her own and taught her everything she needed to know about grave minding. Cissy was not happy about this and hated Rebekkah from the very beginning. Towards the end I was getting confused, however, why Cissy was so upset that she couldn't become the Graveminder. Everyone that talked about it, talked about how what a burden it was, and how they should have a choice in the matter. And yet Cissy wanted it no matter what. Why was she so different then everyone else? I can understand it was supposed to be passed down to blood relatives, but the current Graveminder can also choose. I would think that Cissy would be happy not to have the burden and to let her daughters live normal lives. Granted they do make her out to be a bit crazy in the end, but it still doesn't really explain why she was so upset that she (or one of her daughters) didn't get the "burden" of being the Graveminder.

The other part of the story has to do with a person known as "the undertaker". The undertaker is in
charge of keeping the Graveminder safe and bringing her between the two worlds of the living and the dead. The undertaker in this story is Byron Montgomery. Byron has been in love with Rebekkah since she first moved to town. Rebekkah, on the other hand, has never liked to be tied down or "trapped", as she puts it. Byron and Rebekkah met when Byron started dating Rebekkah's sister, Ella. Ella was supposed to be the next Graveminder after Maylene, but Ella fell too hard for the dead world and decided to die to be a part of it as opposed to living. When Ella died, the task fell to Rebekkah, Maylene trusting her over her own daughters. Byron and Rebekkah are in a sordid relationship for the next few years, Rebekkah finally asking to be cut off completely. Byron agrees but pines for her for the 8 years she is away from Claysville. Once she comes back he immediately tries to win her over again. Byron sort of annoyed me in this book. He was like a whipped puppy and nothing ever changed that, no matter how crappy Rebekkah treated him. It just made me mad that he was so devoted to her even though she constantly pushed him away. At some point we do learn that the current Graveminder and undertaker are drawn to each other, but it still made me mad now hard Byron tried. After a while I just wanted him to stop caring so much because Rebekkah was kind of being a bitch to him. In the end she does admit that she has loved him all along and that she just
couldn't admit it until then, but that made me a little more upset because she seemed to be playing games with him the whole book. She would entice him with kisses then sex, then say "nah.. Just kidding..". So it was just really frustrating. And Rebekkah didn't really seem to grow as a person/character. Yeah she admitted she loved him, but she still seemed like the kind of person who would tease him then run away. I feel Byron was being very stupid and she was just playing with him.

After being gone for 8 years, Rebekkah comes back to Claysville because she has learned of Maylene's death. Byron tells her it was murder and they team up to try and find out what had happened to her. They soon learn their jobs, having been kept in the dark until now, and what it means to the town. They also discover that the reason Maylene was dead was because someone had not tended a grave properly. When they graves are not tended properly, the dead rise and are drawn to the graveminder. The graveminder then has to take them back to the world of the dead. The dead, however, are hungry and Daisha just wanted to feed, which she did whole heartedly. Maylene had been killed by the walking dead. Byron and Rebekkah discover this walking dead girl, known as Daisha, has been going around town biting and killing people, trying to quench her hunger. It is now their job to find this walking dead and stop her before she does more damage to the town. My favorite character was Daisha and I wish there was more of her. She was a good character with good development, even if she was a flesh eating monster. I really liked now she would remember more of her living world the more human flesh she ate. It was an interesting concept and at first I thought it was going to make her turn back to human. Instead, Daisha extracted revenge on those that caused her death.

The big twist at the end of the story is when the reader finds out that Cissy is behind all the deaths. We find out that Cissy is the one who messed up the graves and who made sure they weren't mended so that the dead would rise hungry. She was trying to get rid of Rebekkah so that she could take over the graveminding business. I was actually surprised by this ending. The author does show that Cissy hates Rebekkah and that she is crazy, but not that she is capable of murder. The author also doesn't spend a lot of time on their relationship, so I somewhat forgot about Cissy as I got to the end of the book, which was most likely the point.

The book ends with Rebekkah and Byron finding a nest of recently dead people that Cissy has brought back to kill Rebekkah. Rebekkah turns the tables on Cissy, though, because the dead are attached to her and not Cissy. Rebekkah sicks the walking dead on Cissy then takes them all back to the land of the dead. Both Byron and Rebekkah embrace their new roles in life and vow to keep the town safe and the dead from rising.

All in all I really enjoyed this book. It was a different type of story then one I've read before and I really like that the ending was a bit of a shock to me. I thought that the end that Cissy got was fitting for all the people she was at fault for killing. I didn't like Bryon and Rebekkah's relationship and it some parts it just felt forced. I also wanted to shake Byron and tell him to wake up! One other thing I didn't like was how Rebekkah wasn't sure about anything or really anyone and didn't want to commit to anything or anyone for almost the whole book, then just accepts everything and professes her love to Byron. I felt it was a huge change and it just happened in like a day, which was unrealistic to me.
But again, a book I enjoyed and one I think I will read again in the future.

4 out of 5 stars.  :)

Next book I am going to review: "the one I left behind" by Jennifer Macmahon

Have a good night!


















Intro

Well my friend Mackenzie started a blog and in one post she reviewed a book... So I thought, "well I read a ton of books and I read them pretty quickly, so why not start a book review blog,"
So that's what this is going to be! I probably won't review any of the books I've read in the past, unless I read them again (which I am want to do, so we shall see!) but going forward I will review the books that I have read!

There will probably be spoilers, but I will try to warn on each entry if there is..
So enjoy! And hopefully this will get some people to read more books!

Happy reading!