• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer
  • Goodreads
  • Trakt.tv
  • Bloglovin
  • Feedly

artsy musings of a bibliophile

  • Home
  • About
  • Reviews
  • Features
    • Annual
      • book survey
      • horror october
      • love-a-thon
      • read-a-thon
      • sci-fi month
    • genre guide
    • monotypes vs monoprints
    • monthly recap
    • the musing mind
    • top ten tuesday
    • trend alert
  • Policies
  • Contact

Sana

Playlist: Fresh Bytes

May 7, 2014 by Sana

I’ve recently discovered not so widely known that I keep listening to over and over. So I took it to the next level and made a playlist (and a cover to go with it) out of it.

I. GUILTY PLEASURE  || BRYCE VINE
I can listen to this song over and over and not get tired.

II. ARCADIA || ACE REPORTER
Such a mesmerizing driving-on-a-deserted-road-in-the-middle-of-nowhere song.

III. FALLOUT || JERID NOWELL
Like I read somewhere, Fallout is about ‘going to war with himself in the midst of a dire situation. I could really feel it.’


IV. NEVER COMING HOME || FIENDISH HYPE
The sort of music I like to dance to.

V. THE WAY I FEEL || BESTFRIENDS
Hands up in the air now.

VI. RECKLESS || DIRTY VEGAS
Groovy.

VII. 57 BEL AIR || HEIDI FEEK
I just really like this song.

VIII. BLACK MAGIC BOY || KIM LOGAN
I can’t not listen to it.

IX. GASOLINE BATH || BORN GOLD
More please.

X. I CAN TAKE IT || KIVEN
I love the way it goes all rock in the middle.

XI. HUNGER || BORN GOLD
One can get lost in this song and I think it’s the perfect song to end the playlist with.

Fresh Bytes by Sana on Grooveshark

Like my playlisting skills? Any of the songs?

Review: The Taking by Kimberly Derting

May 3, 2014 by Sana

KDTT

ABOUT THE BOOK

The Taking by Kimberly Derting
young adult contemporary science fiction published by HarperTeen on April 29th, 2014
first book in The Taking series

A flash of white light . . . and then . . . nothing. 

When sixteen-year-old Kyra Agnew wakes up behind a Dumpster at the Gas ’n’ Sip, she has no memory of how she got there. With a terrible headache and a major case of déjà vu, she heads home only to discover that five years have passed . . . yet she hasn’t aged a day.

Everything else about Kyra’s old life is different. Her parents are divorced, her boyfriend, Austin, is in college and dating her best friend, and her dad has changed from an uptight neat-freak to a drunken conspiracy theorist who blames her five-year disappearance on little green men.

Confused and lost, Kyra isn’t sure how to move forward unless she uncovers the truth. With Austin gone, she turns to Tyler, Austin’s annoying kid brother, who is now seventeen and who she has a sudden undeniable attraction to. As Tyler and Kyra retrace her steps from the fateful night of her disappearance, they discover strange phenomena that no one can explain, and they begin to wonder if Kyra’s father is not as crazy as he seems. There are others like her who have been taken . . . and returned. Kyra races to find an explanation and reclaim the life she once had, but what if the life she wants back is not her own?

THE RATING

 

THE REVIEW

The Taking is an engaging read but only if you can get past the falling-for-my-ex-boyfriend’s-little-brother part. I couldn’t get past it and so, I’m really the only to blame for wanting to read The Taking. I read the summary, I knew she was going to fall for Tyler AKA the little brother but, I guess I just didn’t pay attention. Also, it kind of reminded me of Jacob imprinting on Renesmee and not in a good way (spoiler alert: there’s no good way).

What makes it so creepy is the fact that, for Kyra, it only has been less than a day since she was 16 and forever in love with Austin before she disappeared. For everyone else in her life, it’s been 5 years since Kyra disappeared and they’ve tried to overcome her loss and eventually moved on, because that’s life. However, for Kyra, that’s unfair because she was pretty much having the time of her life at 16 and now everything is a mess. Then there’s the mystery of what actually happened to her.

Much of the first part of the book is slow because it’s all about how Kyra feels alienated (no pun intended) from her parents and that is true. She does feel that way and no one around her seems to understand this except Tyler. So, she naturally gravitates toward him and immediately starts having all these feelings for him. Tyler, on the other hand, seems like has been waiting for something like this to happen ’cause he had a crush on her and now has a way of actually showing it which ew. I did like all those chalk drawings he did for her though, but that’s about it.

Kyra could care less about why she hasn’t aged and what happened to her which really made me want to shake her because man, why are you so disinterested in your own disappearance? Her father has all these theories about what happened to her and when he mentions it to her, she freaks out on him. Really freaks out. Her mother is another issue because she really has a hard time connecting with Kyra after so many years. Understandably, Kya is angry with her but thinking ‘she’d squeezed out her new kid’ about your mother? Not cool.

What finally pushes Kyra to investigate her disappearance is another character’s approach when he basically saves her life by warning her on time. I still don’t know how I feel about the whole alien abduction part of the story and the ending was, in a word, predictable. For the plot to work, that had to happen. It finally clicked, though, the reason why Kyra fell so fast for Tyler. Yet I just feel like the The Taking was planned in a way that it works for the story but not the characters themselves and that’s just disappointing.

THE QUOTES

‘Sometimes those few seconds of hope were worth the crash back to reality.’

Monthly Recap: April

April 30, 2014 by Sana

April was laid back and tense. In all honestly, it was pretty much an oxymoron of sorts.

LIST OF NEWSWORTHY

Nephew’s Arrival
I finally, finally an aunt to baby boy. I’ve four nieces and it’s such a different feeling to finally have a nephew in the family. He’s 9 years younger than her only elder sister and so, so adorable. He gets annoyed easily and is one of those babies who like to wake up at 2 am in the morning and wail and wail.

Days of Binge-Reading and Awe
From 3rd April to 30th April, I started and finished  Laini Taylor’s Daughter of Smoke and Bone trilogy. I didn’t think I could do it but I did and I loved every minute of it. Definitely binge-reading more series and hoping that they turn out to be as awe-inspiring as this one.

TV WATCH

I watched TV pretty sporadically but I’m caught up on most of them so that’s good.

How I Met Your Mother series finale, you sucked major balls. I shouldn’t even have mentioned it.

I’m getting bored with New Girl. I need more laughing bits.
Suits finale was EPIC and asdfghjkl.
I caught up on all of Reign and got obsessed with Torrance Coombs. My ship sank, though.
Awkward is back and I’m really glad that I can laugh on Tuesdays again which is pretty much why I watch it.
Orphan Black is back and OMFG, I love it so much.
I also started watching Faking It. I think I like it, yes.

MOVIE WATCH

April was great in terms of the number of movies I watched.

The Avengers (9/10) – I can’t even with this movie. Perfection, really. I needed amazing in my life and it delivered.
Sixteen Candles (7/10) – A classic feel good movie.
Oblivion (6/10) – Such a pretty, pretty movie but it just didn’t blow me away plot-wise. Too many unanswered questions, maybe.
21 Jump Street (5/10) – I thought it’d be way more funny than it was so, it was an okay movie.

LIST OF READS

Ha, I talked about managing to read 8 books every month and being able to get to 100 this year. And I only managed to read half of that this month. Still, not complaining because all the books I read are so freakin’ amazing.

Eleanor & Park by Rainbow Rowell
Daughter of Smoke and Bone by Laini Taylor
Days of Blood and Starlight by Laini Taylor
Night of Cake and Puppets by Laini Taylor
Dreams of Gods and Monsters by Laini Taylor

LIST OF BLOGPOSTS

I put so much pressure on myself to write reviews of all the books I’ve been reading lately and it backfired because I didn’t post anything for about three weeks. But I did manage to post other stuff so I didn’t totally fail as a blogger.

I posted a 101 on how to browse catalogs and tag titles on Edelweiss.
I posted my thoughts about characters who pull a one-eighty.
I posted a top ten Tuesday list of YA for fantasy and sci-fi movie watchers.

LIST OF BOOK BUYS

Addicted to series, hmm?

The Assassin’s Blade by Sarah J Maas
Days of Blood and Starlight by Laini Taylor
Night of Cake and Puppets by Laini Taylor
Dreams of Gods and Monsters by Laini Taylor

PLAYLIST

I listened more music this month than I listened to last month and:

Panic! At the Disco‘s Too Weird to Live, Too Rare to Die is my latest favorite album ever.
Lindsey Stirling‘s music is magic and violins and magic.
Alternative folk is a genre that I can totally see myself listening to and all because of Shelly and Twin Forks.

April 2014 by Sana on Grooveshark

How was your April?

Top Ten Tuesday: YA for Fantasy and Sci-Fi Movie Watchers

April 29, 2014 by Sana

mfttt200px
A weekly feature by The Broke and the Bookish
Ever been entranced by the jaegers in Pacific Rim? Got your mind boggled after watching Source Code? Looper? Wanted to dream within a dream (re: Inception)? Then today’s post is for you. The only movies I haven’t watched from the list are Dredd, World War Z, After Earth, and Elysium all of which I’ll probably be watching soon. But the rest are pretty, pretty amazing movies and I suggest you watch them all.
As you can probably see, I chose one element from the two chosen movies and applied it to each book. I think it’s a fun way to read something that has similar elements but nothing more than that. For instance, the movies I chose for Parallel are similar in the sense that one is about the same event from different vantage points while the other is about running from fate.

Read any of these? Loved them? Hated them? What about the movies?

P.S. Sorry that the movie posters are too small. I’m still learning all this stuff on Photoshop.

The Musing Mind: Character One-Eighty and the Love-Hate Relationship

April 26, 2014 by Sana

Ponderings with little bursts of cartoon art.

character one-eighty [ˈkarəktə wʌn-ˈeɪti]: a character’s personality makeover by the end of a book or series.

Take a deep breath and relax because everything is alright in the world. Why? Well, because the characters you love either died of plot device or changed beyond recognition to drag the plot forward. Meaning that if they are dead then let’s sob into oblivion together, but if they are unrecognizable then I volunteer as tribute to off them the hell off myself.

Choose one and I’ll oblige. (Source)

Wait! I’m definitely not exactly the person I was a year ago so why are we offing characters who’ve changed? Isn’t it their prerogative?

It is and I’ll walk with them towards that prerogative unless they’re a mere plot device. Then I’ll sure as hell will figure it out and probably hate it, too. Imagine where would Gansey be without his obsession of dead old Welsh kings, Celaena without her badassery, Peeta not in love with Katniss, or Snape choosing to die for Harry James Potter? Nevermind, scratch the last two off.

Thing is, plot-driven personality makeovers are just that. Scenarios put in place so that the end result could be achieved. Could be why I prefer character-driven stories over plot-driven ones, because then personality makeovers seem legit. More on that later. Changing a vital element of the story to fit the said story’s goal seems nothing more than a convenient way to tie everything up with a neat little bow.

Like this. (Source)

One of the main reasons why I hated Evertrue was because a certain character went through such a huge attitude makeover and to what end? As a reader, I spent so much time stressing about who’ll give up because the solution seemed close to impossible. And then for it to be solved by changing a character’s outlook on the whole thing? Not okay. Never okay. Never recovering.

When characters do a number on us, 180 to be exact, it has to be because they took our genuine lapse in not judgement to their advantage. Or because they grew up. Or because they are so well-crafted as plot devices that we notice it a little too late. The Hunger Games is a plot-driven series and yet Peeta’s personality makeover does not feel forced. It helped quicken Katniss’ character development, shook her into a reality that was unlike anything she had experienced before and during the games because there was no one left to share the horror of the games with her.

Only Cinderlla did really want to marry. (Source)

Am I saying that character one-eighties are only good to go in character-driven stories? Not… exactly. It’s more about the way they are handled than anything else. It’s the way of admiring Severus Snape by hating him one second and just being in awe of him the next. (Or in my case, just plain hating him). He’s so sadistic and loathsome that you just don’t know whose side he’s freakin’ on till the end. It would either make you go ugh or ah and it all depends on the why of it all. The journey from ‘Ah, yes. Harry Potter. Our new – celebrity‘ to ‘Always’ is seven books long of which I loved. Every. Single. Moment. Of. (Even if I hate the character to no end).

Are character one-eighties something you wish would happen more? Less? Not at all, please and thank you?
« Newer Posts
Older Posts »

Footer

Subscribe via Email

© 2011 - 2023 · theme: minimal finery · artsy musings of a bibliophile