Tag: Maggie Stiefvater

Guest Review: The Dream Thieves by Maggie Stiefvater

Posted September 22, 2013 by Whitley B in Reviews | 0 Comments

The Dream Thieves- Maggie StiefvaterWhitley’s review of The Dream Thieves (The Raven Cycle #2) by Maggie Stiefvater.

Now that the ley lines around Cabeswater have been woken, nothing for Ronan, Gansey, Blue, and Adam will be the same. Ronan, for one, is falling more and more deeply into his dreams, and his dreams are intruding more and more into waking life. Meanwhile, some very sinister people are looking for some of the same pieces of the Cabeswater puzzle that Gansey is after…

As a novel in its own right, The Dream Thieves was pretty good. As a sequel, it was a disappointment. It felt more like an alternate version of the first book than a true sequel. All the character development got reset, entirely new concepts and people were introduced and became the focus, and stuff from the previous book had very little in the way of repercussions. A few major themes from the first book got straight-up repeated (“the ley line needs to be fixed” is not that different from “the ley line needs to wake up.”)

On the other hand, I did like this book by itself. The plot felt a lot more cohesive and focused than the first, although the writing style still gave it that dreamy, unfocused atmosphere. The author didn’t have to reintroduce all the characters, so we got to skip the chapters and chapters and chapters worth of description and backstory; that helped a lot.

I loved the concepts in this book, the creativity that the author displayed in playing with them. I also loved the low-key feel of it all. This is fantasy, but it’s a very calm fantasy, there’s very little flash-and-bang. The magic is restricted to a few magical things, and it’s treated like something real, like something that may be fantastical but that can still be played with and measured and explored. It was a very practical approach to the fantasy aspect, while still being enormously inventive, and I just love that combination.

That said, the plot did drag on quite a bit. I’m still not a fan of the writing style in this. It’s got too much fluff, too many repeated lines, too much extraneous information. This book never met a tangent it didn’t like, and it uses the same tone on everything, whether it’s a tense moment or an everyday moment. Between all the extra chapters and the lack of variance, this book felt less like a ride and more like a straight highway that goes on forever.

A few more random notes: There was very little Blue in this book, and when she did show up, she wasn’t memorable. She went from a character in her own right in the first book, to a tertiary character in this book.

The Dream Thieves is very Ronan-centric, and Adam gets some spotlight, but Gainsy and Noah might as well not even be there.

Much like the last book, while there are plenty of funny and haunting lines, there’s also a ton that are just…well…

“She made a neat rack of teeth at the Grey Man.” (48%)

If you say so.

There’s a character that does some heavy drug use, and while he is a bad guy, there are no physical consequences show. He does a line of coke, then the scene moves on like nothing’s changed. Casual drugs use is a pet peeve of mine; I feel like if you’re going to write that in, you should at least have the authorial gonads to really show it.

Another pet peeve is that a character uses “feminist” as an insult, and it came right after Blue delivered an extremely feminist-positive argument. But the message she gave gets undercut by the line “wow, you are a raging feminist,” especially since there’s no counterargument and Blue more or less folds after he says it. I know teenagers aren’t always well informed on feminism, but that doesn’t mean we adults have to reinforce the idea that speaking up like Blue did is somehow worthy of being insulted.

So, on the whole, it was a very interesting book, with a lot of really good stuff in it, and only a few things that hit my buttons. I’d still recommend it.

Grade: 4 out of 5

This book is available from Scholastic Press. You can purchase it here or here in e-format.


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Guest Review: Lament by Maggie Stiefvater

Posted January 26, 2011 by Ames in Reviews | 7 Comments

Main Character: Deirdre
Love Interest: Luke
Series: Books of Faerie
Author: Website|Facebook|Twitter|Goodreads


Sixteen-year-old Deirdre Monaghan is a painfully shy but prodigiously gifted musician. She’s about to find out she’s also a cloverhand—one who can see faeries. Deirdre finds herself infatuated with a mysterious boy who enters her ordinary suburban life, seemingly out of thin air. Trouble is, the enigmatic and gorgeous Luke turns out to be a gallowglass—a soulless faerie assassin. An equally hunky—and equally dangerous—dark faerie soldier named Aodhan is also stalking Deirdre.

Sworn enemies, Luke and Aodhan each have a deadly assignment from the Faerie Queen. Namely, kill Deirdre before her music captures the attention of the Fae and threatens the Queen’s sovereignty. Caught in the crossfire with Deirdre is James, her wisecracking but loyal best friend. Deirdre had been wishing her life weren’t so dull, but getting trapped in the middle of a centuries-old faerie war isn’t exactly what she had in mind…

A few years ago I read Tithe by Holly Black and was blown away by this world she had created. Reading Lament, I had that same blown away feeling. I was utterly swept up into this world she had created, a world like ours that co-existed with the Fae world. And these Fae are not the cute little fairies we grew up believing in. And I like that.

Deirdre is getting ready to perform in a music competition when she begins to feel her customary performance-induced nausea. She starts hurling in the bathroom when a boy that she dreamed about the night before walks into the bathroom and holds her hair back for her. Deirdre is a bit freaked out. This guy was in her dreams! And now he’s there in the flesh and he takes charge and he pushes her to give the best performance of her life. Which she does…and then his dream guy kind of disappears. And then he starts popping up all over the place and she’s falling for him. But Luke is not what he seems, not at all.

I was so caught up in the mysterious happenings around Deirdre. We’re not immediately thrown into the intrigue that’s going on with the Fae. We’re given glimpses and things start to build from there. First of all, Deirdre is finding these four leaf clovers all over the place. And then after her performance she’s freaked out by this guy (not Luke). From there, things steadily get a bit creepier. Meanwhile, we’re not sure, the reader and Deirdre both, if Luke can be trusted. Especially when we find out that he’s actually supposed to KILL Deirdre. Yikes!

With that kind of tension, I was gripped by what was going on. With all the questions I had, I felt the ending was a bit abrupt. When it was done I was like, is that all? LOL But then I found out Deirdre and Luke were going to be in Ballad, the second Faerie book, so I was ok with the way things ended. Because believe me, things are not settled for Deirdre. Not at all!

Lament gets a B+ from me. I had to go out and buy Ballad as soon as I was finished.

Buy the book: B&N|Borders|Amazon|Book Depository
Book cover and blurb credit: http://barnesandnoble.com

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What I’ve Been Reading This Week

Posted November 30, 2009 by Tracy in Features | 12 Comments

Hello there!

I hope you all had a wonderful week – whether you were celebrating Thanksgiving or not. I personally had a wonderfully quiet Thanksgiving spent at my parents house and it’s always nice to have 4 days off of work to spend time with the family. 🙂

Yesterday two of my friends and I made an improptu drive to Costa Mesa and they both drooled over the UBS New and Recycled Romances – yes the same one that the So Cal Blogger went to. It was great fun and we spent a good hour and a half just browsing, talking and having fun. I think my friend Jen bought something like 18 or 20 books. 🙂 I love that! lol

I haven’t blog hopped in about 3 weeks and I think I’m going through withdrawals! Hopefully I’ll be able to this week cuz I feel like I have no idea what’s going on with any of you! I hope you’re all well

Anyway, on to what I read this week

My first read of the week was Genesis by Jet Mykles. This is book 5 in the Heaven Sent series and it’s was pretty good. It was a New Year’s story involvoing all of the couples. I liked seeing all of the couples together and having normal every day issues like the rest of us. 3.5 out of 5

Next up was the novella Look What Santa Brought by Annmarie McKenna. This was an impulse holiday buy and it was cute. A story about a hero who’s blind and has the hots for his sister’s best friend and the best friend who is trying to get away from her incredibly possessive/psycho boyfriend who wants to take over her life. While it was cute it had what seemed like a very rushed sex scene (the only one in the story) and then the ending was very abrupt. I would have liked to see just a few more pages here and there. 3.5 out of 5

After that I read Lament: The Faerie Queen’s Deception by Maggie Stiefvater. I had very mixed feelings about the book. On one hand I liked the relationship that Deirdre had with her best friend James – even though he played a pretty small part. But I can’t say that I liked Deirdre all that much. Her easy acceptance of the whole Faerie thing was a little off-putting for me. Would a teenager really believe that quickly and not doubt? I found it odd. Then there were some unanswered questions in the story. Luke (who I actually felt sorry for) who would say “I am Luke, it’s been one thousand blah, blah, blah years – do not forget” Why did he say this? Who was he saying it to? Was he saying it just to himself? What was he not to forget? That was never explained and it drove me nuts! And (I don’t want to spoil the story so I’ll say this as vaguely as possible) the queen at the end – why her? Was there something special about her? She said she’d been waiting – but why? I didn’t get it. And the biggest question: What was the queen’s deception? Am I being obtuse? IDK. I have to say that although this book was written well it just didn’t get me emotionally involved. I ended the book going “huh, ok.” 3 out of 5

Alas my Tracy’s TBR Challenge read for the week is a fail. I bought Never Dare a Duke by Gayle Callen after reading Never Trust a Scoundrel and enjoying it. Unfortunately it sat there unread until now. I was sent Never Marry a Stranger – the 3rd book in the trilogy – for review and thought I’d read this one first. Well I just couldn’t do it. After about 20 pages I was ready to throw put the book down. The heroine is a commoner who’s father’s newpaper is failing. She decides that what the paper needs is more gossip and she wants to get the skinny on a Duke that supposedly has paid big money to keep a secret. (I won’t go into great detail but her father sounded like a pretty honorable man who doesn’t print gossip so why she thought he’d print this is beyond me.) She meets the Duke and her best friend (an Earl’s daughter) lies about who she is, so that about did me in. She’s already lied about her identity and then she’s going to scrounge into his past (and lie to get what she wants) and wreak havoc on his reputation no matter who he is – cuz people need to know and he’s a Duke, dammit. Oy. I did read 60 more pages and decided I just couldn’t do it. The heroine’s personality was so annoying to me I just couldn’t go further. DNF

Never Marry A Stranger by Gayle Callen is the next book in the Sons of Scandal series and one I read for The Book Binge. My review should post this week so I’ll alert you went that happens – I think tomorrow should be the day.

Another read for my Year of the Category Challenge was Blackmailed Into Marriage by Lucy Monroe. You can read my review here.

And my last read fo the week…yes, cutting it very close this time…was my Re-Read Challenge book – in preparation of The Dark Tide release on December 22nd I read Death of A Pirate King by Josh Lanyon. I’ll post my review tomorrow!

Have a great week and Happy Reading!


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