lenorayoder's Reviews (154)

dark emotional reflective

Well damn, I’m glad her mom died too! It was hard to read about every single adult in her life failing and/or exploiting her. Absolutely plowed through this book, both interesting and well-written. I wish she’d talked more about certain things, but I think some of that would have been impossible without compromising other people’s privacy. The only reason this isn’t 5 stars is that a chunk of the last third or so of this book just feels less polished than the rest. Definitely recommend. 


Expand filter menu Content Warnings
Diverse cast of characters: No
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes

The plot and characters in this book are both really interesting. Dorian’s internal monologue and Henry’s creeping influence are both well done. Unfortunately, Wilde frequently goes on long tangents, often philosophical or referential in nature, that are a real chore to get through and don’t really feel like a part of the story. You don’t have to make your readers suffer to show that a character is insufferable. 

If you are planning to read this book I recommend this edition, the notes were informative and provided details about what was censored or changed between the early versions of the novel. It felt worth it to read this once, but I suspect I would like a good adaptation better and will seek one out. 

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adventurous dark mysterious tense
Plot or Character Driven: Plot
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: No

great children’s horror, but i’m not a child so it’s 3 stars for me. written too recently for some of the shit that’s in here - very british

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emotional
Loveable characters: No
Flaws of characters a main focus: Complicated

Better than I thought it would be, but not as good as I hoped it would be once I got into it. It's very interesting to read a fucked up relationship develop from the perspective of the people in it. They do love each other, but they're also overly dependent, unhealthy, and don't communicate well. They are the only people who understand each other, but it is because they have both engineered it to be so. On some level they both know the relationship is doomed, but they don't want to be without each other.

I found the way the author handled time travel interesting, especially the implications of Clare's
deja vu moments, and the sketch with the trimmed date
. The underlying terror that Henry almost constantly feels permeates the book, and one of the unvoiced stumbling blocks of their relationship is that Clare never really seems to understand that fear -
evidenced by the fact that she so desires to have a child that will likely have the same terrible condition
. The way Niffenegger's chosen to depict this story and time travel unfortunately means that the reader never really gets to sit with these characters, and by the end of the book I still felt like I didn't really know them, just their relationship. I wish the book was more narrow in scope, or gave us more insight into what Clare and Henry are like apart. The Time Traveler's Wife is a compelling title, but the book is not about Clare, it's entirely about Clare and Henry's relationship with everything else serving as set dressing. 

Overall enjoyed and would recommend. Sometimes the descriptions and references get a little self-indulgent and pretentious, but seeing this complex relationship evolve from the perspective of two incredibly biased narrators was always interesting and page-turning. Also,
fuck you Gomez. Cherisse, why the fuck did you marry that man, let alone have kids with him. Yikes
. I had to list so many content warnings and I didn't even get them all. 

Expand filter menu Content Warnings
informative medium-paced

A lot more focused on a married-with-kids household than I thought - I live with my sister so I was looking for something that can be adapted to that, roommates, friends living together, etc. I’ll be doing that, but the book doesn’t even mention such a situation which I think is a huge blind spot, especially since the subtitle of the book doesn’t indicate that this is just a book for married couples, and the vast majority of the time married parents. 

A little longer than it needed to be. The book spends a lot of time explaining how the author developed the method and I wish more of that time had been spent on giving examples of the method once it was in place, or how some people have personalized it. A lot of topics were repeated several times while others were never mentioned. 
adventurous funny
Plot or Character Driven: Plot
Loveable characters: Complicated
Diverse cast of characters: No

I started this book thinking it would be 5 stars. I love the movie, and I liked all the additional details/context this book gave me, and a lot of the writing is enjoyable and funny. However, parts of this book, especially the frame story, have just aged pretty badly. Parts feel racist, sexist, fatphobic, etc. all for throwaway jokes that are barely funny, if at all. Also in this 25th anniversary edition we get more frame story and a pseudo-sequel. These do more harm than good, and the author's character becomes 10x more annoying to read about - I would recommend sticking to the original story.

As the book goes on its sexist nature gets more and more obvious. I think because the movie streamlines everyone's characters Buttercup feels just as fleshed out as everyone else, but in the book it's obvious that none of the few women characters get the attention that the men do. For a book titled "The Princess Bride" it never feels like we're in Buttercup's head the way we are Inigo, Fezzik, Humperdinck's, etc. Buttercup frequently isn't really around, and when she is it feels like the author kind of forgets she's there and a person. Also
Westley slaps Buttercup???
and we just glide past it.

Given this book is subtitled "Tale of True Love and High Adventure" I also expected more romance/true love. All of the adventure in this book feels shown, while all the love feels told. Westley seems to mostly love Buttercup because she's beautiful - her beauty and that she loves him is all he thinks about when
he's distracting himself during torture in the Zoo of Death
. A lot of this didn't bother me at the beginning because I thought eventually the book would delve deeper into their relationship and we would see them interact more, but that didn't really happen. The ending of the book is all adventure that isn't as good as the Guilder sequences and cuts off abruptly. I'm left not really believing that Westley and Buttercup make it past the 3 month mark as a couple. 

This book has such huge potential and I'm glad I read it once, but now that it's done I'm honestly left hoping a woman will give it a rewrite at some point. I'm glad I have extra info to enrich the movie-watching experience. 
Plot or Character Driven: Character
Strong character development: Yes

Takes a while to get going but even the slow beginning is well-written. Every character feels like a real person. Good depiction of both the obvious and subtle mistreatment certain groups of people suffered in early 1900s Britain. That these depictions feel so real and relevant to today makes this a bit of a depressing read, but it’s worth it. Bittersweet but appropriate ending. I felt so bad for Klaus the whole time,
and I’m sad his story ended that way, even though it was realistic and the right ending for the book’s themes.


Thank god I had this on hand to read after the disappointment of the first two ACOTAR books. I was so hungry for good characters and narration and Simonson delivered. 

Expand filter menu Content Warnings
slow-paced
Strong character development: No
Loveable characters: No
Diverse cast of characters: No

Subpar characters and plot. Okay-ish worldbuilding, but I suspect that’s because a lot of this world’s elements are “borrowed” from other media. None of the twists felt shocking, and I outright predicted all but the one that involved characters I didn’t care about at all. 

Thoroughly disliked everyone except Amren. Feyre makes for an insufferable narrator. While the second half of the book was more enjoyable than the first, I’m not forgetting the 300 pages of absolute nonsense I had to wade through to get there. It was so hard to get through the first half of this book that it set me 8 books behind on my reading goal. Both books in this series are way too long for their plot - I won’t be reading anything else by Maas. 300 pages of no-plot is not okay when your characters are so bad I’m actively hoping they get killed off. 

If you love these books and think they’re the height of fantasy, know that much better is out there and you just haven’t read it yet. Please expand your horizons, you’re missing a lot. 
Plot or Character Driven: Plot
Strong character development: No
Loveable characters: No
Diverse cast of characters: No

At no point in this book was I surprised or intrigued. Neither the plot nor the characters are developed well, and a good book needs at LEAST one. Full of cliches and things I've seen before, down to
the curse
feeling like a
Beauty and the Beast
rip-off, and Rhysand's
use of body paint
being taken straight from
The Mummy
movie. Just a bunch of things I've seen before, and liked better elsewhere. 

I read this because I heard the second book was interesting and I was generally curious about the hype, but goddamn does booktok need to find better material to gush over. Not a single character in this book felt like a real person and that made it really difficult to care about anything, much less a mediocre plot. And it must be said that Feyre makes for an unpleasant narrator.
reflective

If I were more interested in nature, biology, and/or the areas of the U.S. that this book takes place in, this book would have 4 stars. I would recommend to anyone interested in the above, or who has the patience for a book that takes its time with its story. Subject matter aside, there's some really nice writing on display here.

The parts of this book from Raven's perspective are fascinating, and some of her writing and self-reflection hit really hard. There were occasional lines and sections that made me tear up, or that I felt compelled to read aloud to others. 

I would have liked this book more if it was entirely from her perspective instead of imagined animal perspectives, especially since the entire book already has a lot of talk about nature (specific plants, animals, and locations) I don't understand. I understand why those animal (mostly Fox) perspectives are there, they just weren't my cup of tea. 

I also found some of the non-linear storytelling confusing, especially since I think Raven was giving timeline clues in the form of nature details that I don't know enough to decipher (such as when certain plants are mentioned in certain scenes that I'm guessing would only be present during certain times of year).