Wednesday 12 October 2016

Call of the Wild - Jack London

Review:

The Call of the Wild - Peter Husmann, Jack London

The story of Buck, a St. Bernard/Shepherd cross family pet, stolen and subsequently sold to become a sled dog in the harsh environments of the Alaskan wild.  Passed from owner to owner, Buck soon learns that the only way to survive is to use his sheer size to overpower any would be attackers and show them who's boss. 

 

Told from an odd combination of Buck's perspective in third person, we slowly see Buck transform from beloved family pet to the savage mutt, fighting to survive in the (excuse the pun) dog eat dog world,  finally to the wild and free dog, adopted by the local wolf population. 

 

I have to admit, I'm fond of books told from an animals perspective (Black Beauty being one of my all time favourite books), horrified at the way people treat them, heart melting when they at last have a happy ending.  Though the setting wasn't really appealing to me, I still enjoyed the story.

 

4 stars.

Original post: cafebiblioaus.booklikes.com/post/1480716/call-of-the-wild-jack-london

Tuesday 11 October 2016

Empire of Storms - Sarah J Maas

Review:

Empire of Storms - Sarah J. Maas

OMG, this arrived Friday, I absolutely devoured it. I won't bore you with the gushing about how much I love this series, and how much I'm going to hate waiting for the rest of it to be published (and how thankful I am that SJM isn't GRRM when it comes to publishing the next novel in a series, hence why I've been in no hurry to finish that series).

 

That said, the passivity of Aelin's followers bothered me a little, especially the way Dorian took a back seat to much of the planning and scheming that went on during the book, but not enough that it detracted from my enjoyment of the book.

 

5 stars.

Original post: cafebiblioaus.booklikes.com/post/1480151/empire-of-storms-sarah-j-maas

Smile - Raina Telgemeier

Review:

Smile - Raina Telgemeier

Cute graphic novel based on the authors childhood, and the struggles faced in the tween/early teen years, especially when braces are involved.  It almost felt like a walk down memory lane, though I was very lucky to have less-judgmental friends than poor Raina.  The lessons learned in this book are some that all children deal with at some point in their lives, lessons on self, friendship and accidents. 

 

After finishing this I immediately handed it to my 10yo (who happened to be home from school sick) and encouraged my 12yo to also read it when her sister had finished.  Highly recommend to girls in the same age group. 

 

4 stars.

Original post: cafebiblioaus.booklikes.com/post/1480147/smile-raina-telgemeier

Fahrenheit 451 - Ray Bradbury

Review:

Fahrenheit 451 - Ray Bradbury

Wow, just wow... This is quite the prophetic read.  

 

In a world where ignorance is indeed bliss; fast cars, inane chattering and 'the family' are all everyone needs. The threat of war is treated with such blasé disregard that no one even thinks twice about how it will affect them, because bad things only ever happen to someone else.  The parallels between the book and modern society are scary, and a stark reminder of the direction the world is headed...

 

4 stars

Original post: cafebiblioaus.booklikes.com/post/1480130/fahrenheit-451-ray-bradbury