Top Ten Tuesday #30

Hosted by: Jamie from Broke and the Bookish

This Week's List:
August 13: Top Ten Best/Worst series enders

My favorite series enders were ones that wrapped up everything nicely and gave me all the answers I wanted.  Even if a character I loved died I was still content with the ending.

My least favorite series endings were the ones that didn't answer any of my questions or just seemed like a filler book (Sookie Stackhouse #13).  I just remember being very disappointed with those five.  I still enjoyed them, but I was left wanting more.

What are your picks?


{Review} Sweetly by Jackson Pearce

Pages: 310
Publication date: August 23, 2011
Publisher: Little Brown Books for Young Readers
How I got the copy: ARCycling for review 
Rating:  4 Stars
  
     
  
From Goodreads:
As a child, Gretchen's twin sister was taken by a witch in the woods. Ever since, Gretchen and her brother, Ansel, have felt the long branches of the witch's forest threatening to make them disappear, too.

Years later, when their stepmother casts Gretchen and Ansel out, they find themselves in sleepy Live Oak, South Carolina. They're invited to stay with Sophia Kelly, a beautiful candy maker who molds sugary magic: coveted treats that create confidence, bravery, and passion.

Life seems idyllic and Gretchen and Ansel gradually forget their haunted past -- until Gretchen meets handsome local outcast Samuel. He tells her the witch isn't gone -- it's lurking in the forest, preying on girls every year after Live Oak's infamous chocolate festival, and looking to make Gretchen its next victim. Gretchen is determined to stop running and start fighting back. Yet the further she investigates the mystery of what the witch is and how it chooses its victims, the more she wonders who the real monster is.

Gretchen is certain of only one thing: a monster is coming, and it will never go away hungry.


    I've never read Hansel and Gretel, but I knew the base of the story.  Two kids are lost in the forest leaving a trail of breadcrumbs and find the candy house with the witch inside that wants to eat them.  I wasn't sure how Jackson was going to be able to make this into a YA friendly retelling.  somehow she took this really disturbing story and made it fun and entertaining.  And yet she captured that dark and creepy tone that made it feel true to the original tale.

     Gretchen's character really grew during the story.  I'm such a fan of character development so I was very happy to see this progress over time.  What I did find odd was her strange trust in Sophia, the chocolatier.  As someone who was so scared of the witch, why would she trust a complete stranger especially when things started getting weird?

    But with that said, I found myself trusting Sophia too.  I wanted to like her even when things started making her seem shady.  I wish I had read Sisters Red first because I feel like I wasn't understanding everything that was going on.  Also, for anyone who has read this.  Is the chocolate supposed to have magical powers?  I was really confused by the confidence inducing chocolate oranges.  This was definitely a page turner and probably my favorite retelling so far. 

Society's Influence On What We Read

Banned Books Week just ended recently and I thought this would be the perfect time to talk about how wrong it is that society is still controlling what we read.  And even when books are not being physically banned people are thinking it's not socially okay to venture into other genres just because of their age group.  



September 2013 Wrap Up


These wrap up posts are inspired by Katie's Book Blog and Perpetual Page Turner

Picture from September
Huge sandcastle!

Posts:
7 Deadly Sins of Reading
Weird Bookish Habits
P&P: Society's Pressure To Wed (Then and Now)
BookTube vs. Blogging

Reviews:
Losing Hope (5 stars)
Reboot (4 stars)
Winger (4 stars)
The Vespertine (4 stars)
Dead Ends  (3 stars)

Books Read But Not Reviewed:
Let the Sky Fall
Me Earl, and the Dying Girl
Origin
Black City

What happened this month?

BookTube Vs. Blogging

Have you ventured into the wonderful world of BookTubing yet?  If your answer is no then you really should.  I've been making videos with the BFFs for a few months now and I'm liking it a lot better than blogging.



Hang on.  I didn't mean it like that...ok yes I did, but I have my reasons.  

Watching videos feels more personal.  It's like someone is inviting you into their home for a cup of tea and to discuss books.  When they fangirl over a book you get to see their excitement instead of just interpreting what you're reading in their words.  It takes the obsession to a whole other level.

BookTubers tend to review all books, the old and the new.  It seems bloggers feel to be the best we have to review only new releases or ARCs.  And while I agree it is important I want to know why no one talks about books that came out last year or hell even five years ago.  I have read some awesome books like the Gone series by Michael Grant or Eve by Anna Carey because BookTubers were talking about them.  Books that would have sat on my shelf because I thought my new releases had to take priority over those.

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