Skip to main content

The Reader

The Reader by Traci Chee


Synopsis (from Goodreads)
"Sefia lives her life on the run. After her father is viciously murdered, she flees to the forest with her aunt Nin, the only person left she can trust. . . . But when Nin is kidnapped, Sefia is suddenly on her own, with no way to know who’s taken Nin or where she is. Her only clue is a strange rectangular object that once belonged to her father left behind, something she comes to realize is a book."

Review
The main reason I picked up this book was that it got a LOT of hype. I thought it was a good book, but I'd say more for younger YA. I think if I were 12-14, I would have REALLY loved this book. The premise is interesting: In a world where reading doesn't exist, Sefia has a rare book.

However, I found at times the story was a bit too meta... stories within stories within stories, and how reading is literally magic. The pacing was quite slow. I also found the feel or tone of the story jumped around. First, it was this sort of vengeance quest, then there were pirates, then assassins and secret societies and fight clubs... I just felt like everything went all over.  By last few chapters it had settled on a direction for the plot, just in time for it to end (there's going to be a trilogy).

The setting looked unique and diverse (the main character being based off Asian looks and culture), but I also felt like the places were just names on paper. I didn't really get a sense of how they were different.

The writing got progressively better. In the beginning it was more of an omnicient narrator, telling me the story, but by the end it read more like an actual YA novel where I was seeing things through the characters' eyes.

I found the main character, Safi, to be okay. She was very sweet and has some character growth, but also felt a little flat. I didn't really have a connection to her. She also didn't really seem like she had lived in the wilderness for the last six years. I felt like there could have been more depth to her, especially due to the amount of trauma she faced, but as I said, the whole feel of the novel was a little bit younger than what I usually read.

I enjoyed the secondary characters, especially Archer. I felt he had the best character arc of the book. I also liked the pirate captain and his crew. I think I actually preferred their story. There were lots of plot threads left dangling and to be explored more in-depth in the future books.

Overall it was a good, fun, light adventure, especially for a young woman around middle-school age.


Rating
I give this book 3.5 stars.


Details
Genre: YA, fantasy.
Language: None.
Sex: None (some cute kissing).
Violence: Some, but never graphic.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Monthly Roundup - January 2017

In January I read 6 books, which is keeping with the pace I need in order to read 80 books this year. 1) The Reader - Traci Chee (3 stars) 2) Wayfarer - Alexandra Bracken (3.5 stars) 3) Windwitch - Susan Dennard (3.5 stars) 4) The Underground Railroad  - Colson Whitehead (3 stars) 5) Behind the Throne  - K. B. Wagers (5 stars) 6) Queen of Shadows  - Sarah J. Maas (4 stars) I say that's a pretty good start to 2017! I recently started a new job, so posts have slowed while I rediscover the work/life balance, but overall I really enjoyed the books I read this month and would recommend them all (especially Behind the Throne !!! Gahh!!! Review coming soon!). My TBR pile for February is a mile long, but I'm especially excited for A Conjuring of Light,  the conclusion to the Shades of Magic  series by V. E. Schwab. I've also got the February Book Club pick, Daring Greatly  by Brené Brown, and I'll finally finish up Empire of Storms , the latest book in Sarah

Ensnared

Ensnared by Rita Stradling I received a free ARC of this book via NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. Synopsis ( from Goodreads ) "Alainn’s father is not a bad man. He’s a genius and an inventor. When he’s hired to create the robot Rose, Alainn knows taking the money is a mistake. Rose acts like a human. She looks exactly like Alainn. But, something in her comes out wrong. To save her father from a five year prison sentence, Alainn takes Rose’s place. She says goodbye to the sun and goes to live in a tower no human is allowed to enter. She becomes the prisoner of a man no human is allowed to see. Believing that a life of servitude lies ahead, Alainn finds a very different fate awaits her in the company of the strange, scarred recluse." Review The premise sounded very interesting: Beauty and the Beast retelling in the near-future with robots and AI. But it really really fell flat. I read the first few chapters, then put it down for a couple of  months .

Arcanum Unbounded

Arcanum Unbounded - Brandon Sanderson Synopsis A collection of Sanderson's "short" stories and novellas set in his Cosmere universe. Review It's no secret that Brandon Sanderson is one of my favorite authors. His writing is stupendous, his stories are incredible and his plot twists are mind-blowing. Rarely can I figure out exactly where the story is headed, but I am always exceptionally pleased when I get there! Sanderson isn't as known for his "short" stories. Probably because they aren't short. Two of them in this collection clock in around 40k words, which is approaching the line between a novella and a novel. A few of the stories ( The Emperor's Soul, Sixth of the Dusk, Shadows for Silence ) can be read with no knowledge of his other books, and would perhaps be a good introduction to his writing. Those ones you can get individually or are published in other anthologies. I myself had already read a few of the stories, but withi