Photo de l'auteur

Shannon Messenger

Auteur de Keeper of the Lost Cities

34 oeuvres 7,973 utilisateurs 147 critiques 1 Favoris

A propos de l'auteur

Shannon Messenger is New York Times and USA Today bestselling author of Keeper of the Lost Cities and Sky Fall series. (Bowker Author Biography)
Crédit image: Picture of Shannon Messenger

Séries

Œuvres de Shannon Messenger

Keeper of the Lost Cities (2012) 1,691 exemplaires
Exile (2013) 907 exemplaires
Everblaze (2014) 812 exemplaires
Neverseen (2015) 699 exemplaires
Lodestar (2016) 639 exemplaires
Nightfall (2017) 579 exemplaires
Flashback (2018) 520 exemplaires
Legacy (2019) 512 exemplaires
Let the Sky Fall (2013) 448 exemplaires
Unlocked (2020) 403 exemplaires
Stellarlune (2022) 271 exemplaires
Let the Storm Break (2014) 173 exemplaires
Let the Wind Rise (2016) 114 exemplaires
Let the Sky Fall 9 exemplaires
La voz del viento (2013) 1 exemplaire

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Membres

Critiques

Representation: Asian characters
Trigger warnings: Death, war themes, blood, grief and loss depiction, physical injury and child abuse, building collapse
Score: Six and a half out of ten.
Find this review on The StoryGraph.

Is it me or has Shannon Messenger plateaued? I enjoyed Keeper of the Lost Cities and the second and third instalments were delightful too, but from there it's only okay. The fourth one, Neverseen, wasn't it--it didn't reach the same level as book one. I wanted an improvement when I read Lodestar but I didn't get that.

It starts (more like continues) with Sophie and other characters picking up after the events of the fourth novel, Neverseen in the opening pages, where nothing much is happening other than the characters processing everything that happened. Remember the issues I found in Neverseen? They're also in Lodestar, but more prominent I don't know where to begin, but I'll try, first, the repetition. I'm tired of the repetitive plot telling me parts of the story I already heard of before like the Black Swan and the Neverseen. The only new subplots introduced in Lodestar are (you guessed it,) the Lodestar, at least the symbol of it, and a special stone that uses blood. The conflict thickens, but not by much as the ogres are the against council, and the Black Swan is supposed to be this benevolent organisation What is the Lodestar supposed to do? The pacing is like Neverseen, but slower as Lodestar spans more than 600 pages, most of which are filler. Removing filler could've tightened the reading experience. I still like the characters like Sophie, but without any character development, I disconnected from them. I can't relate to the characters if they don't have character development. Did Messenger forget to put that in? Please fix it in the sixth part, Nightfall. At least the conclusion has a slightly faster pace but the final pages are predictable since the finish is the same as the other narratives.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Law_Books600 | 6 autres critiques | May 10, 2024 |
Representation: Asian characters
Trigger warnings: Death of people in the past mentioned
Score: Seven out of ten.
Find this review on The StoryGraph.

Well. It looks like I finally read Neverseen. I wanted to read it for a while after reading Everblaze but not finding it as enjoyable as Keeper of the Lost Cities. I glanced at the blurb, making Neverseen seem intriguing, and did I mention Neverseen is the fourth book I've read from Shannon Messenger? When I closed the final page, I found it good, but not great.

It starts (more like continues) with Sophie and some other characters, who left Foxfire because of the conflict that has been happening since Keeper of the Lost Cities between the Black Swan and the (you guessed it,) Neverseen. I liked the worldbuilding expansion since I got to see Exilium, the school the characters mentioned in previous instalments after so long, I also liked the characters as usual, and I think they grew on me over time. However, Neverseen has flaws concerning many aspects of the narrative that I don't know where to start, but I'll try, the pacing is slow, making me disengage from the story sometimes. Sometimes slow pacing works when there's a slow burn, but when there's nothing happening, what's the point? Sophie and the other characters' journeys to places in the world can detract from the central plot, but removing subplots would tighten the reading experience. The writing style is enough to keep Neverseen going, though, and at least the conclusion picks up the pace with some action scenes, but I'll head in with lower expectations once I get Lodestar.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Law_Books600 | 6 autres critiques | May 10, 2024 |
dnf, nearly plagiarism of Harry Potter (if you ask me)
 
Signalé
libraryofemma | 50 autres critiques | Apr 18, 2024 |
Representation: Black characters
Trigger warnings: Physical injury, hospitalisation of a child and death of another person in a fire in the past, car crash, drugging, bullying
Score: Six out of ten.
Find this review on The StoryGraph.

I loved the original version of Keeper of the Lost Cities so I when I saw an illustrated adaptation of it in a library I expected it to be as enjoyable as the first edition. I glanced at the blurb, making it seem similar to the prose edition of Keeper of the Lost Cities, but when I closed the final page, it was not the reading experience I thought I would get.

It starts with Sophie Foster living her typical life or so it seems in the opening pages until I saw Sophie having telepathic and telekinetic abilities but she's not sure why she has that and it's a secret she kept to herself. That is until she stumbles across a character named Fitz who also has magic abilities and takes her to the Lost Cities, a realm full of elves with all sorts of powers. This adaptation shines since it remains faithful to the source material, but I've seen every scene before so it feels more like a recap of what happened, and I didn't feel too engaged to it.

At least the characters are likable, but they're not that relatable, and by itself the adaptation's worldbuilding is lacking (but I can understand why as it's only the beginning and I can read other KOTLC books to answer worldbuilding questions.) Like the original, the pacing is fast for a book over 300 pages and the plot is decent but it ends abruptly, so I have to wait for the second part to release. The illustrations are a new perspective on the same narrative but I think prose does the better job since I can picture everything more clearly when it's in that writing style. Sophie has to leave her human world behind as she more fully integrates into her new life by meeting her new parents and going to a new school, but it feels rushed like the author wanted to get it over with swiftly. If you liked Keeper of the Lost Cities but want to look at it in a different way, then get this one, but I'd prefer reading the original prose creations.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Law_Books600 | 50 autres critiques | Apr 7, 2024 |

Listes

Prix et récompenses

Vous aimerez peut-être aussi

Auteurs associés

Celina Frenn Adaptor
Jason Chan Cover artist

Statistiques

Œuvres
34
Membres
7,973
Popularité
#3,039
Évaluation
4.2
Critiques
147
ISBN
223
Langues
6
Favoris
1

Tableaux et graphiques