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David Estes

Auteur de The Moon Dwellers

47+ oeuvres 1,222 utilisateurs 113 critiques 2 Favoris

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Comprend les noms: DAVID ESTES

Séries

Œuvres de David Estes

The Moon Dwellers (2012) 224 exemplaires
Fatemarked (2017) 122 exemplaires
Fire Country (2013) 111 exemplaires
Angel Evolution (2011) 84 exemplaires
Brew (2014) 66 exemplaires
Slip (2014) 61 exemplaires
The Star Dwellers (2012) 57 exemplaires
The Sun Dwellers (2012) 39 exemplaires
The Dwellers Saga Boxed Set (2015) 37 exemplaires
Ice Country (2013) 33 exemplaires
The Earth Dwellers (2013) 28 exemplaires
Water & Storm Country (2013) 26 exemplaires
Demon Evolution (2011) 21 exemplaires
Archangel Evolution (2011) 21 exemplaires
"Lifemarked" (2017) 20 exemplaires
Strings (2016) 17 exemplaires
Boil (2014) 14 exemplaires
Burn (2015) 10 exemplaires
Grip (2014) 10 exemplaires
Flip (2015) 10 exemplaires
Nikki Powergloves: A Hero Is Born (2012) 9 exemplaires
Demon’s Reign 8 exemplaires
Time Burned 5 exemplaires
Kraken Rider Z (2023) 3 exemplaires
I Am Touch 3 exemplaires

Oeuvres associées

In the Lair: A Fantasy Bridge Anthology (2017) — Contributeur — 1 exemplaire
What Tomorrow May Bring: The Young Adult Dystopian Boxed Set (2014) — Contributeur — 1 exemplaire

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Critiques

Books that are different are good, but this book, was just odd. Not necessarily in a bad way, but odd nevertheless. Reading was slightly uncomfortable as the style just didn't sit right for me.

This book is a somewhat generic YA fiction about a girl struggling with the role given to her by her society. Easy enough to read, with nothing mind bending or heartbreaking. I would warn potential readers that the writing style, due to the narrating character's voice, won't appeal to everyone.

In opposition to most other readers here, this would not be a book that I would recommend. If you are already familiar with work by this author, however, it seems from other reviews that you would probably enjoy it.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
calenmarwen | 11 autres critiques | May 29, 2023 |
First, thanks to David Estes for giving me a free copy of his book to read and review.

I really liked the idea of this different version of Angels and Demons. David created a new mythology on how they were created, and toyed with the reader’s minds on which one is helping, or out to hurt humans, very clever.

Now on to the spoilers and some thoughts about how the book was written.


Taylor is the main character in this book. She’s a college student, which I liked, instead of the typical high school student in most young adult books. Gabriel is the Angel who she falls in love with. Where I had trouble with Taylor, is that she often reminds herself in the book that her mother didn’t raise a dummy, to trust her gut instincts and that Taylor didn’t need a guy to complete her as a person. Taylor repeats this over and over to herself like a mantra, yet never listens. Her gut tells her not to trust Gabriel over and over, but she does. She doesn’t need a man to complete her, but falls in love with Gabriel after only four days. Gabriel lies to her over and over and even after he promised not to lie to her again, he does, and she believes him. I understand that love can make a person ‘blind,’ but Taylor verges on being stupid. It was very frustrating reading about her choices, I wanted to smack her and shout, “Wake up!” Taylor starts out as a clear-thinking, independent female, but once she falls for Gabriel, she turns into a mound of goo that bases her decisions on what her boyfriend tells her to believe. Not my image of a strong female character or role model for a young girl reading this book.

I found the secondary characters, Samantha, Taylor’s best friend, and Christopher, Sam’s boyfriend who’s a Demon, much more interesting and entertaining. Samantha remained spunky and independent throughout the book even though she fell in love with Christopher.

“The Plan,” was genius and horrifying at the same time. What was amusing was that everyone seemed to have a “plan’ of some kind in the book. Dionysus, the leader of the Angel Council, had the ultimate ‘PLAN’ of enslaving humans. Gabriel had a plan for Taylor to fall in love with him, then later a plan to ‘protect her and escape from the demons at the college,’ and still another plan to rescue her from the battlefield. The demon Jonas, had a plan to scare Taylor and Gabriel into not to try anything funny and escape. The Angel army had a plan to destroy the Demons, and the Demons had a plan to save Taylor. Finally at the end, there’s a plan to save Gabriel from prison. There are so many plans flying around in this book it reminds me of the show ‘Black Adder’ where Baldric is fond of saying, ‘I have a cunning plan.’ And we all know how his cunning plans turned out. I think it would be a good idea to cut down on the number of ‘plans’ because the idea of a plan, lost its ability to create tension since there were so many of them scattered throughout the book.

I noticed that my mind seemed to wander while reading the story and I asked myself why. I realized that there was a lot of ‘telling’ going on instead of ‘showing.’ There was too much internal dialogue and talk about what was happening on campus, where they were walking to and other insignificant things, etc. It was unnecessary padding to the story that didn’t move it along. The extra information only slowed the story down. I think that much of the description could have been cut out and not have been missed. In fact it would have sped up the tempo of the story, and if the rest of the story was tightened up, the book would have been much more exciting. The chapters where we first met Gabriel were very short and precise. I felt the tension in those chapters, wondering, is Gabriel lying, or is he telling the truth to Taylor? Those short chapters were much more intense for me and drew me into the book, more than the other chapters with all the extra description.

Oh, and I can't forget the ending, that was a terrific cliff-hanger!

In the end, even though I found quite a few things wanting in this book, I really like the way the author created the war between Angels and Demons, the legend of how Angels and Demons were created, and also created the villain in Dionysus, who reminds me of Voldemort, in his desire to achieve immortality at any cost.

I enjoyed this story and am very curious on where the author will take this in his next books. I’d recommend this book to anyone who is interested in a different take on Angels and Demons.




… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Penumbra1 | 26 autres critiques | Oct 11, 2022 |
I was given this book to read through Basically Books ARR group for an honest review, thank you.



I first read David Estes’ book Angel Evolution and had liked it so I wanted to give The Moon Dwellers a try to see if I’d also enjoy it; and also to see how much, if any, David’s writing had improved. I can say without a doubt that David’s writing has definitely improved. The Moon Dwellers is nice and orderly. What I mean by this is that David arranged each chapter pertaining to Adele and Tristan and had a similar event happen to them. It was a sort of synchronicity that would bring the two MCs together and David made sure the chapters showed the readers how the similarities worked into Adele and Tristan’s lives even when they weren’t together. I’m not quite sure where David is going with the topic of “Fate” versus “Making Your Own Destiny” in this book, but it’s brought up quite a few times. Also another theme in this book is about family. How family can be by birth or blood and a person may not have anything in common with them. But a person can create a family where people have more similarities with you and you love them even more than blood relatives.

The story is told in first person through the alternating viewpoints of Adele and Tristan. David did a great job of making it clear whose eyes we were seeing the story through. However, I’m not sure that first person was the way to go in this book. The MCs voices came out flat and monotone throughout the book. I felt like I was reading a diary of the MCs thoughts. I didn’t get a good feeling of the kind of personalities they had unless one MC was talking about the personality of the other MC, but that was only telling me, I never felt it. The only image I got was that Adele seemed controlled and Tristan was naïve. I got very good impressions of the personalities of the secondary characters through the eyes of the MCs. Tawni, Cole, Roc, and even Rivet were vibrant and alive. But Adele and Tristan felt flat. That’s why I think the MCs would have been much better in third person. The only time I wasn’t bothered by the flatness of the MCs was when the action started to pick up with Adele escaping the Pen and Tristan arriving at the Pen.

What I liked about each chapter, was that David would end it on a slight cliffhanger. Just enough of a cliffhanger to make me want to know immediately what was going to happen with the MC we were reading, but not so much that we didn't want to read the other MC's POV that was coming up. It was very clever.

Before I go into the characters I have to say I am so happy that David didn't make this story into 'love at first sight.' I can completely see having 'attraction at first sight,' and that made a great reason for Tristan to hunt for Adele.

I liked Adele in that she was able to stand up for herself, but she still was afraid and she wasn’t always successful in what she set out to do. She was still fallible but was not a whiny teenager about it. Tristan seems like he was a lost soul looking for purpose in a meaningless life and he found it in Adele. I can easily see a teenage boy doing something very impulsive like running away to chase after a girl. Teenagers are known to take ridiculous risks because they don’t really have that fear yet of death or of consequences. So Tristan running away makes sense. I love Roc, he is adorable. Loyal to a fault, tries to do his best, and is funny. I think he’s probably my favorite character in the book. My one question is, David, why oh why, did you have to kill offCole? I am so sad.

The pace of the story was slow until Adele, Tawni and Cole make their escape from the Pen. After that the story was more exciting and I didn’t want to put the book down. The book is also an easy fast read, I think in part due to the way David set up the chapters and viewpoints, it made it easier to keep the MCs separate and what was happening to them.

I read this story on my NOOK and there were some odd formatting issues. Words would get cut off at the end of a sentence mid-word. I’m not talking about a word like “talking,” with the “talk” at the end of the line and “ing” at the beginning of the next line. I mean words like “are” where the “ar” is at the end of a line and the “e” starts the next sentence. This happened quite frequently with many different words and it made reading difficult trying to decipher what word I was looking at. I’d have to go back and piece the letters together and it would take me out of the story.

There were a couple of things in the book that I wondered about and don’t remember it being covered or discussed. I believe the issue of where the water came from was lightly gone over, but I would like to know about where they got the air? I wouldn’t think it was from the surface if the Earth’s surface was destroyed and lots of particulate matter was still floating around or noxious fumes. The other thought I had was how hot was it below ground? I know that limestone caverns can be cool, but what about in mines where it can get pretty hot? How do the Dwellers deal with either the cold or the heat? And does it get colder or hotter as they go to a lower level? I would love to have answers on this since it’s something pretty important that the Dwellers have to deal with and something that could make their lives more or less pleasant and also factor into the uprising.

Last but not least, I want to say that I really like the cover. Very nice with the colors, the art and the fonts chosen.

In the end, I enjoyed this book. Because of the flatness of the MCs personalities, I was going to give the book only three stars, that’s how much the bland voices bothered me. But because the action picked up enough to draw my attention away from the monotone POVs, I give The Moon Dwellers 4 stars


… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Penumbra1 | 27 autres critiques | Oct 11, 2022 |
I am really intrigued by David Estes and his premise for this first novel in a dystopian sci-fi series, “Slip.” The main character, Benson, who we know only as “son” for much of the opening section of the book, is forced to live in hiding after his parents illegally allow him to be born despite strict population control measures. But the characters that are drawn the most poignantly aren’t the main ones, but the side players like Janice, the mother who can’t be there for one child her husband has to tell to run away, or her other child, Harrison, whose plight we feel perhaps most of all as the sibling who was neglected from the start because of the secret brother he has no idea about. It’s an interesting and complicated world where there are no winners.

I overall loved the author’s writing style and storytelling and especially enjoyed the great twists at the end. Highly recommended.

Disclaimer: I received a free copy of this book from the author.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
KatKinney | 5 autres critiques | Mar 3, 2022 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
47
Aussi par
2
Membres
1,222
Popularité
#21,017
Évaluation
4.0
Critiques
113
ISBN
55
Langues
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Favoris
2

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