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Chargement... Crackedpar Eliza Crewe
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Inscrivez-vous à LibraryThing pour découvrir si vous aimerez ce livre Actuellement, il n'y a pas de discussions au sujet de ce livre. Well, I wasn't really in the mood for an anti-hero, and then I realized that I'd picked up yet another Strange Chemistry publication (in my experience, a world of mediocrity), and that we were in a demon universe and this Did Not Bode Well. It was a bit of a drag at first, but Meda did win me over somewhat by the end. She's mean snark rather than really clever snark, but she did have some good one-liners and the world was fairly interesting. Also, Templars, fancy meeting you in a trailer park run by a motorcycle gang (ok, that was both funny and clever in concept). Like I said, it won me over. The writing's a bit rough around the edges, but there's all kinds of potential here. ( ) I gave this a read despite being tired of the reluctant hero trope. Meda still seems to pull it off well enough. Her presence overshadows the remaining characters who are strongly lacking in development (especially Chi and Jo). Characters aside, the pace of the book is slow and the story itself is rather dull. The protagonist is the strongest part of the story, but not enough to make it worthwhile. "Cracked" has Cool carved into its forearm with a Stanley Knife. The opening draws Meda, our evil-but-wittily-self-aware more-than-human teenage heroine, in a series of fast, confident, blood-red claw strokes that create an image as clear and succinct as a Kanji. We start at night, with a crazed, helpless girl, waiting in her cell in a run-down lunatic asylum as an evil guard prepares to pay her a visit. Except the girl isn't helpless and she's a completely different kind of crazed, so soon there is blood everywhere and none of it is hers. Yet just as I was settling down to a Dexter-meets-teen-girl-soul-eater story, filled with gore and witty banter, new players arrive and the story cracks open into a whole universe of possibilities. Turns out that all that cool, quietly desperate, slightly self-deprecating, slightly self -congratulatory wrapping contains more complex characters, a mostly-original urban-fantasy universe and a plot that could go anywhere. We meet suit-wearing evil demons and Harley-riding good-in-their-own-eyes Crusaders, while Meda tries to hide in plain sight in a Crusader highschool which seems more like a SAS training camp. The action comes in wave after wave, with each wave getting taller and crashing more loudly. In between, Meda finds out what's really in her past and struggles to work out how "good" she's capable of being. As we watched her go from, me-first-survival, even if I have to throw one of you to the bears, to I-will-not-let-you-kill-my-friends bravery, I was impressed that what I saw was a rebalancing of a believable person rather than some epiphanal rebirth. I liked Meda because she's capable of being truly evil and chooses, mostly, not to be. The humour kept me smiling but never detracted from the tension for example when Meda has to flee through a sewer and her nose teaches her how foul they really are, she says: "The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles lied to me. Sewers aren't a cool place to hang and definately not for eating pizza." Clichés are skillfully repurposed or called out ironically and then milked with flair. I got so hooked on this that I read the whole book in a day and didn't regret a single missed or delayed chore. This is a Young Adult book that doesn't patronise its readers, no matter what age they are. "Cracked" cries out to be an audiobook, Amy MacFadden would nail it, but I can only find ebook copies so I'm faking Amy in my head - that sounded better before I typed it. "Cracked" is the first book of a trilogy. I'm in need of escape, so I'm going to consume them back to back the ways upset girls on TV eat whole cartons of ice cream. This book was good, I liked the fact that it was told from the point of view of the demon girl, and for once I was excited to read the villain's thoughts and all On a side note though, I freaking LOVE Armand!! aucune critique | ajouter une critique
Appartient à la sérieSoul Eaters (1)
Young Adult Fiction.
HTML: Meet Meda. She eats people. Aucune description trouvée dans une bibliothèque |
Discussion en coursAucunCouvertures populaires
Google Books — Chargement... GenresClassification décimale de Melvil (CDD)823.92Literature English English fiction Modern Period 2000-Classification de la Bibliothèque du CongrèsÉvaluationMoyenne:
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