Title: Endlessly (Paranormalcy, #3)
Author: Kiersten White
Rating: 3.5 Stars
Evie's paranormal past keeps coming back to haunt her. A new director at the International Paranormal Containment Agency wants to drag her back to headquarters. The Dark Faerie Queen is torturing humans in her poisonous realm. And supernatural creatures keep insisting that Evie is the only one who can save them from a mysterious, perilous fate. The clock is ticking on the entire paranormal world. And its fate rests solely in Evie's hands. So much for normal.Endlessly was a wonderful conclusion to White’s debut series. While I didn’t enjoy it nearly as much as I loved Paranormalcy, it was much better than Supernaturally was and is the type of ending that leaves the reader wholly satisfied. I loved how plot lines from both the previous novels intertwined and came together in this stunning conclusion, forcing Evie to own up to her powers and use them once and for all.
I think what strikes me the most about this series, either than its quirky narration, is the romance. It’s not like most trilogies where a love triangle is prevalent and one team walks away grinning while the other team cries their eyes out after the third novel. Instead, Evie and Lend have been together ever since they fell in love in Paranormalcy and their relationship, while tinged with paranormal elements and disasters for sure, is also filled with normalcy. Furthermore, their love story grows throughout each novel and progresses through real conversation which I adore. It is evident, especially in this novel, that Evie and Lend accept each other for who they are and don’t expect one another to change. It’s a sweet and unique romance which is one of the primary reasons I love this series so much.
Evie too, is a formidable and fun protagonist and I love her relationships with each and every one of her friends. She yearns to be a normal teen and while she does face paranormal threats, her journey to find herself is just as compelling as each of our own. In addition, I think the best aspect of this book in particular was that White allowed her characters a chance at redemption. She made them far more realistic and three-dimensional in this manner by showing us that they weren’t all evil. I do have to point out though that this transition could have been more developed and some of the conversations featuring the Dark Queen were too cliché and overdone for my liking, but overall, Endlessly is an ending that will satisfy fans of this series and compel new readers to give this unique trilogy a go. I can’t wait to see what Kiersten White has planned next! Bleep! ;)
Author: Michelle Warren
Rating: 2 Stars/DNF
Ever since her sixteenth birthday, strange things keep happening to Seraphina Parrish. The Lady in Black… burns Sera’s memories. Unexplainable Premonitions… catapult her to other cities. The Grungy Gang… wants to kill her. And a beautiful, mysterious boy… stalks her. But when Sera moves to Chicago, and her aunt reveals their family connection to a centuries old, secret society, she is immediately thrust into an unbelievable fantasy world, leading her on a quest to unravel the mysteries that plague her. In the end, their meanings crash into an epic struggle of loyalty and betrayal, and she’ll be forced to choose between the boy who has stolen her heart and the thing she desires most. Wander Dust is the breathtaking fantasy that will catapult you through a story of time, adventure, and love.Wander Dust is a novel that not too many people know of and now I can see why. I think my issues with this book stemmed, not from the book, but from myself. I have read more than my fair share of novels with protagonists performing strange/paranormal acts and then learning that they have magical powers, so I was extremely bored for the first third of this story when Seraphina Parrish goes back and forth in time and fails to realize that she is a time traveler.
Seraphina’s apparent stupidity aside, I just didn’t feel anything for her. This is a character who lost her mother at a young age and whose father is rude, mean, and virtually doesn’t care for her, but I still didn’t care about Seraphina. Somehow, the author failed to make me have that connection with her which I craved and if I don’t feel connected to a character within the first-half of a novel, the chances are slim that we’re really going to connect during the second-half.
Nevertheless, I think Wander Dust has potential and I might have moderately liked it or given it at least 2.5 or 3 Stars if I had finished it through. Its ideas are nothing original and its execution is bland, but non-prolific paranormal/fantasy readers would definitely find something to love within these pages, as would middle-grade readers. For me, however, this book was not.
Author: Beth Revis
Rating: 2 Stars/DNF
A love out of time. A spaceship built of secrets and murder. Seventeen-year-old Amy joins her parents as frozen cargo aboard the vast spaceship Godspeed and expects to awaken on a new planet, three hundred years in the future. Never could she have known that her frozen slumber would come to an end fifty years too soon and that she would be thrust into the brave new world of a spaceship that lives by its own rules. Amy quickly realizes that her awakening was no mere computer malfunction. Someone-one of the few thousand inhabitants of the spaceship-tried to kill her. And if Amy doesn't do something soon, her parents will be next. Now Amy must race to unlock Godspeed's hidden secrets. But out of her list of murder suspects, there's only one who matters: Elder, the future leader of the ship and the love she could never have seen coming.
I am sorry to say that I was extremely unimpressed by this
novel. I read a little over half of it and found myself to be skimming it quite
a bit when I realized that perhaps Across the Universe
just wasn’t a novel for me. In fact, I think the best aspect of this book is
its cover. Once you begin reading though, the characters of Amy and Elder are
flat and lacking, the pace is slow and it takes the reader over a hundred pages
to reach the dilemma hinted at in the synopsis, and the romance is your usual
insta-love. In other words, while this novel may be set in space, it has
absolutely nothing new to bring to the table.
I have to admit that I enjoyed the science fiction elements
of this tale and find the concept extremely fascinating, but beyond that, the
execution of this story fails to do justice to its ideas. Amy is, for the most
part, asleep and her narration is unnecessary until she wakes up. Yet, we are
given descriptions of her nightmares which play absolutely no role in the plot
or development of Amy’s character. Elder, on the other hand, is quite
irritating and falls in love with Amy because of her red hair, not to mention
other lustful qualities about her appearance. I didn’t feel anything
for these characters and can only question why this novel has been
given so much hype.
If that wasn’t enough, the mystery element to this plot line
is dull, lacking, and utterly predictable. I hate it when authors write as if their
readers are stupid or don’t read between the lines, because we do!
I can count on one hand the number of books whose plots I
haven’t guessed this year and unfortunately, Across the
Universe is not one of them. I’ve heard phenomenal things about this
book and I am sure that this novel does merit the hype it gets; if, that is,
you’re interested in a typical YA story which lacks character development,
contains a huge dose of insta-love, and has a predictable plot line. Or, if
those elements don’t bother you, you’ll like this. I, on the other hand, am
dying for something original, creative, and new which I just didn’t find in
this novel.


