Showing posts with label thomas dunne books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label thomas dunne books. Show all posts

Friday, September 16, 2016

Nevernight by Jay Kristoff {review}

Nevernight 
by Jay Kristoff
♦publisher: Thomas Dunne Books
♦release date: August 9th, 2016
♦hardcover, 429 pages
♦intended audience: Adult
♦series: The Nevernight Chronicles, book 1 
♦source: from publisher for honest review
In a land where three suns almost never set, a fledgling killer joins a school of assassins, seeking vengeance against the powers who destroyed her family. 

Daughter of an executed traitor, Mia Corvere is barely able to escape her father’s failed rebellion with her life. Alone and friendless, she hides in a city built from the bones of a dead god, hunted by the Senate and her father’s former comrades. But her gift for speaking with the shadows leads her to the door of a retired killer, and a future she never imagined. 

Now, a sixteen year old Mia is apprenticed to the deadliest flock of assassins in the entire Republic — the Red Church. Treachery and trials await her with the Church’s halls, and to fail is to die. But if she survives to initiation, Mia will be inducted among the chosen of the Lady of Blessed Murder, and one step closer to the only thing she desires. 

Revenge.
Review: Do not be fooled by Jay Kristoff's previous body of work---Nevernight is not a young adult book. Nor is it for the faint of heart, the seekers of HEA love stories, or those looking for a fast-paced read. Nevernight is none of those things---however, it is a pretty awesome story.

The story follows Mia Corvere, a seventeen-year-old assassin-in-training.  Mia is out to avenge her family’s murder. She sets out to train under the assassins of the Red Church, always accompanied by her shadow cat, Mr. Kindly. Once there, she forms alliances, hones her skills, and is forced to face a memory that she’s kept deeply hidden.

The storytelling and world-building is rich and incredibly ornate—at times even a little overwrought with purple prose and vulgarity for my taste. For me, it was not a fast read, in fact I struggled to get past the first 50 pages. After that, it drew me in--still not fast-paced until the third part, but I was definitely fascinated by the characters and the ways of the Red Church. So much gore and merciless violence, people...brace yourselves if you're even a little squeamish.  The story is peppered with footnotes, and while some were hilarious tidbits of sarcastic genius, others disrupted the flow of the story with just too much information. It jumps from the present to the past, letting us in on how Mia came to be where she is, the story of her family, and also how she came upon Mr. Kindly. The story is told in three parts, and it was the last of them that really shone. In fact, up until this third book, I was planning to give this a rating of 3, maybe 3.5---but the finale brought it up to a solid 4 for me. It brought everything together in an incredible, heartbreaking, and exciting end, and will no doubt make even those readers that may have, like me, found the first parts a little slow-going desperate for the next book in The Nevernight Chronicles.

(a shorter edited version of this review was featured in San Francisco Book Review)


•ABOUT THE AUTHOR•

Jay Kristoff is the New York Times and internationally bestselling author of THE LOTUS WAR, THE ILLUMINAE FILES and THE NEVERNIGHT CHRONICLE. He is the winner of two Aurealis Awards, an ABIA, nominee for the David Gemmell Morningstar and Legend awards, named multiple times in the Kirkus and Amazon Best Teen Books list and published in over twenty-five countries, most of which he has never visited. He is as surprised about all of this as you are. He is 6’7 and has approximately 13030 days to live. He abides in Melbourne with his secret agent kung-fu assassin wife, and the world’s laziest Jack Russell.

He does not believe in happy endings.

WEBSITE  •  TWITTER  •  INSTAGRAM

Purchase the book:  Indiebound  •  BookDepository  •  Amazon


Friday, May 23, 2014

Cover Story


Lots of new cover eye-candy!




by Jay Kristoff
Thomas Dunne Books, September 23, 2014









In the Afterlight
by Alexandra Bracken
Disney-Hyperion, October 28, 2014








by Sarah Lynn Scheerger
Albert Whitman Teen, September 1, 2014









The Spiritglass Charade
by Colleen Gleeson
Chronicle Books, October 1, 2014









by Claudia Gray
HarperTeen, November 4, 2014










Whisper the Dead 
by Alyxandra Harvey
Bloomsbury Children's, October 9st, 2014









by Fiona Wood
Poppy, September 16, 2014









Dating Down
by Stefanie Lyons
Flux, 2015







What do you think? What's your favorite out of these?  The Lotus War books have had amazing covers all the way through the series. Love the handrawn/watercolor style of Dating Down. Love the exaggerated font on Wildlife. Spiritglass and Thousand Pieces are just so pretty.

Monday, March 10, 2014

Cover Story


I spied some new fantastic covers this week!





by The Brother's Washburn
Jolly Fish Press, October 7th, 2014








by Nichola Reilly
Harlequin Teen, June 24, 2014








by Kat Beyer
Egmont USA, November 11, 2014









The Last Good Day of the Year
by Jessica Warman
Walker Books, September 9, 2014










by Jennifer McGowan
Simon & Schuster,  August 26, 2014



 




by Michael Grant
Katherine Tegan Books, September 23, 2014








by Mark Alpert
Thomas Dunne Books, April 22, 2014









by Melissa De La Cruz
Hyperion, September 9, 2014








Mojave Green's cover freaks me out just as much as the first book did! But I love it.  I love the colors on The Furies.  And the new cover style for the Maid of Secrets/Maid of Deception series is defintiley growing on me.  What do YOU think of these new book covers?