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Second Helpings Review

Jessica’s senior year is not off to good start. She had planned to spend the summer time at SPECIAL (a free summer enrichment program in creative writing and other arts) as a way of preparing herself for college by immersing herself in dorm life and becoming a new version of her. Unfortunately, her newfound old new again Bridget came along thus keeping her trapped as a obnoxious virgin and not too cool cosmopolitan elite as she wanted to be. Also, she stuck out like a sore thumb in her creative writing class.
But her time in New York did give her some new insight, she is shallow but she has potential, and if she went to Columbia maybe she’ll be able to shed her small-town ignorance and reach her destiny.
So Jessica Darling returns to her last year in Pineville a little wiser and much mroe neurotic as she begins to obsess over her chances of getting into Columbia. And her resolutions to be more cheerful and not think of The One Who Shall Not Be Named-like all good resolutions that falls apart by the first week.
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Sloppy Firsts Review

Jessica Darling is the voice of the early 200s or Y2K generation as she refers to her and her high school classmates whom she despises and resents to varying degrees. But she has no one else to hang out with since her best friend, Hope moved so she settles for the “Clueless Club” to sit with as she zones out of their rapid monologuing of shopping, boys and dances.
I say she is the voice of the Y2K because much like Judy Blume, Mccafferty doesn’t shy away from the rawness and teenage angst in all its messy glory like Jessica’s selfishness, her existential crises, her judgyness, her earnestness and all the feelings in between. She’s in that awkward spot of being cognitively more mature than her peers but flat as a 12 year old (and her period has disappeared to boot). She’s so over the poseur high school scene but she plays into it as well because she doesn’t want to be alone. A bit hypocritical but uber relatable.
However, there is one classmate that seems to challenge her on an intellectual level and it totally freaks her out, Macrus Flautie, the school stoner. He doesn’t seem that smart but his able to see past her facade of normalcy and gets her deadpan, sarcasm. He also asks her to pee in a cup so he can pass a drug test. Yeah, intellectual, creative with a dash of danger. Marcus may not be an adorkable preppy boy but he’s got skills. No wonder he’s nickname is Krispy Kreme.
There’s mot much overarching plot as this is just journel entries over the course of Jessica’s sophmore year, detailing her opinions on everyone and everything and all the turmoil in between. There’s plenty of drama between Jessica’s outsider status in her family, the Clueless Club’s backstabbing friendship, and her denial over the exact feelings she has for Matt and whether he reciprocates. Like I said, it’s relatable and while it’s nothing, readers haven’t seen before Jessica’s voice is humorous and no frills that makes me compulsively read more.
It helps that much like her predecessor Blume, McCafferty hits at intensely universal feelings such as when Jessica can’t take her parents anymore. They’re tired of her moping and PMS-ing, telling her to get perspective. Okay, yes, she’s not dying or in a third world country but it just feels like everytime they tell her to get a better perspective, she has no real problems and just be happy, she feels like they’re dismissing her feelings. She does have problems, they feel big to her, can’t she get a little bit of sympathy?
Another great point, McCafferty explores is the problem with fixed impressions of people. People have nuance, they change and for all Jessica believes herself to be as a discerning individual, she gets played as easily as anyone else. Falling for the perception and her quick judgements of how people used to be as barometers for how they are now. Therefore, several characters end up surprising her in the long run.
I loved the intro to Jessica’s world and her rambling, slightly neurotic-depressive mind, bringing back the nostalgia of early 2000s. Even though I was only 4, I felt like I was there with the references to Britney Spears and The Real World in its dated glory. I can’t wait to see more, I highly recommend.
5 stars.
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Oct Books
The Moonlit Vine by Elizabeth Santiago

Santiago’s debut novel begins with the conquest of the Caribbean as Anacoana’s daughter watches the conquistadors burn down her kingdom. She and her own daughter are in hiding and she gifts her with a zemi that will protect her and connect her to her ancestors.
In the present day, Tania’s life sucks. Her teacher demonizes her for standing up for a fellow student, her mother kicked her brother out of the house after he gets suspended and family feud only fuel the lack of communication in the family. That’s one of the internal obstacles the family faces as Tania’s parents grow more estranged as well as her mother, Esmeralda, fights with her brother, Benny and his wife, Milagro’s snide insults. The only person Tania can find comfort in is her abuela, Isaura and even then she has to tread lightly because Esmeralda is jealous of how close they are.
But the family must learn to come together to face external threats of an unjust education and legal system that doesn’t value or understand POC and splinters their community.
Santiago’s book delves into several intersecting issues such as the sunk cost fallacy stereotypes Tania’s brother, Alex falls into. Alex was trying to stop a gang fight but gets expelled. Her little brother acts out in class, talking loudly and not listening to the teacher-it doesn’t warrent the response of police arresting him. That’s just traumatizing to a freaking 7 year old. Anyone really, but a grieving seven year old? It highlights how the system won’t let POC get emotional or angry or feel grief, they see such displays of human feeling as a threat due to their own negative perceptions.
It’s exhausting to have to be amiable all the time and Tania is not willing to fall into that which often gets her in trouble with authority figures. It also opens the chasm between her and her mother who chooses assimilation to survive but still deals with the weight of microaggressions, real aggression, and racism.
All together it shows how historical trauma still impacts the present. Know what else is present, the indigenous Taino are still alive and resilient. Here, the fictionalized lineage of Anacoana and the passing down of the zemi, illustrate the importance of their ancestors and WOC sisterhood in an act of magical realism and empowerment. It’s powerful and moving and just plain awesome, but the climatic scene is grounded by the sincerity Santiago infuses her messaging about the support of community and the power of young people speaking up to change things in the system. Something she writes in her author’s note that she hopes readers will take away is to not be afraid to use their voice.
Si Se Puede: The Latino Heroes Who Changed the United States by Julio Anta, illustrated by Yasmin Flores Montanez

Anta’s nonfiction graphic novel takes readers and the protagonists through an interactive museum highlighting Latinx’ history in the United States and their impact in science, battle, and entertainment. With a vibrant palette and easily digestable language, Anta not only informs readers of little known individuals like Lt. Manuel Chavez who prevented the Confederates from taking over the Southwest and Mario Molina who proved that humans were contributing to global warming, but also highlights the greats like Cesar Chavez and Dolares Huerta, Rita Moreno and Roberto Clemente. It’s a nice mix of added history of individuals that are known and totally new information.
But he also highlights how their presence has always been part of U.S. history, influencing events in the Civil War, in NASA and their immigration across borders is not a new thing but have arisened because of U.S. intervention in Latin America governments. He also introduces some complex subjects like colorism, the term “Latinx,” conquistador’s invasion and repeatedly reminds the audience that Latinos are not a monolith in how they view these issues and history.
A great book fo Latino History month or any month in the classroom.
Once Upon a Quinceñera by Monica Gomez-Hira Harperteen

Carmen is heading to Miami to work as a princess for DREAMS party planners, making the dreams of little girls come true, and also earning credit for her graduation.
The less exciting component is having to work for her cousin’s quincenera under her domineering, passive-aggressive Tia Celia. The same duo who kiboshed her own quinceñera after her cousin, Arianna got drunk at a party that was totally not her fault 4 years ago. She also has to work her ex-boyfriend, Mauro who caused the drunk cousin-cancelled quincenera incident and dumped her that night.
It sounds like the worst telenovela nightmare ever, but it’s a YA novel so Carmen does get a happy ending sort of.
Yes, her getting back with Mauro is a given even though there is some tense love square shenanigans between her, Arianna, Mauro and Alex that doesn’t make anyone look good before Carmen snaps back into maturity. While, I felt Mauro should sweat it out a little more after he so blantantly used her in the past and insulted her (the guy said she was a booty call that he could never take seriously since she’ll end up pregnant or on the pole. Disgusting. It’s her biggest insecurity too so mega-disgusting), I slowly got into their reunion. Slowly.
Same with Carmen becoming friends with Arianna again. Well, actually I could get behind the cousins becoming friends again and learning to support each other through their jealousy. Same with Carmen learning to control her envy and bitterness and not let it consume her or distract her from her goals.
What I could not get over was her Tia’s constant bad-mouthing, saying Carmen was just like her mother-a irresponsible slut, always seeing the worst of her, and just petty passive-aggressiveness. Tia Celia’s supposed to be an adult and wow, she’s one to talk considering her husband was original Carmen’s mom’s boyfriend. Yes, such drama. At least Gomez didn’t give Tia Celia a redemption like she did with Mauro and Arianna, she was an example of how sometimes you must learn to deal with toxic family members. At least, it gave some good mother-daughter real talk scenes.
This book brings on big feelings and really shows the chaos and stress that comes from quinceñeras. I mean it has all the biggness of American Sweet 16s with the passion and tempers of codependently close Latino family that will get into your business all the damn time.
Dating Makes Perfect by Pintip Dunn

The Tech sisters don’t date, but when Winnie’s older sisters refuse to get married until they had twenty years of dating practice-her mother decides Winnie must start right away. Only by date, these are fake dates under specific conditions so she can be prepared for real life. She gets the experience but none of the heartbreak according to their logic. The dates are also ripoffs of famous rom-coms, and it’s with her ex bff and current nemesis, Mat. So much for no emotional stakes.
Inevitably, the fake dating turns real but first there’s some romantic entanglements as Winnie intially tries fake dating Mat while real life flirting with her crush, Taren. But that soon amicably fizzles as the UST mounts between her and Mat.
Seriously, the UST was fire. Mat’s feelings were intense and yes, he manages to make threatening hot. Like nonviolent threatening but more like arrogant, smug bastard hot. Between their past history (he had a crush on her but did not handle it well) and his hotness, I was itching for them to kiss already so when they did it was so good. I was very invested as you can tell.
But now that they’re real life dating, there’s a new forbidden aspect as they have to keep up the act to circumvent Winnie’s parents rules on no touching/feelings etc. They’re soon found out and Winnie must make a choice and stand up for herself.
Which comes to the internal conflict and development that can make or break the book. Dunn does a good job illustrating how Winnie changed from when she was young, becoming a studious rule follower. It develoed from her secret insecurities that she’s always in her sisters’ shadows, but the one thing she can do better is by being obedient. All under the mistaken impression that it makes her parents love her when in reality their love is unconditional. This led to some great sister and parental scenes.
Which brings me to Winnie’s mom whose actions may seem extra, they come from a good place. She’s not a stereotypical, controlling tiger mom. She just doesn’t want them to hurt or make her mistakes. Which ends up hurting the daughters. Basically, she gets her own arc in learning to let them find their happiness on their own even if it means some suffering. That’s what life is.
Though her plan while crazy was very fun to read. the rom com dates Winnie’s mom suggested was supposed to illustrate that romances like that aren’t real. They were my favorite parts. It included karoke like Best Friends Wedding, lobster date, Shopping like Pretty Women etc. It really added to the lighthearted atmosphere. Readers will also enjoy how the Thai rep and culture is interwoven in the story especially with Winnie, Taren and Mat as they bond over cultural commonalities, other students just don’t get.
Kween by Vinchet Chum

Soma and her sister have been having a difficult time with their father’s deportation. While Soma’s sister, Dehvy is freaking out about planning her wedding without their mother, Soma has been having difficulties in school, stewing with the injustice and imposter syndrome she feels in regards to her heritage. This is only amplified when her spoken word poetry video goes viral and even better, she gets accepted into the local spoken word competition!
Spoken word is a powerful medium for Soma to reflect her name (Soma is the name of a famous Cambodian snake queen who founded the country) and her ancestry, processing her feelings about Ba’s deportation, the immigration system and ancestral stories in general. But she has fears in letting all these issues out in public, fearing misunderstanding and miscommunication and just plain stage fright.
I’ll admit, the novel gave some serious Lilo and Stitch vibes with Soma being the slightly eccentric younger sister whose loud opinions ruffle everyone’s feathers while Dehvy struggles with her wedding and being a guardian. Obviously, I enjoyed it very much because of this.
But Soma’s struggles are very real as she tries to figure out herself. She doesn’t feel Asian enough compared to other contestants and students. She has no connection to the truamas her parents name when speaking of Cambodia’s dictatorship. If she speaks about their history, is she commodifying her parents’ story? Or worse, like she’s trying to use Ba’s story for sympathy. No matter what she does, she feels like she’ll be judged as not enough and that her intentions will be misinterpreted. Yet it’s a risk she has to take because her words have power that can invite others to share and spread connection.
This also has major impact on her interactions with her frenemy, Evie whom her best friend, Sophat (best hype man ever!), keeps trying to push them together to friendship with their commonalities. The issue is that Evie is unashamedly commodifiying their heritage that they haven’t really experienced and co-opting it as her own. But part of that is just Soma’s own projection and she soon learns that they can coexist and there’s room for both of their Cambodian-American experience.
Her teacher, Mr. Drakos is someone else whom she butts heads against most of the time but he turns out to be less of a misguided boomer and someone who has wise words of wisdom in regards to her complicated feelings of her culture and how to embrace and heal from the generational trauma.
Oh, and yes, there’s a cute first romance but it kinda fell to the wayside with everything else that is happening in the story and less interesting compared to the family and internal arcs.
A powerful debut that hits in you in the gut and the heart and shows how elaborately awesome Cambodian wedding traditions can be.
Where the Crawdads Sing by Delia Owens

I know I’m a bit late to the game here since interest in this book was revived by the movie and the controversy a few years ago. But my friend said it was really good so I dived in.
First off, Owens has such a soothing lyrical prose, precisely detailing the marshlands and the small southern community Kyra where lives at the fringes. It helps that she was a zoologist and lends her eye to Kyra’s botanical and animal observations as she sees the ruthless parallels between animal existance with human carelessness and pain as every person Kyra loves hurts her and abandons her.
It’s at one part, one part mystery investigation and overall, coming of age story for Kyra as she loses her trust in humans, learns about love and sexuality, struggles with abandonment, shame and harrasment in the murder trial and then finding love again. She’s a moving protagonist and Owens keeps you so firmly on your side that even I was second guessing whether she could be capable of murder.
However, it has its slow parts, and since it’s so focused on the coming of age, the murder feels a bit hushed even as it flashes back and forth between past and present. It just doesn’t feel as sensational and impactful on the community as Owens implies it is in the narration. Still it was nice to see that Kyra does have some friends and family supporting her in the wings.
Going Bicoastal by Dahlia Adler

Natayla “Tally” Fox has a choice to make this summer. Spending time in NY with her beloved Dad, shaking things up and finally getting the nerve to ask out the Redhead she’s seen around the city? Or going to LA to do a summer internship under her estranged mom and end up hitting it off with her fellow intern who isn’t so anal after all?
Adler’s concurrent narrative devotes every other chapter to LA and NYC, depicting a summer of twists and turns that bring Tally exactly where she needs to be-finding what she wants to do with her life in college, finding common ground with her mother, and a cute significant other to make out with.
I enjoy the Jewish rep in the book as Adler goes out of her way to emphasize the cultural importance it holds for Tally to celebrate Shabbos and keep kosher, even as it sometimes leads to what Tally assumes might be awkward situations when it comes to turning down pork.
Adler packs in a lot of other LGTBQ rep too, showcasing the diversity present in today’s generation with smooth nonchalantness because everyone should be accepted. She also does it with sensitivity as Tally demolishes some myths regarding queerness and Judaism, and what it means to her to be both.
Since Adler is balancing two narratives in one, the significant others feel a bit superficial, hinting at a deeper backstory that never gets explored. I almost wished they had their own POVs so I’d get to know them better, they were interesting. Same goes for the surface-level look at Tally’s choice to go into design as well as her finding a new relationship with her mom whose been absent for the five years of the divorce. Oddly, enough I felt like Tally bonded more with her mom when they were thousands of miles apart in the NYC thread than when they lived together in the LA one.
Still it’s a fun summer rom-com in a choose your own adventure style. Worth the look.
Superman: The Harvests of Youth by Sina Grace

The latest novel from DC Ink has Clark Kent facing a fight maybe he just can’t win. Set during his adolescent high school years, Clark is already using his powers to help others but one of his classmates commits suicide, it sets off a wave of hatred and online antagonism.
Featuring several original characters alongside established ones like Lana Lang and Lex Luthor, Clark’s sweet farmboyish personality is in full view here. Grace does a great job in highlighting Clark’s optimism and belief in the good of people. Yet this fight with mental health is stumping him and brings up his own extentisial questions about his own mortality (what could kill him? Can he even die? Will he be forced to watch everyone else he loves die from murder or old age?) and his abilities. What’s the use of being the strongest man in the world if he can’t help his friends when they’re struggling the most.
Of course, that’s not always what his friends want. As Clark fumbles the ball several times when his girlfriend, Amy (the sister of the classmate) points out that she doesn’t want him to look at her with pity like she’s a broken girl who needs to be fixed. Sometimes she needs to grieve alone, not have him make her happy.
He also gets blasted by his other friend, Gil who’s going down the incel path after breaking his ankle and ruining a chance for a skateboarding career. Bitter, he becomes consumed with the idea that his friends are leaving him, and that everything is everyone else’s faults. He’s the victim etc.
There’s no easy answers, but Grace does a decent job in juggling the many characters and many threads. Yes, things get wrapped up but it’s not neat and emphasizes the importance of community healing. Clark’s formative years are such a goldmine to explore with Clark figuring out his powers and his role in the world, how to protect the ones he loves without falling under the weight of caring for everyone at the expense of his own mental health.
Rez Ball by Byron Graves

Tre has big shoes to fill when he joins his rez’ basketball team. It’s been a few months since his older brother, Jax, died in a car accident and the grief is still present. Moreso, as Tre takes Jax’s place on the basketball team with the expectation that he’ll excell as his brother did and bring them to the championships. In fact, his brothers’ friends say that they’re glad he’s there because it will be like Jax is back with them. Not much mention of Tre’s own worth.
That’s partly why he’s attracted to the new girl, Khiana, who doesn’t have all these images and baggages attached to him and his brother. He can just be. But as basketball season heats up, his friendship with Khiana takes a nosedive and his star rises. Soon, he gets pulled into JV where older players are threatened by his prodigy status, the parties get more tempting and everyone is putting the rez’s reputation on Tre’s shoulders.
Graves’ debut is an excellent look into the process of grief in the family and the joy/difficulties of sports in uniting a community. Largely based on Graves’ own experiences playing basketball at Red Lake where people really believed that the perception of the Obijiwe would be bolstered by basketball successes-they could be seen as proud warriors again.
Kilala Princess Vol. 1 by Rika Tanaka, illustrated by Nao Kodaka

This Disney-manga will surely be enjoyed by those who are fans of Sophie the First, and the younger set. Kilalal is an average young girl who dreams of being a princess like her favorite Disney heroines. While all signs point to her best friend being the princess of the school, it’s Kilala that ends up kissing a sleeping prince and having to rescue her best friend from being kidnapped. On the way she gets to meet her heroines like Snow White and face off against the Evil Queen. It’s pretty much wish fufillment but that’s what makes it fun, and the illustrator, Kodaka, does a lovely job blending the manga style with the more simplified Disney cartoon.
Beauty and the Beast: Lost in a Book by Jennifer Donnelly

I was really excited to read this as I enjoyed Donnelly’s mermaid quartet when I was in middle school. Also Belle is my favorite heroine. But it didn’t live up to my expectations.
Don’t get me wrong, the premise is interesting. Set during the time frame when Belle is trapped in the castle and just getting to know the Beast, she is still spending most of her time in the palace library. There she surprisingly gets sucked into one of the stories. It’s a land called Nevermore with lords, princesses, intellectuals and playwrights who get Belle and her literary love. She finds her people that she’d never found when she was stuck in the provinicial town. It’s in Nevermore where all her dreams come true of having adventure, being a respected member of the community and seeing her father again. But the paradise is really an elaborate chess game concocted by Love and Death to settle their own scores. Predictably, it’s with the help of the Beast and her own epiphany about real life over fantasy that saves the day.
The reason I was disappointed despite the plot is because I literally read this last month with Hale’s Kind of a Big Deal. The two were written years apart but Hale was more inventive in how she approached the premise, using it as a chance to commentate on literary tropes and the temptation of fantasy; exploring why her protagonist was lured by the fantasy and what she could change so she could be content with reality. Belle’s story was limited in characterization since it was trying to fit into the movie, there couldn’t be too much character growth from either Belle or Beast because that would occur after they fell in love.
Also the choice to have Love and Death pull the strings and narrate the plot vaguely reminded me of The Book Thief, where once again Zusak utilized the character of Death in a more compelling way compared to Donnelly’s Love conquers all message here. I mean, that’s a very on Disney brand, but lackluster. So yep, pretty disappointed at it takes elements from other books without a new spin.
Kiss the Girl by Zoraida Cordova

I love Cordova’s romance novels (under the name Zoey Castile) so I was excited to see how she’d tackle the little mermaid’s. Here, Ariel is the star singer of her family band, The Seven Sirens run by their controlling dad-ager, Teo. After the group retires (really a publicity stunt for a bigger comback), Ariel decides to take the chance to explore the outside world. Armed with a wig and an alias, Melody, she soon catches the eye of Eric Reyes, lead singer of the upcoming band, Star-Crossed.
You just know, Ariel’s deception will bite her later as it is already generating lots of speculation in the tabloids of why Ariel is missing in the latest interviews and her father’s ready to blow a gasket. But it gives her an opportunity to get to know Eric better withut her fame interfering, and she gets to experience normal things like doing her own laundry, eating hot dogs on Coney Island, song-writing with a like-minded individual no matter how much she denies the attraction. Eric, here, is characterized as an utter romantic but even though he falls for Melody at first sight, he is cool enough to let her call the shots and delighted to show her his favorite sights on tour.
They’re just so adorable together which makes it hurt when the truth is revealed as it’s clear they get each other more than others as they bond over the pasts of their parents’ immigration stories and feeling the need to prove themselves with the music as an outlet that has slowly become commodified for Ariel. Eric reignites her love for it again.
But that’s not all the drama as Teo seeks to break them apart with carefully said truth-inspired lies. Teo gets the big bad treatment for his controlling ways over his daughters’ lives and finances and for screwing over Odalia Garcia (the story’s Ursula), his former songwriting partner. I like the twist Cordueva delivered in switching the good/bad roles of Teo and Odalia so she can comment on the music industry’s misogyny, and having Odalia being an aloof yet level-headed manager to Eric and Ariel.
Other characters get a spotlight too like Scuttle as the tv host of latest music updates, Vanessa being Odalia’s sister and Eric’s closest confidante even though she initially appears witchy because she doesn’t trust ‘Melody” to not break Eric’s heart, and Max as the band’s lovably, goofy drummer with a big appetite. You can tell Cordova had a blast incoporating references to the movie from all the sea-related descriptors to Ariel calling herself a little guppy, the mermaid/siren mythology and more. It’s a fun book and I can’t wait for more from the Meant to Be series.
Books I read this month
Book of a Thousand Days by Shannon Hale, The Heir, The Crown and Happily Ever After by Kiera Cass, The Rose Years series by Roger Lea McBride, The Time Travelling Fashionista trilogy by Bianca, Concrete Rose by Angie Thomas, Goldilocks: Wanted Dead or Alive and The Enchantress Returns by Chris Colfer, Never After trilogy by Melissa de la Cruz, Don’t Ask Me Where I’m From by Jennifer De Leon, Si Se Pueda by Julio Antes, Half upon a time trilogy and Once Upon Another Time trilogy by James Riley, Prince of Nightmares and Thorns by Linsey Miller, Realm of Wonders by Alexandra Monir, Thunder Girls #1-4 by Joan Holub and Suzanne Williams, Where the Crawdads Sing by Delia Owens, The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo by Taylor Jenkins, Going Bicoastal by Delia Adhler, Ruby Red by Kirsten Gier, Broken Throne by Victoria Aveyard, Family Tree quartet by Ann M. Martin, Royal Academy Rebels by Jen Calonita, The Belles trilogy by Dhionelle Clayton, Twisted Tales anathology edited by Elizabeth Lim, Monster High: Hopes and Screams, and I Only Have Eye for You by Heather
#beautyandthebeast, #byrongraves, #contemporaryromance, #datingmakesperfect, #dcink, #dehliaadler, #deliaowens, #disneyhyperion, #elizabethsantiago, #entangledteen, #goingbicostal, #graphicnovel, #harpercollins, #harperteen, #heartdrum, #jenniferdonnelly, #julioanta, #kilalaprincess, #kissthegirl, #kween, #latinxhistory, #lee&low, #littlemermaid, #lostinabook, #manga, #meanttobe, #monicagomezhira, #naokodaka, #nonfiction, #onceuponaquincenera, #pintipdunn, #putnam'ssons, #quilltreebooks, #rachelreads&reviews, #rikatanaka, #romcom, #sinagrace, #sisepueda, #st.martinspress, #superman, #theharvestsofyouth, #themoonlitvine, #tokoyopop, #vinchetchum, #wherethecrawdadssing, #YA, #yasminfloresmontanez, #zoraidacordova -
A Twisted Tale Anthology Review

This anathology of sixteen short stories take new twists on tales already done in the series and new ones from the Pixar and Disney animal catalogue. In the limited space, the authors manage to pack in heartfelt and fun adventures that may make you see the story in a new way.
It’s always hard to do an anathology review so I’ll do my best to summarize each story and what I enjoyed from each.
(more…)#adragoninthesnow, #afirstmission, #anewdawn, #aroyalgameofchess, #bambi, #beautyandthebeast, #brave, #callitahunch, #castout, #cinderella, #disneyhyperion, #dusttodust, #elizabethlim, #etvoila, #farrahrochon, #fatesthree, #gonnatakeyouthere, #hercules, #jencalonita, #kristinaperez, #lionking, #liviablackburne, #lizbraswell, #m.k.england, #micolostow, #mulan, #peterpan, #rachelreads&reviews, #ratatioulle, #rattlethestars, #robinhood, #sleepingbeauty, #snowwhite, #theenvelope, #thejourneyhome, #thelittlemermaid, #theprincessandthefrog, #thereluctantprince, #theroseandthethorns, #thesecretexchange, #theswordinthestone, #treasureplanet, #twistedtales, #YA -
The Beauty Trials Review

It’s been three years since the muderous, erractic former Queen Sophia has been jailed in her own prison, and Queen Charlotte was rightfully returned to the throne, but the kingdom of Orléans is far from settled.
Beuaty work has been rationed in order to help the Belles be properly compensated and secured, but the rations and rules has only brought more aggression against the Belles for being wanted to treated humanly instead of never-ending workhorses. The rations has only strengthed the public’s addiction for beauty work, and several Belles have gone missing to the illegal underground beauty trafficking, drained of blood to satisfy the desires of the rich. The public is divided by those who want Sophia back on the throne, back their unrestrained excesses and those who don’t want the traitorous queen but want “normalcy” and clean streets again. Neither side has the conditions of the Belles in their minds.
It is in the forefront of Edal’s mind. Even though she’s on the queen’s council, she’s frustrated by how Charlotte’s measures are moderate, trying to please everyone which pleases no one. Even though she’s there to represent the Belles, it’s clear that the concerns of the exploited class are not a priority compared to the rich. Sadly true to life, but Edal has enough.
So when Charlotte proposes the ancient Beauty Trials will determine the next queen, Endal volunteers herself and becomes one of the annoited eight. Even though she’s skeptical of relying on fairytales, it’s clear that this fairytale is very real and more dangerous conspiracies abound.
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The Everlasting Rose Review

Since Princess, now Queen Sophia sent Camellia, Edal, Amber and Rémy on the run, Camellia has been stewing in anger and fear. Mainly, the former as she plots to stop Sophia from reaching coronation day. Some of it is revenge-motivated after all Sophia has put her friends through, but also because she knows it’s for the greater good. With the help of an underground group whose goals align with their own even as they work to undermine the emphasis on beauty work the Belles are known for, and several other allies, Clayton delivers another stunning chapter to The Belles world that shows different isles locations, the origins of the Belles and changes their world forever.
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The Belles Review

When the Goddess of Beauty neglected her lover, the God of the Sky for her human children, he cursed them with Gris, making them ugly and grey. The goddess spent her whole life trying to bring their beauty back, but she couldn’t do it alone, so she created the Belles.
That’s the story of how the Kingdom of Orléans came to be, and today’s society revolves around the commodification of beauty. The Belles are revered for their skills in changing outward appearences, manner and talents, and Camellia Beauregard is eager to put her arcane gifts to use as the Favorite of the royal palace. She wants to follow her Maman’s mantra of making everyone’s beauty mean something. She’s ambitious and willing to do anything to stand out and make her clients uniquely beautiful as well.
But being the Favorite as the royal court is not everything she thought it would be. She hears crying late at night and mentions of other Belles which should not be possible as there’s only six official Belles.
There’s Princess Sophia who challenges Camellia to do grander and more creative beauty modifications, encouraging her to use up her power and drain her. Yet if Camellia doesn’t comply, she witnesses Sophie’s more sadistic obsessions.
Then there’s the Queen who begs Camellia to use her arcane to heal the elder princess, a feat that is a misuse of her natural gifts and potentially fatal, but with Sophie on the precipe of gaining the throne, is it worth Camellia’s death so a monster won’t reign?
Camellia is unsure of what to do, and her isolation and the secrets surrounding her only draw closer around her like a noose. Everything Camellia ever knew about being a Belle is a lie, and she begins to realize maybe being a revered Belle isn’t a blessing but a curse.
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Ranking Once Upon Another Time

Riley returns to the series that started his career. Though the dimension has no name, the fairytale characters are larger than ever.
Except Lena. She’s a giant, only she’s 12 feet tall. She’s more like a taller than average human and a doll to the giants. She’s been hidden from her people most of her life but when the opportunity comes to join the traditional giant sparknaming ceremony, she joins and disaster strikes!
On the other side of the kingdom, a young jinn is enslaved to the Golden King, forced to give wishes to learn humility. The lesson is only having the opposite effect on arrogant Jin whose mistreatment fuels his resentment and bitterness. When he is sent to capture the Golden King’s enemy, the Last Knight, he is sent on a collision course with the cute giant girl and together, they find out the shades of evil and purity isn’t as clear as the storybooks led them to believe.- Tall Tales: It’s rare when the sophmore book gets top spot, but Riley does an excellent job in introducing new characters and higher stakes as the true agendas of various heroes, villains, and heroes who are really villains are revealed. Plus the inevitable heroes-on-the-edge-winning-lose-at-last-minute actually felt real and urgent and all the more soul crushing when the rug is pulled from under them. The lesson felt very applicable as Lena learns how stories can be used to demonize others for narrow-minded purposes and those who preach purity are usually more monsterous than those they claim to be monsters. Plus it was laugh out loud funny like Sherin, the Lilliput with a Napoleon complex and Jin getting “drunk” from a spell.
- Happily Ever After: If you read Riley’s first trilogy or The Story Thieves series, one knows that Riley enjoys his convulated meta-ness and it’s no different here. Everyone’s minds are erased by the fairy queens but Gwentell’s use of the magic book restores Lena as she teams up with Jack, May, Jillian and several other old friends to get Jin back and save the fairytale world from becoming human again. Not only was it delightful to see the old characters return, but Sherin and Lena get some major character development as they wreastle with their insecurities. Lena also learns the power of stories in understanding others’ motives but not excusing their hatred or prejudice yet not getting consumed by it herself, just hoping for change. Again, very applicable to real life and fairytale worlds. It only gets second place because while I understood the message about it being Lena/Jin/Sherin’s time to shine and May/Jack are no longer the protagonists, I did feel like the plot thread of their children being used for shadow magic was completely dropped. I mean, as parents I imagined they’d be a lot more worried after being separated from them for almost twelve years but it was hardly mentioned. Same with Prince Phillip and Jillian getting completely shafted as well as Wolf King and his triplets. It’s a minor complaint but still there. The ending twist was cool though and promises possibly another spin off to come.
- Once Upon Another Time: This was a cool re-introduction to the world and its chaacter especially as both Lena and Jin come off as distinct, earnest characters in their own rights to lessen comparisons to Jack and May. The adventure was solid but can get confusing with shifting alliances, and only hints at what’s to come. Also there was a lesson in here too as there was in the following books but it felt more like an after-thought and shoe-horned in.
So if anyone wanted to return to the mixed up world of fairytales hyped on sarcasm, Riley does it again and readers will happily devour the books with old and new friends.
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Ranking Royal Academy Rebels

Calonita’s spin off/concurrent trilogy, Royal Academy Rebels brings readers back to the kingdom of Enchantsia. Only, it’s not the reformed villains who are in trouble. It’s the royals with their tiaras and ballgowns that bring the revolution.
Actually, it’s one specific royal who doesn’t quite fit the box.Devin of the Nile couldn’t care less about fashion. She wants to be a creature caretaker, her gift for communicating with animals only bolsters her dream. But she’s twelfth in line for the throne, so she’s obligated to attend Royal Academy where she gets on Fairy Godmother, Oliviana’s bad side with her nonconforming ways.
It’s not just a clashing of old fashioned ideas with the young wanting to expand their dreams and definitions of royalty. Oliviana is actually a puppetmaster, manipulating all those famous fairytales so she can save the day and make the royals dependent on her favor. Yeah, so manipulatively smart and gives real Shrek 2 Fairy Godmother vibes.
Just as spunky and relatable as Gilly, Devin’s adventures and friendships at Royal Academy make for a great story about following your dreams, controlling envy and the importance of faith and trust with light wreastling over the nature of who’s really good and who’s really evil.
So let’s get to the rankings.
- Heroes: Okay, it’s par for course that the epic conclusion gets the top spot. Not only is it double the length of the other novels, but has the return of characters from Fairy Tale Reform School. Most notably, Anna Cobbler undergoes her redemption arc whilst Devin struggles with her own fall from grace, struggling with the envy she has with Anna’s newfound animal communication gifts. As well as her feelings that she doesn’t belong in Royal Academy, feeling her own dreams are deferred for the sake of royal duties and responsibilities she doesn’t want. The latter one truly hits home. The personal development, and overall, plot go hand in hand in wrapping up Devin and Anna’s arc while expanding on the previous themes of royal and villain definitions are fluid and no one is born evil nor entirely good.
- Misfits: The introductory book is great fun, bringing in Devin’s unintentional feminist rebellion to Royal Academy as she chafes against Oliviana’s restrictions for princesses to defend themselves or even wear pants. It gets a bit gas-light (lite?) as Oliviana chastise Devin for failing her tests while smiling through her teeth that she will be expelled and her parents will be hurt if Devin doesn’t fall in line. Yeesh, but I like the paranoia and confusion. Devin’s friends and roommates are each distinct, representing different ideas of what royals could be and the importance that following their dreams doesn’t mean they can’t also fufill their destinies to rule.
- Outlaws: As usual, the sophmore book falls into sophmore slump as it has the weight of being the filler exposition, setting the foundation for the finale and introducing important new characters but also drawing out the bad guys winning angle. It’s a solid book but not as interesting as the others.
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Broken Throne Review

This final anathology brings things full circle as Aveyard through the historian-academic Julian Jacos give readers an overview of the world that sprung the Red and Silver universe, important figures and timelines, maps, and declassified materials. This along with five novellas, two previously collected plus three all new ones!
So let’s get to it.
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