Showing posts with label Rosamund Hodge. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rosamund Hodge. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 4, 2015

Top Ten Fairy Tale Retellings

Top 10 Tuesday is a post hosted by The Broke and the Bookish and this week's topic is Top Ten Fairy Tale Retellings.

I’m not even sure I’ve read 10 retellings—much less specifically fairytale retellings. But these are my favorite retellings the only retellings I’ve read period.

  1. The Lunar Chronicles by Marissa Meyer – Cinderella, Little Red Riding Hood, Rapunzel, and Snow White
  2. Cruel Beauty by Rosamund Hodge – Beauty and the Beast
  3. Redeeming Love by Francine Rivers – Hosea
  4. Darcy’s Story by Janet Aylmer – Retelling of Pride and Prejudice but from Mr. Darcy’s POV
  5. The Fall by Bethany Griffin – The Fall of the House of Usher
  6. Crimson Bound by Rosamund Hodge – Little Red Riding Hood & The Girl with No Hands

What are your favorite retellings? Let me know!

Thursday, May 7, 2015

Crimson Bound - Review

Crimson Bound

By: Rosamund Hodge

Published: May 5th 2015 by Balzer & Bray/Harperteen

448 pages

Genre: Young Adult, Fantasy, Retelling

Source: Publisher via Edelweiss (Thank you!!)

( Goodreads | Amazon | Book Depository )

*Note: The above links to Amazon and Book Depository are affiliate links. Affiliate links support giveaways for Somewhere Only We Know readers.

Goodreads description--When Rachelle was fifteen she was good—apprenticed to her aunt and in training to protect her village from dark magic. But she was also reckless— straying from the forest path in search of a way to free her world from the threat of eternal darkness. After an illicit meeting goes dreadfully wrong, Rachelle is forced to make a terrible choice that binds her to the very evil she had hoped to defeat.

Three years later, Rachelle has given her life to serving the realm, fighting deadly creatures in an effort to atone. When the king orders her to guard his son Armand—the man she hates most—Rachelle forces Armand to help her find the legendary sword that might save their world. As the two become unexpected allies, they uncover far-reaching conspiracies, hidden magic, and a love that may be their undoing. In a palace built on unbelievable wealth and dangerous secrets, can Rachelle discover the truth and stop the fall of endless night?

Inspired by the classic fairy tale Little Red Riding Hood, Crimson Bound is an exhilarating tale of darkness, love, and redemption.

I listened to Cruel Beauty on audio a while back, and I enjoyed it. But I also think I enjoyed it as much as I did because it was on audio. It had more of a slow progression than I typically enjoy, so I was a little concerned about reading Crimson Bound over listening to the audio version. But sometimes you don’t really get much choice in the format, so I was just happy to have the opportunity to read and review Crimson Bound. And well, Crimson Bound was a little slow. And truthfully, I might have liked it better had I been listening to the audiobook versus reading it. But I did enjoy it.

Crimson Bound is kind of a combination of two fairytales: Little Red Riding Hood and The Girl With No Hands. Personally, I know nothing about The Girl With No Hands, and so I wasn’t able to really look for how all the pieces of that fairytale fit into Crimson Bound. The ins and outs of the world Rosamund Hodge created in Crimson Bound are fairly complicated to describe. It was easy to understand while reading, but to break things down for you here would be a bit much.

As the description says, Rachelle makes a bad decision that ends up with her being bound to the evil she was trying to figure out how to defeat. Even as a young girl, Rachelle never wanted to sit idly by as the world around her suffers. Now she’s faced with carrying the guilt of her decisions with her or die trying to redeem herself and save those who she was seeking to save from the beginning.

The description isn’t quite accurate when it says that Armand—who Rachelle is charged with guarding—is the man she hates most. She hates the Devourer. She hates the forestborn who turned her bloodbound, and she hates the bishop. Armand…well he falls in line definitely after these three. Armand survived what Rachelle could not. When a forestborn approached him to turn him bloodbound, Armand was able to resist completeing the process and Rachelle hates what that means. It means that she might have been able to resist too. And that’s what Rachelle hates. Herself.

Like Rachelle, I wasn’t fully sure who to trust or who to root for in the beginning. And even when the emotional connection began to develop with Rachelle, I had a hard time connecting to her choice fully. I didn’t really have all of the twists figured out beforehand, but I also didn’t feel the need to try. The ending felt a little clean for me. But this is based off a fairytale afterall.

Favorite quotes:

-“I grow impatient, little girl.” “Then learn to wait,” she bit out..

-“Do you think that doing the right thing will always be pretty?”

-“I think sometimes there is no right thing.”

-…”my mother used to say that if we all got what we deserved, we’d all be dead. And yet somehow God refrains from smiting us.”

-She was bloodbound, after all, and being bloodbound meant knowing how easily I could never turned into Yes, I will.

In the end, I enjoyed Crimson Bound. I wanted to keep reading and was more invested than I thought I would be. Yet at the same time, Crimson Bound was also easy to put down when I needed to. When I finished Crimson Bound I realized that it was a good book, but not exceptional. There wasn’t much for me to complain about, but I wasn’t blown away either. Crimson Bound gets 3 Stars. Have you read Crimson Bound? What did you think? Let me know!

Friday, January 9, 2015

Cruel Beauty - Review

Cruel Beauty

By: Rosamund Hodge

Published: January 28th 2014 by Balzer + Bray

342 pages

Genre: YA, Fantasy, Retellings, Mythology, Fairy Tales

Source: Free Audiobook Sync Download

( Goodreads | Amazon | Book Depository )

*Note: The above links to Amazon and Book Depository are affiliate links. Affiliate links support giveaways for Somewhere Only We Know readers.

Goodreads description--Graceling meets Beauty and the Beast in this sweeping fantasy about one girl's journey to fulfill her destiny and the monster who gets in her way-by stealing her heart.

Based on the classic fairy tale Beauty and the Beast, Cruel Beauty is a dazzling love story about our deepest desires and their power to change our destiny.

Since birth, Nyx has been betrothed to the evil ruler of her kingdom-all because of a foolish bargain struck by her father. And since birth, she has been in training to kill him.

With no choice but to fulfill her duty, Nyx resents her family for never trying to save her and hates herself for wanting to escape her fate. Still, on her seventeenth birthday, Nyx abandons everything she's ever known to marry the all-powerful, immortal Ignifex. Her plan? Seduce him, destroy his enchanted castle, and break the nine-hundred-year-old curse he put on her people.

But Ignifex is not at all what Nyx expected. The strangely charming lord beguiles her, and his castle-a shifting maze of magical rooms-enthralls her.

As Nyx searches for a way to free her homeland by uncovering Ignifex's secrets, she finds herself unwillingly drawn to him. Even if she could bring herself to love her sworn enemy, how can she refuse her duty to kill him? With time running out, Nyx must decide what is more important: the future of her kingdom, or the man she was never supposed to love.

I’m not sure how much I’m going to have to say about Cruel Beauty. I got this as a free audio download this past summer from Sync. Can’t beat free, right? And I don’t know that I would have ever gotten around to this one had I not had it on audio. Anyway, so I was excited about it because it’s dubbed as a Beauty and the Beast retelling right? I can kind of see that. However, the description actually puts it as “Graceling meets Beauty and the Beast” and to that I have to say “WHERE? Did I read a different book?” Because there is nothing even remotely similar to Graceling about this book. (At least not Graceling by Kristin Cashore. Maybe they meant the other Graceling book that I haven't read.)

Because of the comparison to Beauty and the Beast, I was looking for different aspects of that story to come in to Cruel Beauty and so I was initially annoyed when we started heading down the path with Shade. That just didn’t seem to be in line with the events of what happens in Beauty and the Beast. However, eventually, that played itself out in a way that I was okay with.

Overall, I kind of feel like I don’t have much to add. Nyx goes through a period of time toward the end of the book where she’s forgotten most of what she experienced through the majority of the book. That section was slightly annoying. It seemed like an easy conflict choice, and one that was easily resolved as well. I wasn’t sure that there would be an ending that I would be okay with, but ultimately I was content with how everything went. I think it’s possible that I would have liked this one more or possibly less had I not been listening to the audio version. There was nothing wrong with the narrator, but I can see where in some places I would have burrowed deeper had I been reading instead of listening, yet in other places I can see that I might have gotten bogged down as well.

It was a pleasant story to experience, but I wasn’t blown away and I wasn’t frustrated too much. So all in all, I’m thinking a pretty average rating. Cruel Beauty gets 3.5 Stars for me. Have you read Cruel Beauty? What did you think? Let me know!