Queen of the Warrior Bees by Jean Gill (ARC Review)

Queen of the Warrior Bees by Jean Gill (ARC Review)

One misfit girl and 50,000 bees. Together they must change the world. As the Mages of the Citadel fight amongst themselves and prepare for war against the Forest, Mielitta, a despised servant, has her own battle to face. Bastien and Jannlou, the boys who terrorised her as a child, have grown into their status as Mages and she cannot escape them forever.

In desperation, she flees to the forbidden Forest and its dangerous attractions. Her scent angers thousands of bees and, although she survives their attack, she has changed. A strange bee symbol glows on her thigh and her senses are altered. She learns that her connection with bees enables her to summon their aid and gives her the power to shift shape.

This new-found bond works both ways and the bees need Mielitta’s help as the rift widens between Forest and Citadel. Can one girl and a colony of bees reunite Man and Nature, or is the split irreversible?

Block Nature out and she’ll force a way in.

Book Overview:

Author: Jean Gill | Series: Natural Forces | Format: eBook – ARC | Length: 273 pages | Publish Date: June 7, 2019 | Genre: YA Fantasy | Rated: ★ ★ | Recommend: Maybe

Disclaimer: I received a copy of this book from Netgalley in exchange for an honest review.

First, I want to say thank you so much to Netgalley for taking a chance on me in giving me this book. I know it’s been a long while since I’ve done a read for review for Netgalley so I honestly wasn’t sure if I was going to get any more requests, but thank goodness I did. Thanks again, Netgalley!

Now on to the actual review.

I tried my hardest to get through this as well. Unfortunately I didn’t get too far, although I did want to do my best. The premise was interesting enough, and the cover really got me. There’s another book from Jean Gill that’s been on my list that I’ve been wanting to read, although I didn’t get a chance to get to it yet, so I went into this one with the hopes that this was going to be an awesome ride. Unfortunately, it fell a little flat for me and I wasn’t able to feel something for Mielitta except for anger. I didn’t understand why Jannlou and Bastien were such jerks to her besides the fact that she didn’t have her maturity ceremony, and maybe if I had continued the story further I would have found out.

I got about 33% into the book before I decided that I wasn’t as emotionally invested as I wanted to be. However, just because it wasn’t my cup of tea doesn’t mean I write it off completely. I did feel for Mielitta for the way she was treated, and I wanted her to kick some major ass on the Citadel, but at that point I didn’t feel like trying to make it that far would be worthwhile.

I may go back into this book in another format when it gets published. Maybe hearing it as an audiobook would be beneficial for me, although I felt like I was getting lost while I read it. There were scenes that seemed to jump without any explanation, or times where the scene felt like it should have ended a few paragraphs ago but was extended without a reason.

The book had promise – and it irritated me how controlling the men of the Citadel were to women and girls enough that I wanted Mielitta to free her fellow women – but at this time, it’s not one that I would continue to read.

The Future Will Be BS-Free by Will McIntosh (ARC Review)

The Future Will Be BS-Free by Will McIntosh (ARC Review)

In this terrifyingly timely tale for fans of The Eye of Minds, a teen and his group of friends find themselves on the run after using a genius lie-detector contraption to expose their corrupt government.

In a Putin-esque near-future America, the gifted and talented high school has just been eliminated, and Sam and his friends have been using their unexpected free time to work on a tiny, undetectable, utterly reliable lie detector. They’re all in it for the money–except Theo, their visionary. For Theo, it’s about creating a better world. A BS-free world, where no one can lie, and the honest will thrive.

Just when they finish the prototype and turn down an offer to sell their brainchild to a huge corporation, Theo is found dead. Greedy companies, corrupt privatized police, and even the president herself will stop at nothing to steal the Truth App. Sam sets his sights on exposing all lies and holding everyone accountable.

But he and his friends quickly realize the costs of a BS-free world: the lives of loved ones, and political and economic stability. They now face a difficult question: Is the world capable of operating without lies, or are lies what hold it together?

Book Overview:

Author: Will McIntosh | Series: None | Format: Hardcover – ARC | Length: 352 pages | Publish Date: July 24, 2018 | Genre: YA Dystopia | Rated: ★ ★ ★| Recommend: Maybe


“Powerful people aren’t smarter or more capable than the rest of us; they’re just more willing to lie, cheat, steal, even kill.”


Disclaimer: I received a copy of this book from Netgalley in exchange for an honest review.

One of the scariest things about this book is that it doesn’t feel too far off from what I think America will be like, but that’s besides the point.

McIntosh brings a version of the United States to life in this book, where the country is so devastated financially that even high schools are shut down because they lack funding. Once the funding is gone, the students aren’t allowed to come back, and the teachers are quickly displaced. People are homeless in the hundreds, trying to survive in a place where there is barely anything to work for. It’s a nightmare, and it seems like it’s thanks to their current President. For one, President Vitnik had no political experience prior to being elected (sound familiar?) and has convinced the Legislature to get rid of the two term limit enforced after FDR held a record four-term Presidency. Now the county is in the hands of this president that has monopolized on the country’s lack of resources by being one of its main suppliers – literally everything has her face and name – while the country continues to suffer.

In comes Sam Gregorious – lovely name – and his five friends that now have a lot more free time on their hands to invent a lie detector that doesn’t rely on someone’s heart rate, but is 100% more reliable than anything we have ever seen before. Dubbed the “Truth App”, Sam and his team started off their journey to create the truth app to make a boat load of money and get their families out of poverty, while Theo wants to create a “bullshit-free world” where corruption will fall and the honest will rise. Theo was the only one that saw their invention as something more than an instant cash cow, and of course he was the one that was murdered by those that sought to shut their invention down. FYI, that’s not a spoiler since it’s in the synopsis, but it still sucks.

Throughout the entire journey, the book moved way too fast for me. Not one that made me want to find out what happened next, but one where I was always wondering why a chapter ended the way it did, or started the way it did. It didn’t seem cohesive, but I could at least follow what was happening. Scenes jumped so quickly that you were left wondering what happened in the middle – or why it seems like those specific scenes were deemed important.

It was also difficult to sympathize with Sam, or wonder why he was the one that was “in charge” of this whole thing. Theo truly was the brains, and throughout the book I didn’t see what made Sam the leader, if he ever was one. He was the scapegoat, the one that the others chose to blame when “shit hit the fan” and all other disastrous events took place, but did they really show him respect at all? Not really. Was it just because Theo was murdered and they had nobody else to fall behind? He didn’t seem like the type that his friends really rallied behind at all. Not to mention he seemed completely obsessed with Molly, his crush since forever that didn’t like him back, and that seemed to have gotten in the way of a good storytelling. There was a love triangle for no reason, and the only reason why it had any merit was because it fractured the dynamic of the group for such a ridiculous reason. It was not needed, but teen boys seem to be girl-centric when the world is going up in flames.

I think this would have probably made an interesting TV movie, or movie in general, and while I liked the concept of the story, I felt like it could have been explored more. The ending was nice, and I’m glad things will hopefully start to work out again for the United States, but maybe having more of what happened before, and why Vitnik did what she did could be some bonus content for us to feel better about this story.

Queen of Thieves by Katherine Bogle (ARC Review)

Queen of Thieves by Katherine Bogle (ARC Review)

Ruthless commander. Cunning thief. Deadly blademaster. 

Narra is a second generation thief raised in the Guild by her iron-fisted father. Growing up, she dreamed his death would free her, but when he shows up dead in the wreckage of a train destroyed by the Revolution, the happiest day of her life is ruined by one word: traitor. 

Her father is accused of betraying the only thing she thought he ever really loved; the Thieves Guild. To prove his innocence, and remove the stain from her name, Narra will go to darker places than she ever thought possible and be forced to work with people she doesn’t dare trust. 

If she fails, she’ll lose more than her sanity or her life. 

She’ll lose the Guild. 

Set in a steampunk world on the cusp of civil war, Queen of Thievesintroduces a dark tale where family lies, magic might be real, and thieves fall for revolutionary princesses. 


Book Overview:

Author: Katherine Bogle | Series: Clockwork Thief | Format: eBook – ARC | Length: 368 pages | Publish Date: August 21, 2018 | Genre: YA Fantasy | Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★ | Recommend: Yes

“But they avoided her.  They’d never touch her with such fondness or sincerity.  She was cold, heartless – a villain even among thieves.”


Disclaimer: I received a copy of this book from the author, and agreed to provide an honest review.

Can I first just start off by saying that I am a sucker for YA books with a bad ass heroine that doesn’t give a crap what others think? Okay I guess that’s my second disclaimer for the review.

Moving on.

Second of all, I think that this series will be one of my favorites in the near future, and I’m going to have to get me some physical copies to add to my collection. The eBook just doesn’t do it justice!  I absolutely am in love with Narra. From the beginning of the book, you can see the type of woman she is. I don’t even know if I can consider her to be a typical female MC, because honestly she just has this aura of “IDGAF if you like me” and I’m all for it.

Plus her dad is a drunk piece of turd that really needs to step the heck down and let his daughter run things, but that’s none of my business.

I thoroughly enjoyed Bogle’s prose.  Her writing style is one of my favorites so far, and I know that now I’m going to have to read the rest of her work sometime soon.  Also, I need to find out what else is going to happen in Narra’s life, because there is no way that I can just end it like that.

Absolutely no way.

Author Spotlight
Courtesy of Goodreads
 
Born: in Saint John, Canada
            January 26, 1993
Twitter: KattyB3
Genre: Fantasy, Science Fiction, Young Adult
Influences: Lindsay Buroker
Goodreads Member Since: September 2015
 
 

Katherine Bogle’s debut young adult novel, Haven, came second in the World’s Best Story contest 2015. She currently resides in Saint John, New Brunswick with her partner in crime, and plethora of cats.