Friday, 5 June 2015

Something Strange and Deadly

I have the biggest book hangover I’ve had this year and that’s saying something after reading my 68th of the year. I went on a binge when my exams had finished, sue me.

What book gave me the hangover? It’s actually a trilogy. Something Strange and Deadly, A Darkness Strange and Lovely, Strange and Ever After.

The absolutely amazing Susan Dennard has written the best series I’ve read so far. I realise that we’re only halfway through the year but I feel confident in saying that I don’t think anything (even the release of Queen of Shadows – Sarah J Maas) is going to compare to the fabulousness of this trilogy.

I’m a little late to this party with Strange and Ever After having been available for the past year but, honestly, I didn’t think I would be interested in this series until the Truthwitch announcements. That book seemed so otherworldly and magical that I wanted to read through Dennard’s previous works to get a feel for her writing. It was the announcement of Dennard’s new series – available Jan 2015 – that made me want to read her older one. I’m not ashamed to admit to that in the slightest.

The Something Strange and Deadly (SSaD) trilogy follows Eleanor Fitt and the Spirit Hunters as they attempt to put a stop to the necromancer raising the dead in 1876 Philadelphia. Eleanor’s once wealthy family has been thrown to almost poverty and her extremely overbearing mother sets out to wed Eleanor to a wealthy family to raise the family back to former glory.

Eleanor, our wonderful Eleanor, has other plans involving the finding of her brother and the helping of the Spirit Hunters in their attempt to stop the Dead from, well, doing what the dead do, really. We all know zombies, right? They want to chomp on the living and talk about who’s showing the most bone.

Following Eleanor, Jie, Daniel, and Joseph – the latter three being the Spirit Hunters – as they stop the Dead in Philadelphia, Paris, Marseille, and Egypt, is the most fun I’ve had following fictional characters for a while. For some reason everything I’ve read lately has had the same basic storyline where good wins and the guy gets the girl or, more accurately for these books, the girl gets the guy.

I am happy to report that good does win out, the necromancer is destroyed and the Dead stop rising. I am absolutely fucking ecstatic to report that the girl does not get the guy. For long.

I think that’s why I loved this trilogy so much.

There’s so much build up to epic romance between Eleanor and the wonderful inventor that is Daniel Sherridan, and they don’t get to see it through. Evil triumphs over love. And, you know what? Eleanor gets on with life.

She doesn’t stop living just because Daniel is gone. Sure, she attempts to get him back, but she does not succeed. She is denied the chance to live out her epic love story with a man that may come back as he was or completely changed. Dennard does not give in to the temptation of giving her main character the romantic ending, like so many authors do these days.

Instead we get a strong as hell woman that emerges from the hellish experiences she’s been through from the very beginning of the series. This woman has lost her family, she’s lost the love of her life, to this same person. And she destroys him and gets on with her life.

Her friends are there for her and she knows it. She knows that, with their help, she can continue to live, to see out the dreams she had with Daniel even though he is no longer by her side to see them himself.


That is fucking beautiful.

5/5

Tuesday, 26 May 2015

Shadow of Mordor

I've only recently remembered that I even had this and thought I should use it to, y'know, get the feels out.

I'm pissed. Seriously pissed.
I am 8 hours away from sitting my Social Science graded unit (that big exam that determines whether I get to stay in education for the next year) so, naturally, I've been playing video games all night long while staring at my study materials and wondering why it's not just all in my head yet.


I started Shadow of Mordor when it was first released. Then I got a wee bit obsessed with all things Dragon Age and it was pushed to the back burner. Dragon Age, seriously, if you like games and love yourself, get involved with this.
Anyway, I loved Shadow of Morder when I first started it. Granted, it's very similar to Assassin's Creed and, well, I love the AC franchise more than almost anything, so I was pretty much guaranteed to love Shadow of Mordor. And I did... For a while.

Well, I loved it right up until the end.

Because, what the fuck was that ending?
There's nothing to be done.
Fight off a horde, climb the Gate, then hit a series of prompts.

Just so disappointed right now.