Thursday, October 26, 2017

And Then There Were None


By:  Agatha Christie
Genre: Murder Mystery
Pages: 264
Published: 1939
Told In: Third Person
 “Movie” Rating: PG-13

Compare to:
The Mystery of the Yellow Room, 
        Gaston Leroux
The Sign of Four, 
        Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
A Stranger is Watching, 
        Mary Higgins Clark

In a nutshell:
10 strangers are trapped alone on an island, accused of murder by an unknown host. One by one they are killed, following the lines of a nursery rhyme.

What you may enjoy:
This book keeps you guessing. Christie set up the perfect mystery without revealing the secret of it all until the very end. If you want a classic with a surprising ending, you’ll love this!

What you may NOT enjoy:
It is difficult to keep track of all of the characters in the beginning and the story starts off a little slow. By the time the mystery really starts to build, some of the specifics get confusing.

Warnings:
Violence and Disturbing Images:
Man chokes and dies; man killed with an axe (mentioned); man slaps woman; dead woman’s face described; man bleeds from gun wound in the head; man’s head crushed; drowned bloated body found; woman hangs herself.


Language and Profanity:
Damned (29xs); damn (9xs); damnable (3xs); God (15xs); hell; ass


Buy it on Amazon

Thursday, October 19, 2017

The Night Circus

By:  Erin Morgenstern
Genre: Fantasy Fiction
Pages: 400
Published: 2011
Told In: Third Person
 “Movie” Rating: Hazy zone between PG and PG-13

Compare to:
The Golem and the Jinni, Helene Wecker
Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell, Susanna Clarke
The Last Dragonslayer, Jasper Fforde

In a nutshell:
Forced to compete to prove who the stronger magician is, Marco and Celia never expected to fall in love. But their competition is putting all of those who are part of the circus as risk, and their teachers won’t let them stop until only one magician is left standing.

What you may enjoy:
This is an easy book to get swept into the atmosphere. The writing is beautiful and the imagery is elaborately vivid. The plot clearly illustrates how interconnected people’s stories are. The romance is a simple part of the book, not what carries the story.

What you may NOT enjoy:
It is easy to get lost in this book because of the constant jumps in points of view and time periods. The plot itself is not enough to put 400 pages into. At its core, this book is primarily just depictions of a circus and the people who keep it going.

Warnings:
Violence and Disturbing Images:
Man cuts open girl’s fingertips; man breaks girl’s wrist; woman stabs her hand; man stabbed in the chest

Sex and Nudity:
Boy and girl kiss; man kisses woman’s neck; man kisses woman; girl kisses boy; man and woman kiss (2xs); woman kisses man (2xs); man takes off woman’s dress; man and woman are naked together; indicates that man and woman have sex


Language and Profanity:

 Hell, damned (4xs)


Buy it on Amazon

Thursday, October 12, 2017

Coraline


By:  Neil Gaiman
Genre: Children’s Dark Fairy Tale
Pages: 162
Published: 2006
Told In: Third Person
 “Movie” Rating: G

Compare to:
Tales of Terror from the Black Ship, Chris Priestly
The Changling. Terri Windling
A Tale Dark and Grimm, Adam Gidwitz

In a nutshell:
After Coraline finds another dimension, her “other mother” is determined to keep Coraline there forever. The only way Coraline can return home is to find and rescue her parents.

What you may enjoy:
Coraline is a fun and clever character. It’s a good level of creepy/scary for kids without causing nightmares. It is a beautifully written creation.

What you may NOT enjoy:
The book starts of kind of slow. The story is creepy in a weird way. There are quite a few unanswered questions.

Warnings:
Violence and Disturbing Images:
Rat’s head severed from its body; severed hand creeps around a house



Buy it on Amazon

Thursday, October 5, 2017

Dracula


By: Bram Stoker
Genre: Classic LiteraturePages: 488
Published: 1897
Told In: First Person
 “Movie” Rating: PG
(Leaning toward the PG-13 side)

Compare to:
Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Robert Louis Stevenson
The Picture of Dorian Gray, Oscar Wilde
Frankenstein, Mary Shelley

In a nutshell:
The story, told through journals and letters, of how a group of people learned of the existence of vampires, and hunt down the one who started it all---Dracula.

What you may enjoy:
Classic story that makes all other vampire stories look silly in comparison. There is more dialogue and redeemable characters than “Frankenstein” and more details and story than Jekyll and Hyde. Since the story is told through multiple people, readers get many great perspectives.

What you may NOT enjoy:
Sometimes the language of the book is hard to follow for people unaccustomed to older English. Van Helsing talks far too much and all the men are overly dramatic. Some people have trouble their suspension of disbelief when it comes to the blood transfusions.

Warnings:
Violence and Disturbing Images:
Wolves eat woman; vampire kills baby; man kills and eats birds raw; old man found dead; dead body found tied onto a ship; woman dies of heart attack; girl dies from blood loss; vampire bites child’s neck; vampire staked through the heart (slightly graphic); man lying in a pool of blood; vampire drinks from woman’s neck; vampire breaks man’s back, man dies; woman forced to drink vampire’s blood; man’s throat ripped out; vampire’s head cut off and heart stabbed through; man dies from knife wound.

Sex and Nudity:
Women kisses man; man kisses woman

Language and Profanity:
God (30 times); damn (2 times); hell





Find it on Amazon