Scary Light (yawn): Kendare Blake’s Girl of Nightmares

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Hello, again, all you YA Lit readers out in the stratosphere! My grad school classes temporarily lightened enough for me to (finally) finish one of the books I’ve been reading: Girl of Nightmares by Kendare Blake, sequel to the super chilling Anna Dressed in Blood.

I finished it earlier today, but there are still so many questions and unresolved issues swirling around about this!

First, is this really the ending to the Anna saga??? I left it feeling like Cas, our ghost-fighter/wooer extraordinaire, was simply on his way to continue fighting ghosts, as soon as he was feeling a bit better. And especially with the introduction of Jestine, another ghost fighter who apparently is about to get her own athame, it seemed as though Ms. Blake was setting them up for some kind of romance/showdown of ghost-hunting skills or something.

But I suppose that the question itself is actually beside the point. After reading Anna Dressed in Blood (obsessedly absorbed by micro-book light, on my Kindle, on a trip through India, while my fiance was trying to sleep), I was hooked! And while neither Ms. Blake nor Anna are quite at Stephen King levels, in Anna, Ms. Blake does seem several steps ahead of most other writers in creating interesting dynamics and character development that cleanly weaves together a page-turning plot with thrills and chills. And while my memory’s not serving me perfectly on all the details of Anna, what I remember most from it was the atmosphere: creepy, gruesome ghost monsters, waiting to rip at flesh and trip up Cas as he sends them to wherever they were meant to go.

The first Anna hooked me, big time: ghosts, ghosts, and more ghosts!–plus interesting high schooler dynamics, a ghost hunter, his witch-y best friend, and a generally great ensemble cast working to eradicate ghostly ne’er do wells from the realm of the living.

This time around, Girl of Nightmares had a notably less exciting feel. Don’t get me wrong–there’s still ghosts all over, there’s still a pretty epic showdown at the end, there’s still amusing high school drama antics interspersed throughout, but I found myself (and I hate to say this) actually bored at several points throughout. As in, my eyes were moving over words, but I didn’t really find myself committing to the meaning of them enough to take anything away with them. Also, Cas got all mopey-emo since the first book.

Girl of Nightmares is dark, but it’s a responsive dark: the response of Cas realizing that his “girlfriend” Anna (yes, I’d like to know when that happened, too) has succeeded in dragging the horrible Obeahman to hell, but is stuck there herself now, facing an eternity of being tortured over and over by him. Cas, still in the land of the living, pines and mopes and acts heartsick, but quickly realizes he can’t–that, indeed, he won’t–move on, as he’s convinced Anna’s being tortured and is in pain because of her sacrifice.

Noble? Yes. And if the solution was somewhat easily found and the journey to rescue her the true focus of the story, then it would be page-turning, too. And dark and gruesome, in the same vain as the first Anna. Unfortunately, instead  we end up with a book about how Cas learns that Carmel doesn’t want to hunt ghosts, that his athame came from a very old group of people who have athames that look like his athame, that his mother doesn’t approve, that Morfran’s dog likes peanut butter cookies, etc, etc. Not to say that character development and twists to the plot aren’t important, but just to say that there could be a little more excitement prior to the last, oh, four chapters or so. And that there may be more exciting ways to present character development also.

By the end, I found myself feeling very meh. The ending feels more beginning-ish than actually ending-ish, and along the way there really isn’t any clear suggestion as to what, exactly Cas’s end game is. Rescue Anna from hell and then what? Drag her back over the ocean from England (where he enters) to the US? To a house that no longer exists? Or is he going to stay in hell with her? Or hope that both of them are sent to heaven? Even Cas admits that he doesn’t know what he’s going to do, but he feels he can’t just leave her. Which is understandable, considering her sacrifice, but still does not make for the most exciting read.

By the end, Anna (we think?) has been freed from the Obeahman’s control, as have others. Cas is still alive, his friends and mother still support him, and the athame is still his. He’s risked the lives of basically everyone he knows, but the ghost (already dead) has been saved. There just still seem to be so many unanswered questions swirling about.

Over all, this book was ok, but I assume it must be book two of a trilogy. I can’t imagine the author leaving these characters dangling the way they are, with so many loose ends. I’m not sure where she’s going to take it, but until we know for sure whether there’s another piece of this puzzle, there are likely better options out there to pick up. Like Anna Dressed in Blood–a really, really good scary book!

Looking for Some YA Series to Read? Look No Further!

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So today I was wandering around the local bookstore, and realized just how far behind I am on keeping up with all of the many YA lit series that I’ve started and love. (This whole being a student thing really cuts into my reading time!) The last one I finished was Cate Tiernan’s Immortal Beloved series (I’m in love with this series–in some parallel universe, if Ms. Tiernan or any of her minions ever read this, PLEASE give me more Nasty!!). But I guess that just means I have some *serious* reading to catch up on this summer! There’s been a tremendous stash of awesome YA series continuations that have come out recently (and some that have been released in the near past, but I’m just behind on. As mentioned.) I know, I know: duh, obviously there are tons of awesome YA series continuing to be published, but I thought I’d mention a few that I’m most excited about plowing through, hopefully very soon:

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1. The last installment of Cassandra Clare’s hit Mortal Instruments series, The City of Heavenly Fire, has reached stores. I’m salivating at the chance to get my paws on this one. I am absolutely hugely impressed at how well she writes her characters. Who wouldn’t love the infinitely dark and sarcastic Simon? Or the brooding gay wizard Magnus Bane? Or even just the dialogue between them? While sadly the movie of the first book was cheesy at best, the series itself has quite a following, and for great reason.

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2. Ok, ok–I know I’m a little behind, but I just came back from four years of ESL teaching in Korea, so cut me some slack! I really enjoyed Marie Lu’s Legend series, and am on the wait list for this final installment at the library. However, as I seem to be doing a lot of exercising this summer and not as much just sitting and reading, I think I might be impatiently downloading it from audible instead. Great series, strong female lead, and interesting turns in events.

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3. I LOVE KAROU. Laini Taylor’s incredibly imaginative Daughter of Smoke and Bone series has it’s final installment, Dreams of Gods and Monsters, just out in April. This is another one I’ve lost patience in tracking down and have downloaded from audible to listen to–I absolutely love how she tells a story and presents her characters. I will temper this by saying the first one I couldn’t stop reading–literally, I think I went through it in a day or two–but while the second one offered great and imaginative detail, it felt a bit like a placeholder for the finale. Slightly frustrating while reading the second one, so I’m really curious how she ends this and absolutely refuse to read any spoilers!

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4. Much to my excitement (and only because I’m behind on my reading, apparently) I see that Amy Plum’s awesome (though somewhat melodramatically named) Die For Me/Revenants Series has come to an end AND I was able to get the final book, If I Should Die, at the library! YAY! The writing and attention to detail in this series has been excellent and I have really found the first two books to be page turners. I am antsy with anticipation to dive into this final installment. I believe it was released last year, so it shouldn’t be too hard to get ahold of.

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5. And finally I see Kendare Blake’s released Girl of Nightmares, a sequel to her bloody (and scary! I read it while travelling through India, and it scared the pants off of me–literally! I spent the trip in shorts instead!) Anna Dressed in Blood, and I’m psyched to see what she’s come up with! As an avid lover of both YA lit AND horror fiction, my goodness, it just doesn’t get much better than combining the two! (Hmmm. . .  I sense more on this topic to come). As I read the first book, I really didn’t know how it was going to end, so I’m tempted and curious to see what happens with the second. We shall see!

So. .. anyone else have some thoughts about YA series worth checking out? I know there’s lots of them, and I’m farting and tap dancing to keep myself ahead of the curve, but it’s a challenge!