Top Ten Tuesday: Series I Have YET to Finish (or start)

Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly meme hosted by the Broke and the Bookish. Today’s theme was:

Ten Finished Series I Have YET to Finish

Hi, lovelies! I’m on vacation this week, so I might not be able to respond to comments as quickly as I usually do. I hope you’re all having a wonderful week. I’m going to change this up a bit and do a few that I haven’t finished and a few series I haven’t started but want to

NOT FINISHED

Sinner by Maggie Stiefvater     Siege and Storm by Leigh Bardugo     The Sea of Monsters by Rick Riordan     City of Fall Angels by Cassandra Clare

The Wolves of Mercy Falls by Maggie Stiefvater – Need to read Sinner

The Grisha series by Leigh Bardugo – Need to read Siege and Storm and Ruin and Rising

Percy Jackson and the Olympians by Rick Riordan – I’ve read the first four but it’s been so long so I started a reread recently and have only read the first one so far.

Mortal Instruments by Cassandra Clare – Need to read City of Fallen Angels, City of Lost Souls, and City of Heavenly Fire. I kind of gave up on this series for a while, so I may or may not go back to it.

NOT STARTED
(the sad thing about this list is that I own – at least – the first book in each of these series)

Shatter Me by Tahereh Mafi     Under the Never Sky by Veronica Rossi     Daughter of Smoke and Bone by Laini Taylor     The Unbecoming of Mara Dyer by Michelle Hodkin     Something Strange and Deadly by Susan Dennard

Shatter Me by Tahereh Mafi // Under the Never Sky by Veronica Rossi // Daughter of Smoke and Bone by Laini // Taylor  // Mara Dyer series by Michelle Hodkin // Something Strange and Deadly by Susan Dennard

Top Ten Tuesday: New Series I Want to Start

Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly meme hosted by the Broke and the Bookish. Today’s theme was:

Top New Series I Want To Start (New..let’s say within the last year or two)

I’m cheating. Some of my series started more than one or two years ago but have had books come out as part of the series in the last year or two. 😉 Also, there’s lots of upcoming series that I really want to read, but I won’t use those.

The Grisha trilogy

The Vicious Deep series

What about you? What new series do you want to start? Link me up to your TTT!

 

ARC Review – The Revealed by Jessica Hickam

The RevealedTitle: The Revealed

Author: Jessica Hickam

Genre: Dystopian, Sci-Fi

Publisher: SparkPress

Publication Date: June 17, 2014

Paperback: 314 pages

Stand alone or series: First in a projected series

How did I get this book: e-ARC via NetGalley

NOTE: I was provided with an e-ARC of this book via NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. Thank you to SparkPress for letting me read this.

Let’s start with a brief synopsis (via Goodreads):

Lily Atwood lives in what used to be called Washington, D.C. Her father is one of the most powerful men in the world, having been a vital part of rebuilding and reuniting humanity after the war that killed over five billion people. Now he’s running to be one of its leaders.

But in the rediscovered peace on Earth, a new enemy has risen. They call themselves the Revealed – a powerful underground organization that has been kidnapping 18 year olds across the globe without reservation. No one knows why they are kidnapping these teens, but it’s clear something is different about these people. They can set fires with a snap of their fingers and create a wind strong enough to barrel over a tree with a flick of their wrist. No one has been able to stop them, and they have targeted Lily as their next victim.

But Lily has waited too long to break free from her father’s shadow to let some rebel organization just ruin everything. Not without a fight.

What I thought:

I was both really surprised and really impressed with Hickam’s debut novel.

I requested this book on NetGalley because of that amazing summary (and that absolutely beautiful cover!). It sounds super cool, right? Well, it was. Take a dystopian novel then add in what are essentially X-Men mutants, and you’ve got The Revealed. The novel begins with our narrator, Lily, describing the current situation in what is now called the “North American Sector”, which is basically the ruins of the US after a huge war. The US has been mostly destroyed and everyone who survived the war all live on the East Coat. Lily is the daughter of one of two presidential candidates in the first election since the war. Roderick Westerfield is the other candidate, who has a son named Kai. Since the war, a group of people with special abilities called The Revealed has been kidnapping 18 year olds sometime before their 19th birthday. Lily has been marked to be taken, and as such, has been locked up in her home for the year just like every other 18 year old. I’d like to mention that her house is a freaking mansion.

So one of the things I really liked was that Hickam hints at the war, but never truly reveals any details. We don’t know what caused it, how it happened, and we only get a few details for what’s happened since then. I thought this was quite clever, and it kept me reading. I do hope, however, that we get more details as the series progresses. Another thing I liked was how well-done Westerfield was as a villain. He feels positively slimy and icky. When he is touching Lily while they dance at a party, my skin crawled.

The writing was fantastic. I’m surprised this is Hickam’s first novel. She’s a wonderful writer. Hickam’s got great descriptive abilities; I could picture everything she described and her characters are really well done (well, except one, which I’ll mention in a sec). Her writing was my favorite thing about this novel.

Okay. What I didn’t like was Lily actually. She was seriously inconsistent and selfish and immature. She’s gone through so much in her young life that I felt her immaturity was strange. All she wants to do is rebel against her family and she tries (and succeeds) to escape her house several times, which I do understand because her mother is horrible; however, she begins the novel saying her father came to her for advice all the time on his speeches and cared about her opinion, but later she says that since he announced his candidacy, they’ve been on bad terms. Um, what? Also, her love interest in Kai is crazy. Her family used to be close to his but then the war happened and her father and his announced their candidacies; things changed. He betrayed her when they were in high school then joined the military. Now he’s back and she trusts him again, even when he really doesn’t give her much reason to. It wasn’t exactly insta-love, but it was a little too close for my comfort. She was basically like this, “I hate him. I like him. I don’t like him. He’s so hot. I can’t like him. I do like him.” UGH. I would like to say that I thought Lily started off the novel so strong, independent and forceful, and then suddenly she’s whiny, vulnerable, and weak. This was strange, and it happened too quickly to be a believable change.

On the other hand, I really loved Rory, who is an intern in Lily’s mansion’s kitchen. Oh, yeah. She lives in a freaking mansion, but she keeps trying to rebel and escape. What? Anyway, Rory is Lily’s best friend, and she’s great. She’s feisty, strong, and rambunctious, and I would totally be friends with her.

Also, there’s a twist about ¾ of the way through that I thought I knew what was going to happen and was totally SHOCKED. So that’s really awesome. Additionally, I won’t give too much away, but when we finally meet The Revealed and they explain themselves and what’s been happening, I loved that. It was a really cool way to explain their powers. Just all around great ideas in this novel.

The bottom line:

I really liked this novel, and I think this series has a whole bunch of awesome potential. I will most definitely read the next in the series, but I hope that our main character has grown some and gotten over herself. I would recommend this book for sure.

Rating: 7.5 – between pretty good and freaking fantastic

You can learn more about Jessica Hickam on her website. You can also pre-order The Revealed on Amazon.

Reading next: Second Chance Summer by Morgan Matson