Showing posts with label atria books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label atria books. Show all posts

Thursday, May 16, 2013

Book Review: Walking Disaster (Beautiful #2) by Jamie McGuire

The blurb as seen on Goodreads:
Release Date: April 2, 2013
Publisher: Atria Books
433 Pages

Finally, the highly anticipated follow-up to the New York Times bestseller Beautiful Disaster.

Can you love someone too much?

Travis Maddox learned two things from his mother before she died: Love hard. Fight harder.

In Walking Disaster, the life of Travis is full of fast women, underground gambling, and violence. But just when he thinks he is invincible, Abby Abernathy brings him to his knees.

Every story has two sides. In Beautiful Disaster, Abby had her say. Now it’s time to see the story through Travis’s eyes.





I was an infantile asshole that had the emotional control of a three-year-old. 


The above quote came directly from our main character and no truer words have ever been said. So then comes my question, why are people so in love with him? 



 No, really. I want to know because I really don’t understand how people can love someone based on the this:



She usually got her crap and left right after I bagged her. – really, bagged? 

Her indifference was exactly why Megan was one of my few frequent flyers. 


She had the hair of a porn star, and the face of an angel. – definitely how I’d want to be described


Pigeon was the total opposite of the girls I’d met at Eastern, and I had to know why. – how do you know this? You’ve had no interactions. You’ve seen her once before. Your instalove is invalid


A warm feeling – probably just the insane urge to throw this girl on my couch – came over me.


“Nah. I’m going to see if I can get Abby on the back of my bike again. It’s the closest I can get to the inside of her thighs.”


“Haven’t you ever made out with someone, Travis? Haven’t you just messed around without letting it get that far?” That was the stupidest thing I’d ever heard. “What’s the point in that?”


My heart had been back and forth between leaving Abby alone and deciding it was okay to pursue her more times than a freshly single sorority girl on the second floor of a frat house.


Abby bent over to push the turkey into the oven, and my morning tendency to protrude through my shorts had even more of a reason to do so.


Oh yes, he’s a keeper.



 Anyway…



I honestly don’t think I can write an actual review on this book because there’s hardly any new material. This book is about 90% recycled from Beautiful Disaster. I’m not kidding. Even the characters are recycled. Shepley and America are the same person, one just has a penis. Travis’s thoughts are exactly the same as Abby’s. He seems to be psychic when it comes to what she’s thinking. 


I went in giving this book the benefit of the doubt, hoping it would bring something new and not just be the disaster that the first one. But alas, I was horribly wrong. This book is the worst depiction of what a relationship should be. Everyone is codependent and overdramatic, not to mention Travis’s violent reactions to EVERYTHING. 

And Mrs. McGuire, please learn about character development and consistency. Abby was just blank. Travis went from world class douchebag to whiny "everything is the end of the world" douchebag. America and Shepley went from “stay away” to “go for it” to “stay away” to “go for it”. Changing people just for the sake of making the story go where you want it to does not work.


Oh and that epilogue...



 But I guess it was too much to ask for anything to be believable. 


Thank you to Netgalley and the publisher for providing an e-copy of this book in return for an honest review.

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Book Review: This Girl (Slammed #3) by Colleen Hoover

The blurb as seen on Goodreads:
Release date: April 30, 2013
Publisher: Atria Books
256 Pages

There are two sides to every love story. Now hear Will’s.

Colleen Hoover’s New York Times bestselling Slammed series has brought countless readers to their knees with a whirlwind of love, passion, and heartache.

Layken and Will’s love has managed to withstand the toughest of circumstances and the young lovers, now married, are beginning to feel safe and secure in their union. As much as Layken relishes their new life together, she finds herself wanting to know everything there is to know about her husband, even though Will makes it clear he prefers to keep the painful memories of the past where they belong. Still, he can’t resist his wife’s pleas and so he begins to untangle his side of the story, revealing for the first time his most intimate feelings and thoughts, retelling both the good and bad moments, and sharing a few shocking confessions of his own from the time when they first met.

In This Girl, Will tells the story of their complicated relationship from his point of view. Their future rests on how well they deal with the past in this final installment of the beloved Slammed series.


 


I'm going to start off by saying; I'm not a huge fan of books which are just a retelling of a previous book from a different POV. That being said, I enjoyed both Slammed and Point of Retreat, so of course I was going to finish the series. There may be possible spoilers of the first two books in this review.

This Girl takes place immediately after Will and Layken get married. They are lounging around in their hotel room talking about the past when Lake decides she wants to hear Will's story of how thwy got together, including his break up with Vaughn. The story of the past is intermixed with the two of them in the present and Lake prompting Will for the next "chapter" pretty much.

What I liked:
-I loved that Will's backstory began with his parents' death. This was a life changing event for him but we never really got to see or hear what happened during that time. How he felt when he found out the news, how he thought that everyone was gone, how fe felt abandoned by not just Vaughn but his parents, and how he knew he wanted Caulder with him.

-Speaking of Caulder, I adore him. One of the best parts about this book was that we got to see more of the relationship dynamic between Will and Caulder. Also, the friendship between the two little brothers stole all three books for me. They were just golden.

-Colleen Hoover's writing style. I'm not going to deny that this girl can write. From the witty dialogue to the slam poetry, there's a natural flow to the writing that's a joy to read.

What I didn't like:
-Layken's overreaction to Will's story. You asked him about the past, specifically about other girls. Locking yourself in the bathroom and having a tantrum shows how immature you are.

-Will's degrading behavior regarding himself. Everything was always his fault. He calls himself an asshole when Lake freaks out over his past dating history. He's constantly calling himself a horrible person for feeling what he feels. While yes, there were times when he was sending mixed signals to Lake, but she was doing the exact same thing.

-The setup of the story. The way that each "past" chapter was setup with a "present" chapter right before felt a little contrived to me. It was like, oh tell me about the time you first saw me, tell me about our first kiss, tell me about our fight. While the individual chapters flowed well within, the way they merged together was a little jolted and too much like hitting points 1, 2, 3...

Overall, this was an enjoyable series. While the first two were a little angst drive, this one was more like the candy-coated topping. A good finish.


 
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