Saturday 21 November 2015

The Healer's Apprentice by Melanie Dickerson (Review by Ashley Nikole)

This young adult, historical fiction book is amaze-beans. Melanie Dickerson (for me personally) is a bit of a hit & miss. Some books I like, others...not so much- but this one I loved for multiple reasons...

The PLOT... 
wasn't mind blowing in it's uniqueness, but it flowed well & was pleasant. The twist about Lord Hamlin's betrothed was pretty cool, and while I wouldn't say this book was fast paced- it didn't lag either. It flowed pretty smooth & consistently throughout. 

The Characters... 
were unique and I felt as though their personal struggles were relatable & not the usual surface level stuff one normally reads about in YA Fiction. 

The Spiritual Content... 
was not your average for YA Christian Fiction, with sprinkles of God's name here or there, or a bullet prayer. There was some pretty heavy demonic crap floating around with the bad dude (closer to the end of the book)- Moncore (who's a sorcerer). At one point he puts curse on someone, proclaiming that they will be tormented by demons forever & essentially end up insane from it. So, that aspect makes this book heavier overall from the bad stuff present...& for that reason I'd more recommend it for readers 16+ 
But I appreciated the angle about spiritual warfare against evil, and prayer etc. that the character's used to combat Moncore's curses & power. Spiritual warfare is not something I've read a lot of in Christian fiction, but I enjoyed seeing Dickerson displaying the power of prayer & warfare.

The Sexual Content...
There's character's falling in love...some creepy dudes who don't have good intentions toward Rose and the like. At one point someone asks Rose to become his mistress.

Conclusion...
Very much enjoyed this read. It was more mature than most YA books, just given how the characters dug deeper and had a stronger sense of sacrifice & duty than most characters I've read about in other YA fiction. 
The witchcraft in the last portion of the book definitely had me feeling heavy and a tad disturbed afterwards (just since I know how real the dynamics of spiritual warfare are in real life)- but at the same time I appreciated the light shed upon the spiritual warfare aspect of things. So it was heavy, but I appreciated, and thoroughly enjoyed this book. 

4 Stars & I would recommend this one for ages 16+ 

Friday 6 November 2015

Wolfsbane by Ronie Kendig (Review by Ashley Nikole)


Wolfsbane falls in line as book #3 in the 'Discarded Heroes' series, following a Black Ops type of team called 'Nightshade'.
Each book follows a member of the team, with this one following former Green Beret medic, Canyon Metcalfe. The lady MC is Danielle (Dani) Roark, a demolitions expert that, at the start of the book, is escaping a brutal captivity in Venezuela.

Review for book 2 in the series, Digitalis.

PLOT:
Moved pretty fast & well paced throughout. The first...about half I'd say, is set in the United States and isn't focusing on suspense, but more on the relationship/romance side of things, with plenty of involvement with the Metcalfe family & sibling dynamics, which I enjoyed.

Just before the halfway mark, the story moves over to Venezuela, and that's when the action/danger & suspense really works itself up into its full potential.

The first time I read this book, the subplot in italics (of a native Venezualan mystery woman telling a story of a soldier named Bayani & her daughter, Chesa) confused me. I didn't really get where it was going or what the significance was to the story, until about 3/4 of the way through. But have no fear, it IS significant, & at the end, you have a big "Aha!" moment. Second time reading through this novel, I understood the significance of this plotline & really felt it added a good angle to the story. 

VIOLENCE:
With Nightshade being a black ops & covert operation team, they end up being in hostile territory where plenty of military/guerrilla violence/killing/shooting/fighting etc. takes place. People get shot, stabbed (blood gurgling, & pouring out of wounds, etc) fistfights etc.
Mention is made that Dani was tortured, but not much is mentioned of it in hindsight. A Nightshade member is tortured when captured by the enemy.

Cutting (explained down below)

SPOILERS:
Not too far into the book Dani attempts suicide via
cutting herself (we don't see her doing it). Someone
interrupts her while she's doing it, and she hides 
her arm behind herself, but the blood splattering 
onto the bathroom floor gives her away. 

At another point, when she has been captured,

she attempts slitting her wrists again, to 
escape the brutal treatment she knows she 
will receive. She is interrupted again. 

SEXUAL CONTENT:

Dani has several memories of being raped. While they are not prolonged or usually overtly explicit in  their remembrance, they aren't nondescript.

--------SPOILERS----------
Dani & Canyon have sex once after an innocent
play-fight-tickle match turns into kissing,
passion & getting physically intimate.
The scene ends with, "Canyon kissed her again,
deeper, more passionately. He traced her leg and drew
the hem of the tunic upward." So it is cut off before anything
happens, but we get the idea what is about to take
place. Following, Canyon knows what he did was
wrong, & they have a talk at the end of the book about
having extramarital sex, & why they (if they could have
changed things) would have waited until marriage.
----still spoilers----
With Dani, I can understand her reason in giving herself to Canyon before marrying him...before being raped multiple times in captivity, she'd been a virgin. The first time she'd kissed Canyon (post captivity) it was her first kiss.
Not having a strong or active spiritual conviction to back up saving sex for marriage, she felt safe & loved with Canyon, & was probably more than ready to have a loving sexual encounter, after having her virginity stolen, & her sexuality only being used in the context of rape. Not that it makes what they did, right, but I can certainly empathize.
P.S. Canyon won no brownie points after that scene...I was like, "Dude! You had one job." #fail #justno what happened to all that self- imposed soldier self-control? Treat the girl right & put a ring on it, ahem, before sleeping with her. But he owns up to his mistakes, & that is what matters. People mess up at times, but how they handle their mistakes is key. 

Drug Content: 
Canyon is addicted to some high powered pain meds, he initially was taking for a back injury. He kept taking them even after the pain abated, to numb his emotionally pain regarding his past. He hid his addiction from his family & Nightshade team. Eventually he is found out, and gets off the meds (detoxes). 

CHARACTERS: 
I loved these guys, mainly because they were broken & imperfect. While I couldn't circumstantially relate with them, their emotional trauma & struggles made me emphasize, big time. I didn't feel distanced from Dani & Canyon, as though I were merely reading about two fake people. I felt as though I was Dani, or Canyon in a scene, heart being torn apart, bereft at loss, or elated at a triumph. That is what I am looking for in a book- to be transported into another world, another character. Their imperfect state, how they messed up at times- but just kept going, spoke to me so much. 
While I don't want to read about a person who goes doing bad things (on purpose) left, right & centre, I also cannot connect with a character who is total perfection. Dani & Canyon were imperfect, made mistakes, got super messy, but they owned their mistakes. They kept moving forward, & that is what made me love them! 
They were walking out of brokenness & into being whole & well. That process seldom looks cute, and that's what I loved so much about this book. These people being in the trenches of the 'process', and moving into their destiny...sometimes taking two steps back, then one forward. 

CONCLUSION: 
This book, content wise is a pretty heavy book. Dani was in captivity for six months, during which she was repeatedly violated through rape and torture. It deals with a character who attempts suicide multiple times to escape horrors no one should endure. Another has a drug addiction. It's a heavy book, but it is filled with redemption, hope & perseverance. Canyon's upbeat & humorous personality kept it from staying too heavy the whole way through.
Generally, I'm not a huge fan of the more content heavy books, but I loved this one. Second time through I fell in love even more.

The heart I have for abused & battered women, was spoken to deeply by this book. Novel's that are fiction, but speak to & nudge your convictions...those are the keepers.

5 Stars for this one, & I'd recommend it for readers 18-19+