Showing posts with label supernatural. Show all posts
Showing posts with label supernatural. Show all posts

Thursday, 1 December 2022

Book Review | Practical Magic by Alice Hoffman | prettylittlewriter

 Synopsis
For more than two hundred years, the Owens women have been blamed for everything that has gone wrong in their Massachusetts town. Gillian and Sally have endured that fate as well: as children, the sisters were forever outsiders, taunted, talked about, pointed at. Their elderly aunts almost seemed to encourage the whispers of witchery, with their musty house and their exotic concoctions and their crowd of black cats. But all Gillian and Sally wanted was to escape.

One will do so by marrying, the other by running away. But the bonds they share will bring them back—almost as if by magic...’


 
This was a very hard-going novel. Not because it was bad per-say, but because there were NO CHAPTERS. The book had sections, and within those sections, there was maybe one or two parts where the section had a ‘pause’ between each paragraph, but otherwise, they were complete full longass paragraphs that are SO hard for me to end with, I like to finish reading once I’ve completed chapter. Therefore, this book has taken me a long time to finish (I did read another book in-between as I had a book tour review to do also).

I don’t often say this, but this was definitely a case of ‘prefer the movie to the book’! I don’t know for sure if it’s because I’ve been watching the movie religiously for years every spooky season, but the movie is a lot less harsh on the characters, and I found myself disliking certain characters within the book too that I actually really like in the movie.

For example, Sally’s children. We don’t really see a lot of them in the movie, and when we do they are very sweet and kind characters, and quite young. Within the novel however, Antonia is a bitch throughout to her younger sister Kylie, and Kylie also turns into a bit of a bitch as she starts treating both her Mum and Aunt by pranking Gillian when she gets a boyfriend (out of spite and jealously) and verbally abusing her mum constantly.

One thing that was really prominent throughout is how much emphasis is put on beauty within the novel. Each character have moments where they do not think they are good enough because of their beauty, they have either made a change, or because they aren’t getting attention from a man they are no longer good enough. It was quite difficult to read some of these parts as it made me quite angry!

In the movie, we all knew Gillian was beautiful, with her doe eyes and stunning hair, but it wasn’t what the whole story was about, they made it more about what had happened to Gillian in the hands of Jimmy, and learning to grow and find love again, especially with Sally after losing her husband.

This was another thing that I was really upset about within this novel. We were introduced to the curse on the Owen’s love life, as Sally’s husband died with the beetle around, but then the curse was never mentioned again; but Gillian fell in love and got married again, and then Sally also eventually fell in love with someone again too. At least within the movie, it seemed that Sally broke the curse once she met the man that she had wished for as a child, the man that she created that shouldn’t have existed, but did. There just seemed to be no explanation and no rhyme or reason for the curse the exist if it wasn’t going to be broken.

I was however, pleased that Gillian found love again within the book, and Ben seemed like the perfect man for her. We also didn’t really get much from the relationship between Sally and Gary. We did get certain parts of the novel from Gary’s POV and his attraction to Sally, but the development of their relationship after their first two interactions was very sparce.

The book is actually very dark compared to the movie, with some quite upsetting scenes, including unwanted sexual advances towards a child, so this surprised me as the movie feels to me like a cup of warm cocoa on a cold autumn night. It makes me feel cosy, and happy, whereas reading this book, I was often quite upset for the characters, and furious.

The book was very well written, with some great descriptions of the characters and their surroundings, I felt like I could see Sally’s home quite clearly in my mind, and also Jimmy’s oldsmobile. You could feel the magical elements of the novel emanating from the book, like magic was absolutely everywhere and you could turn away from the book with your own magical powers, which was a very beautiful feeling.

I think Alice is a very talented writer, and I’m sure a lot of people absolutely adore this book, especially if they haven’t watched the movie, however, I just can’t get on board with it. It’s too different, I love the movie way too much, Gillian was a spoilt brat throughout the novel, and although she was a bit wild and a free bird in the movie, at least she was likeable and you felt sorry for her!

So overall, personally, I did slightly enjoyed the novel, certain parts of it were good and I liked having a little more depth to the characters, but personally, I love the movie way too much to really rate this more than a 3 star, and I felt there were lots of really dark and harsh parts within the novel that I didn’t really enjoy.

3/5 stars


Thursday, 7 October 2021

Book Review | Afterlove by Tanya Byrne | prettylittlewriter

 This is such a beautiful love story, that once I started it, I couldn’t put it down.

Synopsis

'Car headlights.
The last thing Ash hears is the snap of breaking glass as the windscreen hits her and breaks into a million pieces like stars.
But she made it, she's still here. Or is she?
This New Year's Eve, Ash is gets an RSVP from the afterlife she can't decline: to join a clan of fierce girl reapers who take the souls of the city's dead to await their fate.
But Ash can't forget her first love, Poppy, and she will do anything to see her again... even if it means they only get a few more days together. Dead or alive...’

I was hooked on this novel from the very beginning.

The fact that it had some paranormal elements to it drew me in, as I love a good supernatural story, but then when we get into the romance between Ash and Poppy, I just fell in love with their love.

Tanya has done an incredible job writing this beautiful, elegant and epic lesbian love story, and I genuinely think she is one of my new favourite authors.

 

Ash was such a relatable character, and I really felt a connection to her throughout the novel, with memories of my own teenage loves (albeit mine were not quite as epic as this). Poppy also seemed like such a lovely human being, never judging Ash for their difference in upbringing (Poppy has grown up very wealthy and Ash not so much) and she loves her for who she is completely.

 

I loved that Tanya separated the novel into two parts; Before, which allowed us to see the development of Ash and Poppy’s relationship, and then, After, which is once Ash has died, making the resulting grief all the more heart-breaking.

 

The supernatural side of things with the reapers was very clever, something I haven’t read before, and without going into too much detail as it would spoil it, there a certain aspects of being a reaper that create an edge of danger and uncertainty for Ash. The ending was very well established, and almost the perfect ending in my eyes.

 

The only negative thing I would say about this novel is that I would have liked to see more of Ash’s grief for her family and her best friend. She was very close with her parents and her sister, and we don't see a lot of grief displayed from Ash with the fact that she can never see them again. Obviously, as it’s a love story, the focus was on her relationship with Poppy, but it would have been nice to see more of a grieving process.

 

I must admit, I have never read a novel with any LGBTQ+ characters or relationships before, so I do not have anything to compare this novel to, except that I felt so much heartache and love for these characters, just as much as all the other love stories I have read before, so I think it is absolutely brilliant. I will definitely be looking to read more from Tanya!


5/5 stars