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Tuesday, January 21, 2020

Review: The Day I Died (Apocalypse Cycle), by Aya Knight


The Day I Died (Apocalypse Cycle)

Title: The Day I Died (Apocalypse Cycle)
Author: Aya Knight
Format: ebook
Source: BookSirens

From Goodreads: "Oshin Fletcher lives by three rules: obey authority, don’t draw unnecessary attention to yourself, and above all else, never leave the city walls.

Some say that rules are meant to be broken. For Oshin, her world shattered on the day she was betrayed. A secret meeting leads her beyond the safety of her city. Lured by the ignorance that comes with being lonely and hopeful, Oshin was about to discover just how severe consequences could be. Lost and alone, she waited; no one came. But they did. The infected, the decaying, the undead.

Oshin wakes to find herself in an abandoned house, deep within the forest. Her body was changing, her desire to feed, uncontrollable. She was a marionette—her hunger, the puppeteer. She pivots on a line between life and death. They say the undead are mindless, but Oshin was very much aware. She sets out in an unknown world where the worst evils aren’t the undead, but humanity itself. With only days before the effects of the disease take hold and decay sets in, Oshin must race to find a way back home for a cure. She soon discovers that home is not everything she thought it to be. Dark secrets have been in play since the moment she was born.
An emotionally intense zombie survival story."

My Opinion:  I was really excited to read this book - a book told from a thinking zombie's view? I was all over it! I like reading books that turn preconceived notions about a subject on their head, and this book certainly did this. 

The story begins with a girl named Oshin who has always followed the rules, but she is getting a bit bored with this. Enter Codah, a very cute boy who Oshin has had a crush on for quite some time. When he finally notices her and asks her to meet him outside the walls of their compound, she can't go fast enough. The problem here is that the world outside the walls is crawling with the undead, which is why the biggest rule for the compound is Do Not Go Outside the Walls!! But teenage girls aren't known for using common sense when it comes to teenage boys, so Oshin talks herself into believing that nothing bad will happen if she just goes out for a short while. As expected, she was wrong. She does get to meet another boy, Bastion, along with sister, Lace. They are already "undead," but like Oshin, they are still able to think for themselves (although the underlying hunger is always there, and the stiffness of the body setting in already lets them know that they are only days away from turning full on undead).

I think the basis of this story can be summed up with this one sentence from the book's synopsis: "They say the undead are mindless, but Oshin was very much aware." What a novel approach! I think the bones of this story are very good, but there were a few things that kept me from giving this book 5 stars. 

First, Oshin goes beyond the walls of their compound because a boy who has never looked at her twice told her he wanted her to! I know teenage girls aren't always the smartest when it comes to boys, but this didn't make much sense because all her life it was pounded into her head that you don't go beyond the walls! I was also confused by the term "undead". Oshin kept referring to herself, Bastion and Lace as "undead" but then she would talk about holding her breath or her heart beating. Just a bit confusing. 

There were also some pacing problems and other inconsistencies, but the twists and turns in the story kept me reading, and overall this was a very compelling look at what goes on in the minds of aware zombies.

In summary, I love this take on the zombie genre, and all of the twists and turns the plot takes along the way. That's why I am giving it an enthusiastic 4/5 stars.

I received an advance review copy for free, and I am leaving this review voluntarily.

Review: Hoods: The Beginning (Hoods #1), by David Niall Wilson


Hoods by David Niall Wilson

Title: Hoods: The Beginning (Hoods #1)
Author: David Niall Wilson
Format: ebook
Source: BookSirens

From Goodreads:  San Valencez is a city with many levels. Near the barrio, on the south side of town, gangs rule the streets, and those that don’t find a way out tend to be sucked into the shadows and consumed. Not far away, near the border between the bad side of town and civilization, there are those standing up to the shadows. They aren’t superheroes, exactly, but they aren’t regular kids either. They have abilities, intelligence, strength, skill—and a desire to see their city become a better place.

Four teenagers, Weaver, Cami, Shooter and Combo, come together with a mutual desire to make things better, to help those who need it and punish those who deserve it. When Shooter’s old friend Mikey approaches them, concerned over his brother Dale’s connections with a gang called Los Escorpiones, they organize and become something stronger than their separate parts. The city is in danger from a threat it doesn’t even know exists. All that stands in the way of disaster is a group of “Hoods.”

My Opinion: San Valencez is a tough place to live, so having friends, your own squad, is highly recommended, especially if you have to go out at night. Our four young heroes-to-be are pretty much loners, until a chance encounter in a dark alley brings two of them together. Bobby and Eddie both have enhanced abilities, and, unknown to them, they are caught on video by a classmate of theirs by the name of Luisa, code name Weaver. Weaver and Cami (another classmate named Lisa) have already been working together to help clean up their city, but they are not getting as far as they would like, so when Weaver sees what Bobby and Eddie can do, she knows instinctively that she needs to recruit them to join her cause. The boys agree that someone has to take on the gangs and other bad elements in their neighborhood, so they join forces with Weaver and Cami, and get their own code names, Shooter and Combo. They have to keep their identities secret because it would be very dangerous if anyone found out who they were.

I really enjoyed reading this book. The setting was described in such detail that I could feel the gritty darkness of it slipping into my mind as I read. The four kids who headline this book were well fleshed out and easy to like. You get to know them through their back stories and family history, which was written into the story very naturally.

I thought the plot flowed along at a good pace, which made the book very easy to read. It was a quick read because of this.

In summary, I enjoyed this book very much and enthusiastically recommend it to lovers of MG/YA fantasy stories. I give it 5/5 stars.

I received an advance review copy for free, and I am leaving this review voluntarily.