"Until I feared I would lose it, I never loved to read. One does not love breathing" (Lee, 1960, p. 17-18).
Sunday, November 4, 2012
Girl of Nightmares by Kendare Blake
So, it hasn't been that long ago that I blogged about Anna Dressed in Blood. It was an excellent creepy book, that kept me on the edge of my seat. It also really surprised me (in a good way) that a YA author would be willing to gruesomely kill off some of her characters. I know that sounds weird, but as a diehard fan of Stephen King, in my book, the more out there it gets, the better.
Warning: If you haven't read Anna Dressed in Blood, then you might want to skip the last paragraph.
Girl of Nightmares is Anna's sequel, and while I wasn't disappointed, I felt that for once, a trilogy would have served Blake better. I know it seems to be the trend in YA literature to have trilogies pop up everywhere. It has really become way over used. However, I think that Blake wrapped up this series too quickly. SInce I went into the book thinking that it would be a trilogy, I kept expecting it to leave me hanging. Although I was glad that didn't happen, I felt that Blake wrapped up the ending the way too abruptly. I'm hoping that she will change her mind and we will get to see Cas again from her somewhere down the road.
Girl of Nightmares, like the first book, has some seriously creepy moments, but they are fewer and farther between. The book opens six months after Anna dragged the Obeahman to Hell and saved Cas and his friends. However, Cas can't move on. He can't let Anna go. What's worse is that he begins to see and hear her everywhere. She is being tortured constantly because she didn't cross over to where she was supposed to go. She is trapped with the Obeahman and he is still feeding off of her pain and fear. Cas knows that he can never move on while she is suffering. He decides that he has to go after her and bring her back. This decision sparks tension between him and his friends, and starts Cas on a journey that will take him far from home.... in more ways than one.
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