Showing posts with label christmas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label christmas. Show all posts

Wednesday, 25 December 2013

Review: N0S4R2 by Joe Hill

UK book cover of N0S4R2 by Joe Hill
While most other bloggers have signed off until after Christmas and left a cheerful message behind, I'm sat here alone at 11:35pm on Christmas Day writing about murderous child monsters and rapists. Who doesn't want to be me right now!?

Plot summary: Young Victoria McQueen has a gift fpr finding things. All she has to do is ride her bike through the Shorter Way Bridge and she'll come out wherever she needs to be... even if that's hundreds of miles away. But it turns out she's not the only one with a special ability.

There are others... like Charlie Manx, who takes children to Christmasland in his 1938 Rolls-Royce Wraith with its NOS4R2 vanity plate. Only by the time they get there his passengers have changed, utterly. They've become Charlie's children; as unstoppable and insane as Manx himself.

Only one kid ever escaped Charlie Manx: Vic McQueen. But her first brush with Manx lit the fuse on a life-and-death battle of wills... a battle that explodes a quarter of a century later. Because Manx has taken Vic's son. And Vic McQueen is going to get him back.

I have the utmost respect for Joe Hill for not even attempting to cash in on his father's name. It would have been so easy for him to do, but 'King' isn't featured anywhere on the cover of N0S4R2. Good for him (Later: I've now read his rants about The Hobbit film on Twitter and love him even more). To be honest, it's almost irrelevant anyway, as this book is more than capable of standing on its own two feet.

Even the most cursory glance at this book cover will draw the gigantic-ass wreath to your attention. I thought this meant I should try my damndest to read this before Christmas, which I subsequently did. Turns out it's really not important at all. Yes, Christmas does feature in the book but not in the way you're thinking. In a way, it might actually be better to read it in July (which is when the story takes place anyway) as the entire point of the book is an unnatural, disjointed Christmas. I was reading about haunting Christmas songs playing constantly, but then looking up at my tree and my lights and wondering exactly what the problem is. Anyway, your choice. But if you own it, don't put it off until next December!

So we've established when to read N0S4R2; now let's move on to how. The answer is: slowly. Every page needs to be savoured for its uniqueness, odd charm and quirky plot. Yes, it is 650+ pages long (taking a page from his father's book, clearly) but I swear they'll rush past before you even know what happened. I read half of it in pretty much one sitting just because I didn't want to stop reading.

It's not a scary book in the slightest; there are occasions that are slightly creepy, but never more than that and never for long. I say this like it's a disappointment, when it's really not. I thought of it more like an odd dream - it doesn't scare you, but you know there's something not quite right. It does work perfectly, though. Everything slots together into a novel that stands out as being completely one-of-a-kind. It's twisted, but fascinating.

Charles Manx is the perfect villain. He doesn't look like a stereotypical baddie; instead he seems more like somebody you could meet on the street and not think anything of it (evil car aside). People like him exist and that's far more worrying than any theoretical monster that lives under the bed. He genuinely believes that he's doing the right thing and that the children he abducts need to be rescued. There are a lot of layers to him, so it's difficult to see him as out-and-out evil. He's more dangerous, somehow - those who truly believe often are.

The ending is absolutely perfect too. I wasn't convinced at first, but then the narrative jumps a few months down the line and everything clicks into place. It makes sense and while it's not what I wanted to happen, I wouldn't change it. 

N0S4R2 is a very memorable book; I know I'll be thinking about it for months to come. It's a quirky story with certain 'paranormal' aspects, but the truly disturbing parts are the 'real-world' horrors - the serial rapist is described quite avidly, for a start. This book is truly brilliant and I can't recommend it highly enough.

 Visit Joe Hill here or find him on Twitter.

Thursday, 5 January 2012

IMM Christmas Edition

Who says you can't do an IMM on a Wednesday? Or write about Christmas on January 5th? It has to be done, I'm afraid. I've been ill for a little bit so this is very, very late, but hey, we'll all survive.

This is to say thank you for all the bookish Christmas presents I got this year. I got some wonderful things, some of which I've already got stuck in to!

From family


I'm superbly happy with what I opened on Christmas morning! The top two books are editions of Pride and Prejudice that I didn't already have, and the top one especially is beautiful. It has a grey hardback cloth cover with printed pink flowers and elegant font on the inside. Pretty :)

The third book down is Unnatural Issue by Mercedes Lackey. I adore her Elemental Masters series, so I was more than a little excited to get my grubby paws on the latest one. 

The last book still makes me smile in a horribly dopey way whenever I look at it. Want a close-up? I think we should have a close-up.


A horrible close-up, but a close-up nevertheless.

It's one of those new Barnes & Noble leather-bound editions, and I swear, I love it more than oxygen. It's hardback and embossed and the pages are that wonderful crisp quality. You know what else? It smells damn good too.


Look at these, look at these, look at these! These are bookends that combine two of my favourite things - books and frogs. Not only that, but the frogs are wearing graduation caps and I graduated from Law School last month.

I know they're not technically books, but I just had to show you them.

From friends:

By which I mean other bloggers, but hell - I have real-life friends who don't know me as well as these people! The following are my friends and I'm more than a little lucky to have them.

I was blown away by what I got through the post this year.


I know I've already mentioned The Story of King Arthur and His Knights which was sent to me by The Lit Addicted Brit but I'm including it here again, partly for completion's sake and partly because it matches the Poe book above. Unlike that though, I still haven't forced myself to take off the plastic wrapping yet!


Ellie from Musings of a Bookshop Girl wasn't only nice enough to send me a copy of Ape House by Sara Gruen (which I've already reviewed - click here), but she also included the Pride and Prejudice DVD! You know, the proper one.

I could have posted a picture of the DVD itself up there, but why bother why I could just post a photo of the reason we all watch it in the first place?


The Night Circus is easily one of my favourite reads of 2011, so a massive thank you to Bex from An Armchair By The Sea who sent it to me a few days before Christmas. I was so eager to read it that I devoured it in the few days between Christmas and New Year! I haven't posted a review yet because I'm so behind it's ridiculous, but it's next on my list :)

 
And finally, Forgotten Bookmarks is from Hannah at Once Upon A Time, the Queen of Perfect Timing! This book was actually waiting on the doorstep when I got home on Christmas Eve, and you just can't get any better than that.

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Right then. You're going to be so, so sick of my posts over the next few days, I can guarantee it. I'm waaaay behind but I suddenly feel motivated so I'll work on catching up.

I'll do a normal IMM on Sunday (or thereabouts) and talk about my non-Christmassy books but I couldn't wait any longer to say a public thank you for the above :) 

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