TO LAUREN KATE, THE WOMAN I INTENDED TO HATE, …BUT ALAS… CANNOT
It's been almost 2 years now since that long, tedious task of submitting queries, partials and fulls in my search for an agent. And while I did eventually find an agent, I recall vividly, one agent who wrote me back within about an hour's time of my submission. WHAT? That rarely happens. He liked my voice and my premise BUT… "had already purchased a series called 'Fallen'" and mine was just too similar in tone, characterization and plot. I was steaming (just when you think you have finally come up with an original idea first)…I was like, "Okay, who is this Fallen person, I'll find him/her."
So I made a note to self, to read my competition (begrudgingly) as soon as it hit the shelves. Because I am a very slow reader (I like to taste every single word) – it took me awhile to read Lauren Kate's Fallen. And, welp, I can see why that agent sucked her right up as well as Disney purchasing the rights to the book ASAP.
I am making it a point to review all the fallen angel books that were purchased (before mine gets sold, IF it gets sold), keepin' it real ya'll, and as this is my first STAB at a book review, I hope I can do Ms. Kate and her book justice.
First of all, it is no secret that most of the spooky books take place at some "special" school for the gifted, blood suckers or some other such freak fodder. Yawn. Lauren Kate's setting was no different, however, in this case (no yawn), it worked. Dark, different and believable. We have a protag who is also believable and what I liked about Fallen, was that it did not come right out and slap you in the face with WHAT we were going to be dealing with. Neither did it overwhelm us with too much information on what is a very complicated part of Biblical history. However, I am sure that will come (it will have to) in the following books in the series.
The relationship between the protag and the love interest moved at the proper pace, and I enjoyed some of the other scary tidbits thrown in along the way. While I did have some reservations about the protag's bff, it was a bit confusing exactly WHO that was, so it made some of our main character's feelings questionable in the end, as I did not feel that we really had enough time to see the interaction of these two to make it a bit more believable. But really, I think that was my only qualm, and Lauren, GREAT JOB!
What I always like to do when I read a book, is make little stars by some lines that to me, set writers, and those who just want to be writers apart. It is that thing that cannot be taught, it is simply the way that some writers weave their words together producing a beautiful, even poetic analogy, or description that tells us that particular person has been at the writing game for quite some time now vs. those who wake up one day and say, "I'm gonna write a book" – and luck and timing smile down upon them and it gets published. I think you will understand this a bit better as I share some of the lines that made me want to put the book down to clap…I did have to leave some out, so as not to have to deal with including "spoilers" or anything like that, but here is some of what Lauren Kate delivered (probably more appreciated by fellow writers than readers, but appreciated none-the-less) Becca Fitzpatrick, YOU ARE NEXT!!!:
"Around midnight, her eyes at last took shape. The look in them was feline, half determined and half tentative—all trouble."
"It had felt so good to be back home in Savannah, where, as her mom always said, even the wind blew lazily."
"At her old school, the green-tie-wearing, pomaded future senators had practically oozed through the halls in the genteel hush that money seemed to lay over everything."
"The sky was that no-color color, a grayish brown so oppressively bland it was difficult even to find the sun."
"She spotted a lone dandelion, and it crossed her mind that a younger Luce would have pounced on it and then made a wish and blown. but this Luce's wishes felt too heavy for something so light."
"That's right," Miss Sophia said, head bobbing in a saintly nod. She was just left of hard of hearing."
"This train of thought was heading straight for Pity City, and she wanted to get off."
Good Spooky Stuff:
"All she knew was that when the shadows came, they were usually accompanied by a cold chill under her skin, a sickening feeling unlike anything else."
Saturday, May 22, 2010
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