Tag Archives: books

wednesday reads: miss peregrine’s home for peculiar children (ransom riggs)

wednesday reads: miss peregrine's home for peculiar children (ransom riggs)

At one point over the summer, I found myself having to kill some time at an Indigo. Not surprisingly, I found myself perusing the Young Adult section, horrifying myself with the quantity of vampire love stories, while hunting out the more interesting looking releases.

Then, I spotted the black and white cover of Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children. The vintage photograph image of the creepy, little girl peaked my interest, because, seriously, how can old, creepy photos NOT peak your interest, right?

I picked up the novel and started flipping through it. The old photographs sprinkled throughout the book pretty much sealed the deal for me right there, despite not having a single clue what the book was about. I don’t know what it is about me and those photographs, but, it seems that you can sell me on anything if you throw them in. It’s like an extra interest bonus or something.

Hey Vic, want to rob a bank? I’ll give you these really neat creepy, old photographs. SOLD.

Hey Vic, want to burn all of your clothes? I’ll give you these really old, creepy photographs. SOLD.

It’s like the icing on the cake, guys! ICING ON THE CAKE.

Anyway, I digress.

I picked a random spot in the book and started reading a little snippit in order to get a feel for the writer’s style. I do this with every single book. It may only be a paragraph, or it may be a full page, but I always read a small, random section of each book to see how I feel about the style it’s been written in. I can no longer remember where I picked this habit up from. All I can remember is that I recall reading the suggestion to do so somewhere, a long time ago.

The style seemed good, the photos were spot on, and I loved the fact that the book had colour throughout. I’m always intrigued by books that have a print style slightly different from the norm. Miss Peregrine’s has a neat maroon filigree along the bottom of each page, as well as patterned chapter pages which add to the whole feel of the book, as silly as that may be.

I fell right into the story rather easily. It’s written smoothly and carries you along like a perfect wave from start to finish. It does feel jumpy, though, I suppose, at the beginning where the pace is quicker, moving almost… too fast? I understand that this is what gets the ball rolling, but it felt really quick and didn’t overly develop the one relationship between the main character and his grandfather.

The further I got into it, the more it reminded me of X-Men. The fact that the novel revolves around a group of gifted children isolated in a secluded historical home with a headmistress who cares for and helps them to develop and hone their talents is very similar indeed. Sure, that may be where the comparison’s end, but the premise is there.

Even though I found the book enjoyable and devoured it in only a couple of days, I found myself frustrated with the ending. Why? This book is obviously the first in what will one day be a series. I was blindsided, and I didn’t like it. I had no idea this was going to be s story involving more than one book, and so, expected a novel that would tie up its loose ends and complete properly. Instead, I closed it up, having one small plot point resolved, and a much larger, more vague adventure on the horizon… THAT I CAN’T EVEN READ ABOUT UNTIL WHO KNOWS WHEN!

I’m the type who delays reading a (popular) series until it’s a bit more developed as I prefer reading as much of the story as possible in one go. Injecting gaps between books only requires you to read the preceding novel before the newest, which, let’s face it, never happens. Then, I find myself confused in the newest book’s plot unless the author does a decent job of recapping what’s happened before, which, at the same time, can become irritating, I suppose, if you’re reading through them all at once.

So hard to please, I am.

Miss Peregrine was good. Heck, I may even say it was great. It had all the elements of interesting and fun with just the slightest bit of suspense and a dose of intrigue. It also had just the right amount of creep factor for others like me who just can’t handle books and movies that are too heavy on the creep.

Seriously.

Don’t read this novel late at night when the house is dark and quiet and you’re right at the point of the novel where they’re discussing Wights and you have to look at the accompanying photos and then decide, “Do I venture out of the bedroom, into the dark house, to use the washroom? Or do I stay here safe and warm?”

Getting up to go to the bathroom was the hardest thing I did that night.

Silly Miss Peregrine.
Silly Wights.

Silly Vic.

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wednesday reads: nanowrimo day 2

wednesday reads: nanowrimo day 2

November blew in like a whirlwind yesterday. With the start of NaNoWriMo and the start of Movember, the whole day was a delicate balancing act of packing up Mustache Note Pads that sold once every few hours, designing a new invitation for a local couple, planning for Christmas and getting those items off to print and trying my darnedest to get a word count started.

By the end of the day, I was at 748 words and effectively, just under 1,000 words shy of the daily word count.

Looks like I have some catching up to do. I have no worries, though, except for that my story is based off of one scene that I’ve been toying with in my mind for ages that doesn’t feel like it goes anywhere because I haven’t sorted out the whys for the scene to start with.

It’s going to be an interesting month, isn’t it?

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wednesday reads: go fresh

wednesday reads: go fresh

At the beginning of 2009, I decided to finally start a book blog. I had been no stranger to blogging, having done so for about 11 years by that point.Until then, however, I had mostly kept a very personal blog, writing grocery list type entries about the daily going ons of my life. Exciting, right? Not so much; especially when you’re an average gal and not some controversial socialite in a roaring metropolis.

That was never the point, though. Journaling had always been something I did for myself, stemming from my fear of never wanting to forget those little moments of life that ultimately fade away with time.

It wasn’t until 2007, after a move to Toronto, that I decided to start a blog with a little more focus: big city living.

Apparently, my attention span was about 3 seconds long at the time and it lasted one entry. Pathetic, right?

In 2008, I decided to try my hand at a fashion/bargain hunting blog, as well as a music/concert blog. Both lasted for about 9 entries combined. Having been able to write in a journal/blog daily for just about a decade, my inability to keep up with themed blogs was a touch out of character. I just didn’t seem to have enough to say about one topic. I suppose the 3 second attention span has something to do with that.

Finally, at the tail end of 2008, or maybe sometime in January 2009 after an introspective, drunken New Year’s Eve celebration no doubt, I realised that I was choosing topics that, sure, I had some sort of vague interest in, but wasn’t really in love with. Did I always love clothes? Only when they fit and hugged me with love rather than contempt. Did I always love concerts? Hardly. I hated crowds, rude, young folks because I’m practically 75, and wasting my time waiting around to go just a little bit more deaf, inching myself ever closer to that big hearing aid purchase.

Enter Book Bound, the only focus driven blog that lasted more than a handful of entries. Unfortunately, it, like the rest, eventually fell by the wayside, but only because I got sidetracked and, after too long of a lapse, felt painfully silly and awkward going back to it.

Regardless, Book Bound was more than just a book review blog. I felt book review sites to be too plentiful on the interweb and instead, opted to plainly talk about the books I was reading. I would highlight portions of books that stood out to me and discussed them at length, connecting them to personal situations or life moments at large. It gave me an outlet to talk about books as well as life, in a very round about way.

It went well for about six months. Then, I hopped on a plane, went to England where I was supposed to see one of those last Michael Jackson concerts ever (spoiler: I didn’t see the concert), and came home with one of the worst illnesses ever. Okay. Maybe not ever, but it was pretty awful for a few weeks.

I fell out of my routine and just like that, abandoned Book Bound. I’m sure it hates me by now and has resorted to a making a voo doo doll of yours truly. I guess that explains a lot of things…

HAVING SAID ALL THAT, here we go, starting fresh, with vicentinebooks. Every Wednesday I will either discuss what I’m reading, or what I’m doing in terms of the big, ol’ writing world. NaNoWriMo is less than half a month away and I have every intention to participate again this year, after a two year hiatus. It’s about time I fell back into all of this.

Sometimes, you just need some time to dust away the cobwebs, or clean up after some particularly messy metaphoric life and mental tornadoes. Those are always nasty, nasty storms, aren’t they?

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