Companions of the Night is yet another YA fantasy about a teenaged girl who unwittingly becomes involved with vampires. I like most of Velde’s books, though, and was pleased to find out that the story is mainly a thriller with only slight romantic leanings, and its vampires quite devious.
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July 5, 2008

Ah, the almighty Opeth. By general consensus, every album of theirs has been deemed brilliant. Hell, they’ve even had rotation on MTV without elitists tearing them a new asshole for it. Yet admittedly, it took me a long while to understand and enjoy this band. Years, even. But after listening to Still Life, I’ve finally seen the light.
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June 28, 2008
I’ve read one of Klause’s books before and liked it, so I was intrigued going into The Silver Kiss, her first novel. While I find it weaker than Blood and Chocolate, it still contains the same surprising twists to a well-used, even stale, setting.
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June 27, 2008
You know, I debated about reviewing this book the first time I read it. After all, I’d already reviewed Twilight, and surely my thoughts and criticisms would become redundant if I kept at it for the entire series.
And then I reread it and became interested at what could have been and what is. Because, contrary to common (and polarized) opinion, I thought there were good moments in this book, and a potential for much more that was never realized. Spoilers behind the cut.
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June 9, 2008
Thanks to Villain Month, I’ve begun paying more attention to the villains in the books I read and the movies I see. In fact, I just finished watching Se7en (and by God, do I hate intentional mispellings; it’s one of the many reasons I can’t stand most nu-metal bands) and am now puzzling over its villain John Doe.
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June 5, 2008
Title: Five Hundred Years After
Author: Steven Brust
Genre: Fantasy
Five Hundred Years After is the second in a series of fantasy novels that pay homage to Alexandre Dumas’ d’Artagnan Romances. With an ornate prose style and entwining plot, it makes for a dense and interesting read.
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May 20, 2008
Twilight is the first book of an explosively popular series centered around supernatural teenaged romance. After reading it, I can understand why it is also such a divisive series, generating ardent fans and disgusted antis. It’s wish fulfillment, and a lot of it.
This is a long review, and I mean long, so for anyone interested only in the gist, here it is: a fast read, but ultimately boring and unintentionally odd.
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May 10, 2008
Well, the hype finally got to me. Next up in my reading list:

The reactions to this book (and the rest of the series) are interesting. It either generates fervent love or undying hatred. I’ve read about 20 pages so far and found it to be a typical supernatural YA story. Perhaps it just grows worse the further you read, like a literary version of MRSA.
May 8, 2008
Bloodtide is a dystopian update on the old Icelandic saga Volsunga. Having never read that saga, I don’t know how much liberty Burgess has taken, but I do know that his version is chock full of blood, madness, and incest. And pig people.
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May 4, 2008

Frankenstein Unbound was…interesting. A novel that actually explores the effects time travel and alternate realities can have on a person’s mind, it’s an intriguing read.
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April 26, 2008