Monday, October 29, 2012

Kirsten Miller: All Five Books

I know. I went MIA; it couldn't be helped. But I'm here now! So let's dive right into it!

The author of the past month, or however long it's been, is Kirsten Miller, author of the Kiki Strike series, with the third coming out in February of 2013, the Eternal Ones series, and the yet-to-be released novel, How to Lead a Life of Crime.You can check her out here.

All of Miller's books have similar threads: they all take place in New York City, where she lives, and tend to have to do with female empowerment, adventure, and twinges of mystery.

Originally, I was going to give individual reviews to Miller's first series, Kiki Strike. However, I've decided against it--too many opportunities for spoilers and such. The series stars Ananaka Fishbein, vigilante Kiki Strike, and the other members of the Irregulars, all of whom possess particular talents. Oona Wang, the hacker/lock picker, Betty Bent, master of disguise,  Luz Lopez, mechanical wiz, and Deedee Morlock, scientist. A seventh irregular is added later on in the series, is also a chemist, and goes by the name of Iris.
The plot is phenomenal  for those with a sense of adventure; the first book opening with a question of are you the type who is reading for an answer to boredom, or the type lusting for knowledge and secrets? While this book may be a little young for some, I found the series to be extremely enjoyable. The characters are strong-willed, stubborn, yearning for an answer to boredom, for justice; they are, in a word, vigilantes. As Mark Twaine's Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn have been to millions of boys across the world, Kiki Strike and her Irregulars are sure to follow in similar steps for the world's female population.


Miller's second series, The Eternal Ones, follows the paths of star-crossed lovers from the dawn of time; known today as small-town girl Haven Moore and playboy Iain Morrow. Haven wakes up, every day, dreaming of Morrow, of their past lives. While Haven can only see into bits and pieces of one life time, Iain remembers everything. After some pushing and shoving and desperate searching in this lifetime, their lives are threatened by chaos, and an organization for the reincarnated: the Ouroboros Society.
All four of the books are well-written and well-thought out; however, while these two are for a more mature audience, I didn't find them to uphold the standards I was brought to expect from the author's first series. For those with a love of suspense, romance, and adventure, I would definitely recommend this series. 

Expect a review on this wonderful author's next two books sometime in February or March, depending on when they are published!

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

Important Announcements!

First things first, I must apologize for being gone for quite the period of time. I'd say it won't happen again, but who knows? 

The next order of business pertains to two new features that I'm going to be adding to this blog. Over the course of the next few weeks, I'll be doing 'group reviews', where I'll pick an author and spend the whole week reviewing books they've written and so on. I'm also going to examine several classics, such as Charlotte Brontë's Jane Eyre, (which you can expect sometime this coming week). Alright? Alright. Now, onto the fun part!

The author I shall be introducing to you today is Kirsten Miller!

Because I have to do a special on my potentially favorite author ever. The author of Kiki Strike: Inside the Shadow City, Kiki Strike: The Empress's Tomb, The Eternal Ones, The Eternal Ones: All You Desire, and her two up-and-coming novels, How to Lead a Life of Crime, and Darkness Dwellers, the third in the Kiki Strike trilogy. 

What can be said about all these books, what single phrase can capture all of them in one single swoop? 
Dangerous. All of Miller's novels feature feisty heroines who know how to kick some serious butt; all focus on the dangerous side of life, of New York City.

That's all for now, folks! Check in tomorrow for  reviews on the two published Kiki Strike books by Kirsten Miller!

~The Book Birdie

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Beauty Queens by Libba Bray

So I was away last week on vacation in Maine, where I had no access to the internet whatsoever. Instead, I had my good friend (she made me write that), NickDing, write that previous post, as you might have guessed. But I'm back now, and ready to jump back into the world of book reviewing!

But first, let's talk about beauty queens and pageants. Gosh, how I hate those things; they are terribly demeaning to females, not to mention they take away from things that really matter. Like war, like getting help for the poor. Like family and living until you're so filled up with being alive you just float away. I've always thought of beauty queens as stuck-up snobs; as those girls that you hate because they are just so loud, not in volume but in presence, the girls that are obsessed with whether they look good or not.
And then I read this book.

Beauty Queens by Libba Bray
 If you were to judge this book by it's bikini-clad cover, you're likely to imagine it's a frivolous and somewhat cheesy tale of beauty queens fighting over who will win the prized crown.
But, oh, my dear, dear readers, it is nothing like that at all.
50 teenage beauty queens, publicists, and chaperons are all in a plane flying to a remote tropical paradise where they can practice before they battle for the title of "Miss Teen Dream." Filled with excitement, not scared at all.
Then, the plane crashes on a supposedly deserted island in the middle of the ocean. Only 13 girls have survived the crash; no one else. Together, they have to figure out how to survive on the island; though some--Taylor Hawkins, a.k.a. Miss Texas, in particular-- believe they should continue to prepare for the pageant instead of trying to survive.

The girls build huts, discover who they are, save pirates, and save themselves from the Corporation, the people who are sponsoring the pageant, and who want them dead.
Most importantly, though, they save themselves from themselves.

This looks like a trashy beach read (though, let's face it, we all need those).
This isn't a trashy beach read; this is a novel rich with feminism, with empowering girls, with displaying the inequality that is still experienced by females across the globe. It's riddled with humor, suspense, and mystery.

If Lord of the Flies had girls instead of boys, it might have turned out a bit like this.

What are you still doing here? Go out and get a copy today!

Friday, July 20, 2012

Bloody Jack by L.A. Meyer

Nearly as riveting the second time I read it, Bloody Jack took my breath away again. A quick but sophisticated read, this historical fiction action thriller is perfect for most audiences. Mary Jacky Faber is a orphaned teenage girl in the early to mid 1700's wishing for a better life. When the leader of her gang of orphans if murdered by the evil Muck, Jacky reaches her boiling point of being a beggar and decides to leave the gang. After a few days of traveling and disguising herself as a boy, Jacky works her way onto the HMS Dolphin as a ships boy using her rare ability to read. Once there, she must learn the ways of the sea, different then anything she's ever done before. ***Important note. The first few chapters of this book are rather dreadful because of the old english and solumness. Do not let it scare you! It's really a great book!

Friday, July 13, 2012

The Secret Life of Bees by Sue Monk Kidd


There are books that amaze you, and books that you abhor. And then there are the books that pick you up off your feet and shake you around, introduce new ideas, possibilities, feelings, to you. Books that snatch your breath away. I'm glad to say that this coming-of-age novel is one of the ones that will be remembered forever, having changed a mindset. 


Lily Owens killed her mother when she was a small youth, and has since been forced to live with T.Ray, her abusive father on their old peach farm with only a black lady, Rosaleen, as a friend. 
Of course, there is those few possessions of her mother's, one of which is a picture of the black Madonna, Tibourn, South Carolina, scrawled on the back. When Lily turns 14 and Rosaleen is arrested for spitting on a white man's shoe--the novel is set in the 1960s--and then beaten up in jail, Lily kidnaps Rosaleen from jail and, together, they embark on a journey to Tibourn. Once there, Lily and Rosaleen locate the bee ladies--three black sisters, August, June, and May--whose honey is represented by the same black Madonna that was Lily's mother's. They allow the two to stay there for the summer. 


This is a story of racial triumph, of empowering women, of slight love and of the places we call home. 

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Welcome!

Hello there, and welcome to the Book Birdie! I would be the Birdie in question, and I'm here to be your guide in the book world. Every week, I'll review at least one book for your enjoyment, possibly--hopefully--more. 

I suppose you probably want to know a bit more about myself. 

Let's see: I'm a secret agent working for a top secret government agency that no one knows about and I'm at the top of the class. 

What? You think I'm lying? That I wouldn't put information up like that on the internet if it was true?
Yeah, you're right. 
But isn't it a funny thing, how we will put anything on the internet, able to claim it's false at a moment's notice with our words. But what if it was true? What if I was actually a detective for a branch of government disguised as a chain of delis? I mean, I'm not--let's face it, that's impossible--but wouldn't it be so cool?

This is what the slogan for the Book Birdie was going to be:
Books for teens reviewed by teens!

But that is utterly cheesy. And I'm not a fan of cheese. So here's what the slogan actually is:

Great, right?

In the event you were wondering what sort of book and movie genres--have I mentioned that I will be covering movies and such, as well, too?--will be covered, never fear, dozens of mystery, crime, romance, adventure, fantasy, sci-fi, and so much more. Of course, the majority of this will be the sub-genres of the major heading 'young adult.'
Though, we all know that there is so much better writing when all the world's books are opened up to you. 

Anyways, sit back, relax, and take a spin around this blog; get inspired by the reviews, feel that longing build up inside you until you have to jump up and go and read the actual book. Enjoy, and don't forget to live, to smell the roses and drink the hot chocolate.