"5 stars for the Prince of Tides!"
This book ages well. I just finished it, marveling at the wit and lyricism of Pat Conroy. He spins this story out piece by piece, building a whole from the puzzle pieces of the story. I wasn't sure of the narrator at first but soon decided he was the perfect voice for the main character. He read well and did those southern accents proud. I loved this book and this audiobook!
"Fun. But Parsol Protectorate was better."
This was, indeed, for a younger audience the Soulless books. It seemed more over the top (if one can say such a thing in comparison to a steampunk supernatural comedy of manners) and a bit sillier. I appreciated the backstory of a certain Scotswoman - that was fun. For those who read Jane Austen, Etiquette and Espionage is to Soulless as Pride and Prejudice is to Northanger Abbey. If that helps.
"Why such high ratings?"
After struggling along I realized I was reading a computer game. First, this barrier, then that barrier to overcome, then out pops the monster to fight, blah, blah. Where is the novel? All populated with a bunch of dislikable characters. I finally got tired of trying to like this audiobook and stopped struggling. I feel pretty ripped off. If I wanted a computer game, I would play one, not try to read one.
"Narrator killed it for me."
Yes. It is a good story, though not as compelling as the first one.
The characters.
He seemed to read most of the story with less expression than the narrator of the first book. I wish she had been able to read it this time, too. He had sort of a monotone compared to her. Perhaps that is why I did not like this story as much as the first book.
Rescuing the nephew and the other people. It was touching and suspenseful.
Please get the first narrator again for sequels.
"Not her best"
The idea for the story. Ms. Willis has an amazing imagination.
I much preferred Blackout and Doomsday Book. And I thoroughly enjoyed To Say Nothing of the Dog. But this endless tome went on and on. After the first couple of parts it was all gloom, with scene after scene in the same pattern. It should have been cut a good 50 - 100 pages.
When doing Maisie (sp?) - annoying. Otherwise, she was fine.
Only if it got rave reviews.
Maybe if I read the book it would have been a better experience since reading is much faster than listening. But I would love a word count on the word "no." It seems the protagonist said it constantly.
"Unremitting sordidness"
Probably not. I had to stop - none of the characters were very good people, and the constant sordid nature of the plot and motives got to me after a while. The author has talent and writes very well. The construct was imaginative. But ...
Probably not.
Liked her accent.
Not really.
Obviously this appeals to others much mor than to me. I have been disappointed in my recent choices and will stick to known authors or reread some of the ones I have enjoyed in the past for a while.
"OK, I guess"
Probably not.
Probably not. I found the opening scene disgusting - like they were trying to pack as much repulsive stuff into one scene and one person as possible for the shock value. I read plenty of fantasy w/tough scenes but this struck me as gratuitous. And something about the repackaging of the male dominated world abusing women, in this instance, was annoying.
A British accent
Nah.
I've read better.
"Couldn't finish"
Young readers. I think I might have outgrown this one by 14 or 15 at the most.
Probably not.
Her male voices were pretty odd. And she did not have much expression. She mispronounced a couple of words.
I found the whole first part to be a bore - middle school rants against parents rules went on and on and on. Not much of a plot all that time - no action. Should have condensed it. I did not listen past the first hour and a half. And I like YA books most of the time, if they are good ones.
Author doesn't understand what irony is - misused it. At that point, I shut it off.
"A great young adult/kids book for all"
I loved this whole series, and was sad that there were no more books in it. The charming, eccentric, humorous characters as seen from the kids' point of view were great. Plenty of suspense and scary stuff broken up by the fun and funny. Lots of magical goings on in a world dreamed up by a very imaginative author. I recommend it highly.
"Quality, and wonderful characters"
This is a unique story, told from the point of view of a young girl in Nazi Germany. It takes talent to grow a fresh tale from ground that has been turned over by so many before. I truly cared about the characters, who lived their convictions the best that they could and took the consequences. The narrator was great.