Showing posts with label page-turner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label page-turner. Show all posts

Saturday, September 12, 2015

Asylum

Asylum by Madeline Roux, 313 pages





The concept of a novel being supported by pictures is fascinating to me. This is a young adult novel, and it has pictures! But these are not ordinary pictures. Oh, no! These pictures (or rather, photographs) enhance the story by unfathomable magnitudes.


I realize that what I am saying can also be applied to children's books or graphic novels, but the concept utilized in Asylum is much bigger! In children's books and graphic novels, the pictures really do make the story. When pictures are utilized in novels, it enhances the story.


Asylum is about, well, a summer school whose dormitories are in an abandoned mental hospital which housed grotesque "cures" on the patients. It only makes sense that a summer student (or two) would become possessed within the course of their tenure at the school. The novel by itself is creepy enough to give you nightmares, but when the novel is paired with photographs (actual, albeit somewhat edited, old photographs from asylums back in the day), be prepared for a sleepless night.


This is undoubtedly a quick and satisfying read with a cliffhanger that will leave you hungry for the sequels.

Thursday, August 13, 2015

Contest

Contest by Matthew Reilly, 334 pages



A co-worker recommended this book to me, and I should have known what genre it would be before I even read it: science fiction. My co-worker loves science fiction, but I'm not really a fan. Nothing personal against science fiction, but it's just not my cup of tea. The last book he recommended to me was science fiction, so I really should have known. Fool me twice, I guess.

With that being said, I am pleasantly surprised as to how much I actually enjoyed the book. The timeline of the book occurs in less than one day, and it is riveting! The action is basically nonstop, and it was because of this that the book made for a quick and exciting read.

The only downside? It involves a contest (that takes place in the New York Public Library) where the last person (or alien) who is alive wins. Normally, I suppose, this wouldn't be such a bad thing, but it can become problematic (and rather traumatizing) if you read this book directly after reading The Hunger Games (which I did).

It is worth it, though. You may just have the inexplicable desire to read The Very Hungry Caterpillar or a Dr. Seuss book afterwards, though.