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Friday, January 15, 2016

DiSemblance (DiSemblance #1) by Shanae Branham ~ Review


Approx. Pages(reading content/actual pages): ~219/220

Format: e-book

Content: Clean, some psychological conflict
Jason Tanner lives between two worlds. Problem is, only one is real. 
Inside the hologram machine 17-year-old Jason has everything his heart desires, including a digital simulation of his dead mother. While outside the machine, he’s forbidden contact with everyone. Living within the shadow of a serial killer, Jason is captivated by the beautiful girl next door, Boston Manning. Disobeying his father, he secretly cultivates a relationship with her. 
For Boston life is divided into those that have and those that have not. Displaced in a new high school, she is determined to have the life she’s always wanted. But will her choices hijack her dreams and plunge her into the treacherous clutches of a serial killer? 
As an action-packed romantic thriller, DiSemblance is sure to keep you guessing until the very end.
DiSemblance had a pretty action-packed story that was...interesting. I know interesting gets overused a lot. So, what is interesting?

Well, I didn't really have a care for this book until the real crazy starts happening. Just to reiterate the plot, this story provides insight into the perspective of three characters: Jason Tanner, his girlfriend Boston Manning, and Detective Bruce Durante (if i'm not mistaken[if I forget, please forgive me]) during the intense investigation on whom the public of this story knows as "The Comfort Killer." And I shan't leave out the more interesting character of the bunch in my opinion, Isaac Tanner. Don't ask why, he just is.

Jason and Isaac Tanner are two brothers who have basically been away and were denied of the wonders of having real friends or even just doing teenage things, causing them to be socially-inept. Or so I think? Due to their father's, Lloyd, life-long work on an invention of a virtual-reality machine, they've been kept away as a source of protection. The machine is seriously valuable and you can imagine if it fell into the wrong hands, shit is going down. Anyway, I expected awkwardness. I expected an uncomfortable... aura. I just expected something different and I only got that in Isaac. Maybe I was missing something about Jason, maybe there's nothing even wrong with him in the first place. Who knows. *shrugs*

There was a Criminal Minds sort of feel to it. But I wasn't as enraptured by the story as much as I am with the television show. Nonetheless, there were some moments that really had me thinking (between the scenes of Detective Durante and the journal, and the hospital scene when "someone" woke up from a coma), "whoa!" or "oh shit." I had my moments of turning back a few pages just to see if I read correctly. The line between what was real and what was fabricated was present in those short pages, but overall, I wasn't into it until SPOILER (highlight the blank space) the pictures of dead people and the map of Montana surrounding the Tanner's kitchen happens. Not really a spoiler. I just wanted to do it. SIKE. But really. HOW'D THOSE GET THERE HMMM? In any case, the hunt for the killer was a good ride. I wish it was darker, though. I mean, the ending wasn't happy go-lucky or anything. There's Isaac to think of! Poor Isaac. But I guess my expectation of a teen science fiction-y, thriller story was too hyped up that it fell short. And as I said, it's still good. But I wouldn't go back to re-read the first book.

I didn't have any one to root for, except strange Isaac. I could actually care less about the rest of the characters. Again, not to say they suck. They can be pretty badass. But, they just aren't my cup of tea at the moment. And, maybe that makes me tooootally... wierd? Biased? Close-minded? I don't know.

I was given a free copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.
★★★✩✩

Power of the Matchmaker by Karey White ~ Review


Approx. Pages(reading content/actual pages): ~75/79

Format: e-book

Content: Clean
A prequel novella to the POWER OF THE MATCHMAKER Series
Mystical . . . Beautiful . . . Romantic . . .
12 novels by 12 bestselling authors
Released once a month in 2016
Read the matchmaker’s story to find out where it all starts . . . 
Mae Li has been in love with Chen Zhu for years, and he with her. But when the matchmaker arrives at the Zhu family home, she recommends another village girl for Chen. 
Heartbroken, Mae Li watches as Chen does his duty by marrying another. Mae flees her village with the clothes on her back and her only possession—a pearl embedded comb, given to her as a goodbye gift from Chen Zhu. 
Upon Mae’s arrival in Shanghai, she quickly learns that she’ll starve within days unless she sells her prized comb or joins a courtesan house. She goes to the Huangpu River and promises the River God that she’ll always be selfless if he will save her from becoming a prostitute . . . Her wish is granted when Ms. Tan, the matchmaker of Shanghai, finds Mae. But Mae must completely change her future and her name if she is to become the next matchmaker.
I'm not sure what I expected from reading this little novella... but whatever it was, I kind of liked it. Admittedly, I'm a sucker for romance and I'm a sucker for unfortunate twists in life (bring on the NHEAs). This story is a wonderful blend of the two, I think.

A love gone wrong? More like an expectation gone wrong. I understood why Chen resisted himself from the temptation to escape the cruel fate that is -cough- a bull matchmaking by a shitty matchmaker. I really did. But it didn't make it suck any less. And, if I had to see a guy- my ONE-AND-ONLY-FATED guy- marry and have cute Asian babies with another woman... well, hell, I'd run the freak away, too--maybe.

I must say, when Ms. Tan was introduced, I grew to like her very quickly. Old and as nice to Mae as she was, she immediately got my approval to be a respectable character. The secrets that surround her on the powers in matchmaking were intriguing and I wanted to learn what she was passing onto Mae.

There's not much further to say on this piece. It's simply an introduction to an awaited series of 12 books spanning 12 months. This read was very fast paced, as it skipped some years towards the end of the novella. And, in all honesty, my favorite part was the Epilogue. It was a satisfying end to a chapter in Mae's life that desperately needed a close to, and a hooking beginning to a new future for Mae, and I can't wait to continue on with the story of Power of the Matchmaker.

I was given a free copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.
★★★★☆