God Save The Queen
Kate Locke
urban fantasy
2012
***** (five out of six stars)
Cover - the cover is what drew my eye - this old style dress with a miniskirt and boots. She has a huge gun and a teeny tiny hat. She has extremely red hair, only I think it's supposed to be very, very red, not hair red. Good cover - and it was a good book.
I enjoyed reading God Save The Queen. I loved the whole re-working of the royals and nobles, how the nobles are the ones who've been affected by viruses over and over enough to morph into beings such as werewolves (Scotland) and vampires. Then there's the half-breeds - born of royal and non royal unions - with a whole class oriented system of birthing...Oh yeah, these people are snooty. The regular humans are completely the "commoners", with no royal blood and are in fact beneath the notice of the vamps and weres....there's one other group, the most 'pure' of the classes - the goblins...they are also the ones who have been the most dangerous of all, and have to live underground because they cannot stand sunlight.....
In God Save The Queen, the main character (Xandra) is looking for her missing sister. In the opening scenes, she's visiting the goblin king even though this is the one people and place that she fears - an overwhelming fear. But she visits because she knows she'll get the truth, if she survives the encounter. She's treated with an almost surprising respect. And gets an answer, which leads her to searching even more for her missing sister...until her sister is pronounced dead... But Xandra doesn't believe that her sis is dead, and she goes about trying to find her, and stumbling upon a plot, a group of traitors and her destiny.
Along with a missing sister who just might be dead, Xandra has a brother and another sister. And the sister is in a same-sex relationship, which is handled very matter of factly by the author, nothing is written in a "look, see how this lesbian couple is included in the story" manner. Rather the girlfriend is just introduced into the story as any girlfriend/boyfriend would be introduced. I like that in a novel, and better yet - there doesn't seem to be any negative aspects to this coupling. There is no subplot of discrimination for same sex, or people acting affronted by same sex - the couple is just another couple in a large group of people. There is also a tranny featured in the story - one of the workers at a club. There's a good variation of characters in this novel.
Xandra meets up with a group of people who try to tell her that the world she lives in isn't the same world the rest of them live in. Xandra has a sugar coated view of her Duke father, and the system they work in because she's always been treated well by them, but as one of the others point out, she's treated much differently by her father than even her siblings were.
From almost the very beginning, I had a strong feeling about what was going to happen with Xandra, and even though halfway through the book, this hadn't quite been revealed, I was looking for the next book, and accidentally read in the blurb the big surprise for this first novel, so if you haven't yet read the second novel's blurb, don't. It's a big spoiler for the first book.
Anyway - the set up and worldbuilding for this series is pretty cool. The action, the scenes and subplots, descriptions, dialogue, etc all are written and fun to read. The only issue I had with the novel was a very vague sense of ...stilted or stodgy word usage. It's so vague, I'm surprised it bothered me, but it did - enough for me to slow down at some parts...but luckily - there were plenty of new situations, actions and goings-ons for me to keep on reading - because a lot happened in the novel. With the exception of the inevitable questions that are included in any story with a mystery, I enjoyed the hell out this book. You probably know the type of questions, questions that are part of the narrative and weaved within the story, almost ramming it home to the reader that yes, the character has a lot to figure out. I think a lot of books would be better off without these paragraphs of questions in the form of narration. Such as, "Was my sister really dead?", "Was he interested in me because of my activities?", "would he still be interested in me in the morning?", "did my brother suspect me of..." etc. Not word by word examples, but rather examples from the book in general.
Discounting those pesky numerous questions as narrative, and some vaguely formal wordage, I did enjoy the novel. I enjoyed it enough that I would love to get the second novel - to see what fun and cool things this girl is going to get involved with next. And the final fight scene in the novel - wicked. Simply wicked.
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Showing posts with label Kate Locke. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kate Locke. Show all posts
Saturday, February 23, 2013
Monday, January 21, 2013
It's Monday, and...brrrrrr
it's been a busy week. the normal work week; along with me getting the oh so bright idea of going into work an hour and a half early so I could volunteer in my granddaughter's classroom....
this wouldn't have been so traumatic, but then this also happened to be the night that the kinders, 1st, and 2nd graders were performing in the Winter Showcase. ahhhh - this started at 6 p.m. and ended when it ended.my last job of the day ended at five thirty, so i had a half hour to walk back down to the multipurpose room and snag a seat. no such luck. the room was standing room only at the back and sides - the seats were completely taken. completely. ahhhh - if it weren't for this being my first granddaughter's very first performance i would have left. I was in so much pain from the cold and work - but i put on my big-girl panties (what a term!) and just handled it.
i would have posted a pic of the kids on stage, but i don't think it's okay to post pics with other kids without permission from all the parents, so you get a pic of the granddaughter in her glory. she chose to wear her flower girl dress, with the neckalace from x-mas. she was beautiful - all the kids did a great job singing and reciting their two poems, and i could swear that i could hear her voice over the rest of the class - it was blended in, but recognizable. not one shy moment from her - she got on stage with her class and belted out the song. all the kids had strong voices and carried the tune very well. so proud of them.
when i finally made it home, i was in some extreme pain (helped by pain meds, thank god) - but i would totally do it again. volunteering for the class was fun - working at a table with the kids, helping them understand their assignment - all fun. then watching the performance with so many kids that i deal with on a daily basis between library, lunch supervision and daycare - so much fun also, amplified with my granddaughter being part of this.
Well - On to the Book Meme...
It's Monday, What Are You Reading? is a weekly meme hosted by Sheila of Book Journey. We "get together" and see what others have been reading - finished reading, and are reading. It's fun. It's easy. It's a good thing to do.
I didn't get a whole lot of books finished, but I did finally finish....
Ghosts & Echoes by Lyn Benedict...good story, grew on me as I got further along.

I finished reading The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-time Indian by Sherman Alexie - a VERY good young adult novel written diary style with accompanying cartoons great book, tackling issues such as alchololism, family disfunction, racism, stereotyping, sex and other things that teens go through on a daily basis.
I had a little more finished than I though I did...
currently reading...
I also used my last gift card to buy a few books at Barnes & Nobel. Not sure which book I'll pick out to read yet - while putting one book away, I ended up completely rearranging a book shelf of mine, which of course led to pulling books from two other shelves, as well as moving the stack from my bedroom shelf onto an actual book shelf. Really - a stack on my bedroom floor? Yup - for reals. The books from the bookstore giftcard were...
Scorch (#2) by Gina Damico, DeathLands Nemesis by James Axler (confusing, is it really no 1 or no 10? as all the other DeathLands books seem to be numbered - whatever, it was hard to find online), God Save The Queen by Kate Locke and Disappearing Nightly by Laura Resnick (the first in a series that I've been trying to find ever since I bought the unclearly marked second of the series). I'm kind of leaning toward reading God Save The Queen.
Going through some of my shelves was an exciting way to 'rediscover' some of the books I've been wanting to find - some that i've been wanting to read for a while, some that i've bought and FORGOTTEN that I bought (like Tin Swift by Devon Monk - it's here. I don't remember buying it, but it's here!) Might be a good reason to go over the bookshelves - rediscovering books you forgot you've bought. oh boy.
What are you reading, and what are you planning..?
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