“You are Cub,” Nico repeats. “If they really have a problem with it when your brother’s older, just beat your brother. You can do it easily enough. If you truly want your family’s name and title, take it,” he says, turning to look me in the eyes. “Show them just how much you deserve it.”
“But I'm female,” I say.
“Who cares?” he asks, going back to his shadow searching. “You worked hard for that title. You were acceptable as an heir before your brother was born, right? Well if you exceed as much as I know you will, you’ll be acceptable even after it. But none of this bowing down, none of this letting people take what you want or force what they want on you. You're a super villain, you do what you want.”
Very interesting main character, and definitely got the concept of a person who shapeshifts into a cat right. I was very amused by it and I am glad we saw more of the villains here.
Adorable, but at this point, I've got to take a mental pause and remember who's who, and I've read them back to back in a matter of days. And the plot thickens in this book with the arc resulting in an awesome end. I will say, despite the shortness, these books never feel rushed. They just end sooner than I want and you move on to the next POV.
Not sure how I'm going to convince my library to get all 37 books...
This series degenerates further, the message from this book is - IT'S OK TO BE A STALKER because obviously the cute little girl does not know what she wants. Here is a newsflash for the author - nobody has a right to touch you without your permission. This is not a 'crush' he is 14 years old and should know that no means no. What kind of lesson is the author giving to our daughters (and sons)? The author has obviously got a hatred of women, he probably believes women should not be allowed to drive and should require permission from a male relative to do anything, of course marriages should be arranged as whatever the girl wants she does not know her own mind. When Nico goes out he tells Trent and Max to guard the rest as obviously these powerful female superheroes cannot look after themselves Read this if live the author you believe women should be kept barefoot and pregnant Wish Goodreads had negative stars
It's a kitty perspective for the most part in this outing. Adanna is the daughter of a powerful famous supervillain and has similar potential as a panther shifter, except she's stuck with beginner ability blues. She is confused about her future, uncomfortable at Cape High, and adorable as a cub! If that's not enough, a particular lazy superhero student is annoying her at every opportunity... so cute.
Cape High is accumulating more super students but there is danger in the shadows as an evil character and a Collector are in pursuit of supers with rare abilities.
It was fun meeting supervillains who challenge and discuss animal rights as well as being active rescuers for abused exotic pets (all under the super radar of course... mustn't taint the rep!). Most super villains are not the baddies they protest themselves to be and adhere to strict classic rules... and it's ex-supervillain, father of Sunny and Zoe, and Cape High Principal, (Tech)Nico who has captured my heart - he's so naughty but nice and mad genius to boot!
This installment picks up right where the last leaves off, but focuses on a different main character. Adanna really annoyed me, she was so hung up on the lines between hero and villain that she couldn't relax and it hampered the story somewhat. We finally got a name for one of the villains, and that villain story line progressed superbly! I think it will be interesting to see what happens in the next books! There was even a secondary villain story line introduced and I enjoyed it as well, especially when they intersected! All in all, a pleasant way to distract myself from the worries of being in a hospital waiting room.
Don't get me wrong. I like the books. The Characters are great and I even like the story line somehow. But everything is too cute. Obviously every time you like someone, they'll like you back. The villains aren't really villains and murder is O.K. as long as the guy killed is bad. I think the distincion between villain and hero should be clearer. You can respect you enemy but actually caring for him or even liking him is just to far fetched and isn't believable.
I always enjoy reading Hello Kitty. Adanna is so externally calm, but struggling to figure out where she fits in life, as mirrored by her struggles with her shapeshifting. Sunny is so obviously smitten, and she is so obviously oblivious. For all of that she is a strong and skilled young cape who is clearly extremely compassionate, she just needs to grow into her own skin.
Probably my favourite book. She's the daughter of THE panther, supervillain extraordinare. What else can she be but a supervillain? That's the first glance. Second, reveals stupid family traditions, a second much more loved job of her father and a certain boy that will not leave her alone. And really, it's awesome to transform into a panther. A cub? Not so much.
Hello Kitty is written partially from the perspective of a wannabe super villain teen who shape shifts into a panther cub. Most of her time is spent staving off the advances of Sunny. The outcome of that is kind of obvious. This story had a decent climax, at least.
Grammar and repetitiveness detract from what could be an entertaining story. Cape High #3 leaves more questions than answers.