Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

The Last Descendants #1

The Eyes of a King

Rate this book
FIFTEEN-YEAR-OLD LEO NORTH’S prospects in life are limited. He attends military school, lives with his fearful grandmother, and looks after his brother Stirling. He resists his innate powers, because those who demonstrate any sort of magical ability are considered enemies of the state. But when he finds a blank book in the snow, his typical indifference melts away. From the first moment he touches the book, he senses its strange power. Passages start to appear on the pages—revealing family secrets, telling the history of Malonia, and uncovering the story of Ryan and Anna, two teens from a parallel universe. When Leo’s seemingly narrow path takes an unexpected tragic turn, he finds himself on a journey from which he can never really return. And, as he slowly begins to lose touch with reality, Ryan and Anna’s story comes to the forefront. Their idyllic summer romance—seemingly worlds away from Leo—has everything to do with Malonia.

448 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 2008

28 people are currently reading
2008 people want to read

About the author

Catherine Banner

6 books320 followers
​Catherine Banner was born in Cambridge, UK, in 1989 and began writing at the age of fourteen. She studied English at Fitzwilliam College, Cambridge, before moving to County Durham where she worked as a secondary school teacher. She has published a trilogy of young adult novels, The Last Descendants.

Her debut adult novel, The House at the Edge of Night, tells the story of the 2008 financial crisis and 95 years of European history through one family and their bar on a tiny Mediterranean island.

Her work is translated into 21 languages. She lives in Turin, Italy, with her husband and young son. She is currently working on her next novel, The Lit and Unlit World, which follows the women of a vine-growing family in the mountains of north Italy.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
203 (20%)
4 stars
243 (24%)
3 stars
282 (28%)
2 stars
170 (16%)
1 star
103 (10%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 110 reviews
67 reviews
September 30, 2008
As I started to read this, I was struck by something irritating about the writing style. The text felt like it was written by a 12-year-old trying hard to inflate her language and imitate an adult writer. There were too many clipped sentences used for dramatic effect, too many observations laden with detail, and the pacing was awkward. After wincing through several pages I couldn’t take any more and read other reviews of this. It turns out that this young author started writing this when she was 14 and finished when she was 19. You can tell.
Profile Image for Amelia.
344 reviews59 followers
June 21, 2011
Originally posted on The Authoress: Book Review and More.


I read somewhere that Catherine Banner was slated to be the next J.K. Rowling. I’m sure whoever said it had good intentions but I’m left going, Um no. The book was exciting at first because it was different, but soon, the flaws began to stand out. The writing began to show a amateur-istic choppiness. Then, the plot just didn’t make sense and by the end of it, I was left skimming the pages. I wish I had gotten more out of this because I think the idea was clever, but being dragged out over four hundred pages and squandered with raw writing? The idea starts to lose its luster.

The first thing is the writing. It was choppy. But that was all, because even choppiness can be brilliant (look at Maria V. Snyder). It lacked that critical personal element that makes the readers care about the characters. When tragedy hits halfway through the story, I’m left feeling sympathetic because it’s sad by nature, but I had no emotional take in it. And Leo’s reaction…It was stretched over the rest of the book—more than two hundred pages of the exact same thing over and over and over and over again. The repetition was just annoying after a while. Then, when the romance came in, I was just like…”Oh, you’ve got to be kidding me.” There was simply no emotional depth. I just didn’t get it.

The characters didn’t make sense, either. I didn’t like any of them. Not Leo, the main character. Not Grandmother. Not Maria. Maria! That girl had no place in this story.

That was my main issue, right there. Nothing really had a set place. I’m expecting everything to be so Its Own that it can’t be left out without the story falling apart. If it isn’t needed, then I don’t want to read about it. Maria didn’t hold a critical part, neither did her story, which took forever to get out and wasn’t that surprising.

When I pick up a book—especially a fantasy—I’m expecting some type of “tightness” about the plot. Consider Cinda Williams Chima. Her fantasy books—The Demon King and The Exiled Queen—are thick. Over five hundred pages each. Over that considerable amount of length, she doesn’t let anything go to waste. She uses everything. Meaning, something she mentions in the beginning of the story becomes significant later on. All her character’s subplots are critical to the main plot. With Eyes of a King, there was no tightness. With the parallel world aspect, the two plots should have been so tightly bound that you shouldn’t have been able to tell them apart. I feel that the separate stories barely affected each other.

Not only was the plot not tight, but it was cliché. The romance with Ryan, the story with Aldebaran…And the dialogue was poor. The lines of one character could come from any other character. There was no differentiating feature between them.

The writing could have stood for some serious polishing. There’s a difference between describing the rain outside to just describe it versus using the rain as a backdrop and tool to get to the bigger picture. And I think putting it in first person was a mistake. The emotional distance between the reader and the characters was simply accentuated by the use of “I”.

However, there were a few diamonds amongst all the roughness. For example:

There was an atmosphere of disquiet in that strange town. Horses shifted and puffed steam in the damp evening air, and the men who walk around did not talk or smile. There were Malonian flags everywhere, grubby and damp, and they flapped like sickening birds against the buildings.

Excerpted from the hardcover, US edition, page 251.

Overall however, I was just not impressed. I was so excited to read this book because I’d had the name “Catherine Banner” down on my authors-to-investigate list for months and I finally found her book in the library. She apparently started this book when she was fourteen and she was showcased in a prestigious British gallery for inspiring young Britons. But I don’t see the hype. I might pick up the next book because I know how an author’s writing can change as they mature as a writer. (Again, see Cinda Williams Chima.)
Profile Image for Heli Künnapas.
Author 42 books103 followers
December 14, 2023
Oeh, ma pole midagi nii konarlikku ammu lugenud.

Raamatu tutvustuses on kirjas, et Banner hakkas seda teost kirjutama 14-aastasena. Suur osa teosest tunduski kooliõpilase kodutööna. Peategelane oli 15-aastane poiss, kuid tema hääl oli samuti väga ebausutav.

Pikemalt kirjutan blogis: https://midaheliluges.blogspot.com/20...
Profile Image for Anna.
84 reviews9 followers
June 30, 2024
tegemist on raamatuga, mis inspireeris minus armastuse ja huvi mitme narratiiviga lugude vastu. saan aru, et on tegemist Banneri esimese raamatuga, mille kirjutamist alustas ta neljateistkümne aastasena ning ilmselt on ka mõeldud sellele vanuseklassile. see siiski ei tähenda, et raamat (ja selle tõlge) peaks halb olema. kahjuks see seda oli.

mitmed süžeelised võtted made no sense peale selle, et nad andsid Leole voli käituda nagu puberteeti põdev tiinekas. mida ta muidugi ka oli, aga fantaasiaraamatus võiks eeldada täiskasvanulikumaid tegelasi?? igastahes, nii Stirlingi surm kui ka Akira mahalaskmine olid nii mõttetud sündmused, mille üle Leo siis terve raamatu vältel virises ja teisi halvasti kohtles. lapse surm selleks, aga Leo VIHKAS Akirat ning tema seos Mariaga oleks selleks vihaks andnud veelgi rohkem põhjust, kuid pärast Akira tapmist Leo kahtses oma tegu? miks? on arusaadav, et ma ei pea tegelase käitumisega nõustuma, kuid ma ei näe selliseks asjade kulgemiseks põhjust, kuna tegelased lihtsalt käituvad, reageerivad üksteise käitumisele ja peavad maha pikki sisemisi monolooge.

kuigi eelnev on ilmselt suurim probleem raamatuga, on jutu worldbuilding ka väga kesine, eriti kuna üks peategelastest ei huvitu sellest maailmast, milles ta elab. Leol on niivõrd palju tegemist oma probleemidega (loe: kinnisideedega), et teda ei koti ei maagia (halloo?) ega ka paralleelmaailma olemasolu (HALLOO??), kuid ka tema surnud (?) vanemad, side kuningaperega, oma maailma poliitiline olukord ja tema suhted elusolevate lähedastega.

pikalt kaalusin raamatu pooleli jätmist, aga vedasin ikkagi lõpuni. teist raamatut (ja kolmandat apparently) ei kavatse kahjuks lugeda. eriti kui sarjaga jätkab see sama tõlk.

◇─◇──◇─────◇──◇─◇

"Kui vana su vanaema on, Leo?" küsis isa Dunstan mind kõrvale tõmmates.

Rumal küll, kuid mulle ei tulnud meelde. Kunagi, enne kõiki neid sündmusi, teadsin seda küll.
"Kuuskümmend?" pakkus Isa Dunstan. [kuigi eelnevas lõigus oli isa Dunstan nagu daddy dunstan ;) aga siin father dunstan AAAHHHHH] "Või vanem?"

Hakkasin parema käe sõrmedel lugema. "Kuuskümmend üks?" päris isa Dunstan. "Kuuskümmend kaks? Sa ei pea rääkima." Ta jätkas äraarvamist. Kuuekümne viie juures ma noogutasin.

Ta oli kaua aega vait. Ühtäkki kuulsin, kuidas vanaema hakkas jutustama lugu oma lapsepõlvest - kõrgel, nõrgal häälel, mis oli nagu kellegi teise oma.
"Ta on päris vana, Leo," ütles isa Dunstan siis. "Ja šokk ei mõju nii vanale inimesele hästi."

[tell me, et selle raamatu kirjutas 14-aastane without telling me, et selle raamatu kirjutas 14-aastane, be so fucking for real rn]
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Bücherfresserin.
342 reviews90 followers
July 7, 2011
"Nette Fantasygeschichte, mit Wandlung zum depressiven Hauptcharakter"

Inhalt:
In “Das Lied von Malonia” geht es um den fünzehnjährigen Leo North, der gemeinsam mit seinem Bruder und seiner Großmutter in einem Armenviertel in Kalitzstadt lebt. Diese Stadt befindet sich in dem Land Malonia, das von dem Diktator Lucien beherrscht wird. Allerdings war vor einiger Zeit noch alles anders, als die königliche Familie über Malonia herrschte und alles dadurch besser noch war. Doch diese Zeiten sind längst vorbei, sodass Leo kämpfen muss, um in dieser tyrannischen Welt zu überleben. Eines Tages findet Leo auf einmal ein schwarzes Buch, das magisch zu sein scheint. Es berichtet ihm von den Geschichten seines Großvaters, der in das Land England, weit weg von Malonia verbannt wurde, da er über starke magische Fähigkeiten verfügt und so auch North seine Geschichten erzählen kann. Aber alles ändert sich, als Leos kleiner Bruder stirbt und plötzlich scheint sein Glück vollkommen verloren zu gehen, zwischen Revolution, dem wahren König von Malonia und Leos ungezügelter Wut.


Meinung:
“Das Lied von Malonia” ist der Beginn einer Trilogie, die im englischen auch unter dem Titel “The Last Descendants” bekannt wurde. Es handelt sich um einen Fantasy Roman, bei dem die Geschichte teilweise in der fiktiven Welt Malonia spielt, aber auch in England. Obwohl dies der Beginn einer Reihe sein soll, schließt das Buch aber in sich ab, da die Fortsetzung erst Jahre später spielt.
Die Hauptrolle gilt dem jungen Leo North, der in recht armen Verhältnissen lebt und dem nur noch sein kleiner Bruder und seine Großmutter geblieben sind. Als Leo eines Tages ein schwarzes Buch findet, indem unregelmäßig Geschichten erscheinen, ist ihm sofort klar, dass es sich um Zauberei handelt muss, denn diese liegt in seinen Genen. Zusammen mit seinem Bruder taucht er immer wieder in diese Geschichten ein, um dem grausigen Alltag in Malonia zu entfliehen, bis er merkt, dass er die Geschichte seines Großvaters liest, der gemeinsam mit dem rechtmäßigen Thronerben nach England verbannt wurde. Allerdings kann es sich nicht mehr nur auf diese Geschichte konzentrieren, die ihm mehr und mehr zeigt, dass eine sich weitere Revolution anbahnt, da er sich um seinen todkranken Bruder kümmern muss, der plötzlich am schleichenden stillen Fieber erkrankt. Mit Hilfe von Maria, einer guten Freundin und seiner Großmutter pflegte er ihn, bis er stirbt und Leos Welt völlig aus den Fugen gerät. In seinen Träumen landet er mehr und mehr in diesem seltsamen Land England und weiß nicht mehr wo er mit sich hin soll, gefangen zwischen unendlichem Kummer und einer zügellosen Wut.
Diese Geschichte wird hauptsächlich aus der Ich-Perspektive von Leo erzählt, jedoch wechselt diese, sobald Leo erneut aus dem Buch liest oder über England und seinem Großvater träumt. Zwar bauen diese Wechsel Spannung auf, aber ebenso stiften diese Verwirrung, da zu Beginn diese Wechsel ständig geschehen, sodass man teilweise nicht mehr weiß, ob dies die Realität oder einer von Leos Träumen ist.
Dazu kommt, dass die Geschichte, die in England spielt, um Längen spannender ist, als Leos Alltags Leben in Malonia und das, wo der Roman überwiegend in einer fiktiven Welt spielt. Die Geschichte wird zwar nett erzählt, ist meiner Meinung nach aber sehr vorhersehbar. Dabei hätte das Buch weitaus mehr Potenzial. Das schlimmste ist dann aber noch, dass das Buch ab der Stelle, bei der Leos Bruder stirbt, völlig aus den Fugen gerät. Wieso? Vorher waren beide Handlungsstränge ausgeglichen und ich dachte, dass die Geschichte sich auf die Revolution in Malonia hinarbeitet, aber sobald der kleine Bruder von Leo stirbt, erhält Leo 80% der Aufmerksamkeit der Autorin und dies nicht zu knapp, denn man erlebt den, noch zuvor sympathischen Hauptprotagonisten, nun von einer sehr traurigen Seite, was natürlich verständlich ist. Das Problem hierbei ist aber, dass der Hauptcharakter in diesem Loch stecken bleibt und dies dem Leser detailreich erläutert wird. Ich dachte immer wieder, jetzt muss sich Leo wieder aufrappeln, jetzt muss er merken, dass man weiter leben muss! Allerdings ähnelt Leo irgendwann eher einem geistig Verwirrtem mit seltsamen Wutausbrüchen, als einem magisch talentierten jungen Mann, der wieder zur Besinnung kommt. Dies ist auch der Grund wieso dieses Buch niemals 5 Sterne verdienen würde, es schweift einfach zu sehr ab. Die Geschichte um den König von Malonia, der den Diktator stürzt, gerät einfach völlig in den Hintergrund! Natürlich trauern Menschen um verlorene Verwandte, natürlich ist Trauer bei solchen Textpassagen unabdingbar, aber doch nicht das ganze Buch entlang. Jeder Mensch hat garantiert schon einmal jemanden verloren, der einem sehr nahe stand, aber jeder weiß auch, dass man sich irgendwie aufrappelt — die Autorin anscheinend nicht, denn diese lässt Leo durchweg leiden, bis er wild um sich schießt, sich erschießen will und dann irgendwann gar nicht mehr spricht. Das Ende ist dann natürlich sehr prompt, die Revolution klappt, der Prinz wird König von Malonia und Leos Großvater ist wieder zurück. Und Leo? Ja, Leo merkt endlich, dass er zwar nicht glücklich sein kann, jedoch weiter leben muss. Prima und sehr motivierendes Fazit für jüngere Leser. Zwar sind solche Gefühle realistisch, dennoch sollte man sich vorher Gedanken machen, was man da eigentlich schreibt. Einen Fantasyroman, oder doch eher eine Lektüre über das Problem mit dem Loslassen.
Die weiteren Bücher werde ich mir wohl nicht mehr durchlesen, der erste Teil war mir demotivierend genug. Nette Fantasygeschichte, nette Charakter, aber die Wandlung zum depressiven Hautprotagonisten gibt dem Buch dann doch den Rest.

Der Schreibstil ist nicht gerade der Renner. Zu Beginn holpert die Autorin ziemlich durch die Kapitel und es reiht sich ein Hauptsatz nach dem anderen an. Ebenso bieten die Dialoge meist wenig Abwechslung, sodass sich das triste Bild nicht nur bei der Handlung, sondern auch bei dem Schreibstil auftut. Außerdem sind einige Textpassagen wiederum in kursiv gedruckt (Briefform) und wechseln plötzlich in der Erzählperspektive, ohne das dies vorher dem Leser veranschaulicht wird.

Das Cover finde ich persönlich extrem kitschig, mit dieser merkwürdigen Abbildung einer bleichen Figur. Das passt überhaupt nicht in mein Bild von Malonia, ebenso wenig wie das rote Buch, denn die Geschichte dreht sich die ganze Zeit um ein schwarzes. Allerdings gibt es von Blanvalet jetzt auch eine Taschenbuchausgabe, die mir dann doch besser gefällt.

Fazit:
Der Roman ist nicht schlecht, aber deprimierend. Die eigentlich spannende Handlung gerät zur Nebensache, da sich die Autorin einfach zu viel auf ihren deprimierten Hauptcharakter konzentriert. Somit geht auch der Fantasyfaktor um einiges flöten, weshalb ich diesen Roman nur bedingt weiterempfehlen würde, wenn man wirklich kein anderes Buch vorziehen mag, denn die Geschichte ist zwar interessant, ebenso wie das fiktive Land Malonia und dessen magische Geschichte, aber man hat zu oft das Gefühl, dass Leo zu geistlicher Verwirrung neigt.
9 reviews
Read
May 3, 2021
mwah, mist een echte clou.
Profile Image for J.M. Cornwell.
Author 14 books22 followers
August 4, 2008
An intriguing fantasy of parallel worlds.

Leo remembers the day he picked up the blank book and his dreams of the magical land of England appeared on its pages. He and his brother, Stirling, lived with their grandmother and went to military school to learn to be soldiers. It was after the queen’s brother, Lucien, murdered the king and queen. Lucien was a brutal dictator, ruling over a poor and changed land, but he wasn’t foolish enough to ignore the prophecy; he exiled the young prince, Ryan. Some people whispered that Lucien had killed Ryan, but in Leo’s dreams, Ryan lives with Leo’s uncle, Aldebaran, in the fairy land of England.

As the pages magically fill with Leo’s dreams, his world changes, moving toward a crisis that will mark him and his family and end the stalemate between Lucien and Ryan.

The beginning of The Eyes of a King sent me plummeting into a story that felt more like coming in at the middle of an intense conversation where I couldn’t grasp the context before I was plunged into the midst of yet another story. It took a while for me to get my bearings before Catherine Banner switched tracks and dropped me into the midst of yet a third story. Each story was far too compelling to give up before figuring out how they connected.

The introduction to two of the stories is jarring, each drawing me deep into the different worlds until the rhythm of Banner’s prose mesmerized and held me captive. As the pace quickened and all the stories converges, The Eyes of the King it became nearly impossible to put down. It was well worth wading through the fog into Malonia and England and following Leo on his dark journey.

The Eyes of the King is an ambitious tale that is at times as confusing as it is dark, but despite the rocky beginning, becomes an exciting tale of adventure, love and intrigue that breathes new life into fantasy, as though channeling Neil Gaiman by way of Peter Straub.
Catherine Banner has created a phantasm with a touch of fairy, a healthy dose of pure darkness and a deep understanding of the politics of a gripping adventure tale.


###
Profile Image for Sash.
158 reviews18 followers
November 29, 2013
“Eragon” kohtub “Vendade Lõvisüdametega”
Tegemist on järjekordse lapsautori üllitatud teosega, mis tekitas lugemisel äärmiselt vastuolulisi tundeid. “Kuninga silmad” tegevus toimub riigis nimega Maloonia, mis asub kusagil meie paralleelilmas, ja on seotud Inglismaaga. Maloonia on sünge varauusaegne paik, kus hiljuti on kukutatud kuningas, prints pagendatud ning käib sõda. Raamatu peategelane, 15-aastane Leo ja tema väike vend, kelle eest hoolitseb vanaema, käivad mõlemad sõjakoolis. Lugu läheb käima kui Leo leiab tänavalt salapärase tühja raamatu, kuhu hakkab jupikaupa ilmuma lugu nende maa ja tema perekonna omavahel kokku põimunud ajaloost.
Lugu on kirjutud kogunisti kolmekihilisena, mis on keerukas ettevõtmine isegi kogenud autori jaoks. ja käib Catherine Bannerile ilmselgelt üle jõu. Süžeeliinid on segased, venivaks ja raskesti jälgitavad, eriti alguses. Alates raamatu teisest poolest muutub lugu veidi tempokamaks. Probleemiks läbi raamatu jäävad siiski ka tegelased, kes on pinnapealsed, isikupäratud ja räägivad kõik täpselt ühtemoodi. Veidi rohkem on välja arendatud peategelane, kelle mõttekäigud on kohati täiesti nauditavad.
Väga huvitav on raamatu maagiakäsitlus – Maloonias on maagia olemas, kuid see on mitte eriline anne, vaid pigem tahtejõupingutus, mida mõned suudavad paremini kui teised ja mida on püsivalt tööd vaeva nähes võimalik endas arendada – nagu iga teist oskust. Siiski ei ole maagial raamatus väga suurt rolli.
Sisuliselt ilmselt rohkem nooremale lugejale (8-13) sobiv raamat suudab endas siiski väga hästi ühendada huvitava seiklusloo ning keerulised igapäevaprobleemid, millega peategelane Leo kokku puutub – vägivald koolis, venna surm, elu sõjaolukorras, nälg, kohustuste üleküllus ja piiratud vabadused. Võrdluse “Lõvisüdamete” raamatuga tõin just sellepärast, et autor on oma nooruse kohta erakordselt hästi suutnud edasi anda Leo leina, kui sureb ta vend – sündmus, mis heidab loo niigi süngele õhustikule veel täiendavalt masendava varjundi –, ning tema hakkamasaamist hulluse piiril kõikuva vanaema, teismelisest emast kena naabritüdruku ja kooliprobleemidega.
Profile Image for Amelia.
60 reviews3 followers
February 26, 2010
Kudos to the youngin that had started this book at 14!


*******SPOILERS*******


I could not get into it. The set up and imagery was great. It had a lot of "little details" thrown about to give authenticity. It wasn't all that bad for me until a certain someone decided to kick the bucket. After that it was just "WHA WHA WHA WHA WHA WHA...etc." from the main character. I'm a fan of angst but hot damn! ENOUGH!

I had an issue with the back and fourth between worlds and characters. It was easy to follow, but I feel like Anna and Cassius (Ryan) got the short end of the stick. Their story was set up at the very beginning then just dropped in favor of Aldebaran's for the majority of the book. The whole thing between Anna and the king (tehe!) was rushed and smushed into a few chapters towards the end. Which is why I found myself looking around at my ceiling and walls for possible insight as to how the hell they would fall in love and do the dirty after knowing each other for about 5 seconds. The prophecy was supposed to be this big thing in the plot but it was dealt with in a few pages.

It was absurdly predictable. I knew everything that would happen and who everyone was at the beginning. The foreshadowing was like a large man in a chicken suit running into rush hour traffic with it's subtlety.

The concept was great, coming from a 14 year old, genius. Just poorly executed. I really struggled through this. I don't think I can handle the next 2 books.
912 reviews16 followers
September 22, 2008
If you take into consideration that this book was written by a teenager - started when she was 14 and finished four years later - some of the problems I had with this book make sense. I found it to be all over the place, literally as well as figuratively.

The story is touted as being magical, but other than some characters being able to travel between two different worlds and some rather minor acts, magic was not a large part of the book. I found the main protagonist's worlds - both inner and outer - to be very dreary and depressing. He (Leo) was in a state of angst throughout the book - not surprising considering what he went through, plus he was 15, as were most of the other main characters. Unfortunately, I found him more annoying than sympathetic.

I wouldn't say it was a waste of time to read this but I don't feel any desire to read further books in this series. I also wouldn't recommend this book for anyone under 15, due to some of the themes.
212 reviews
September 12, 2009
I tried to read this book. The story seems so interesting that I was really looking forward to it. The writing was terrible. I had problems getting through the first chapter. Then I looked and saw that the author was young, a teenager I think, when she wrote this book. I think this author has the potential to improve. So I would maybe read future works. But skip this one.
Profile Image for Cady Lorenzana.
Author 19 books28 followers
February 29, 2012
I bought this book because we were ask to make a book review for an english class. I am so confuse on how the story flows. Especially in the middle part. When I'm making the review, I will still go back to the parts to analyze the whole story. Its really confusing. The only part that I like was the end part---because of Ryan and Anna's story even if it is only short compared to the others.
Profile Image for Angie.
2,393 reviews56 followers
July 22, 2008
The premise was truly promising ...
but wow, how many times did I think to myself how much longer is this book? Could we please move it along here?

The author has time to improve. She's either not quite yet or barely twenty.
Profile Image for Norma ☁️.
117 reviews9 followers
April 29, 2022
Anche se il libro non è stato scritto benissimo e la storia è confusa, una volta arrivata alla fine tutti i pezzi si sono riagganciati. Speriamo che il seguito sia migliore!
Profile Image for Kelsi.
176 reviews
July 29, 2025
Ok...so I am only about halfway through the book but I don't think my thoughts are going to change between here and the end of the book so I am writing my review now.

For starters: I thoroughly detest this book and have pretty much since the first few pages. I am pretty much finishing out of pure stubbornness at this point (I have a thing about not abandoning books...) I am basically skimming just to get through it. Here is why I hate it so much:

The characters are flat and emotionless and there is nothing to draw me to any of them:
-Stirling: Whiny crybaby. I know he is supposed to be deathly ill but I really don't care because the character wasn't built up at all before the fact so I had no attachment and feel no sympathy for him or his illness. The constant back and forth between is he sick or is he not sick is getting really annoying too.
-Leo: Bratty teenager who doesn't seem to care about anyone but himself. Also the main character but seems to do very little of any importance.
-Grandma: Don't even get me started...all she does is yell. Her grandkids come home injured and she barely asks if they are ok, just digs into them for being home when they should be at school.
-Maria: Upstairs 15-year-old neighbour with a baby. Her and Leo have a love connection of some sort but there is no reason why he is interested other than she is pretty. Abandons her baby with her mother all the time but gets mad when her mother tells her she knows how to care for the baby better than Maria does.
-Aldebaran: Now this is a character I could be interested in. Too bad he only appears in a side story and barely seems to be connected in any significant way to the main storyline.

That leads me into my next point: where exactly is the plot in this book? There is a bit of storyline to do with the army and a war but that hasn't been made clear and doesn't seem significant. Stirling is sick with something called silent flu but nobody seems to know what that is so it isn't clear whether he actually has it or not. The kids appear to go to a military school but this also appears to be pretty unimportant other than the fact that one of their teachers is abusive except when it comes to his sickly daughter who has only been mentioned once. There is a lot of religious propaganda since Stirling wants to be a priest and apparently him and Grandma went to church everyday before he was sick. Finally, there is the sideplot of the magic book that Leo found which tells the story of Aldebaran. I think this would be a great plot if it were focused on but it seems to just be thrown in here and there. In conclusion: the main storyline is made up of numerous plots which don't really seem to connect enough to form a significant story. So far nothing interesting has happened (in 200 pages.)

Finally, the WRITING!! Oh man this girl needs a creative writing class. She seems to have something against using contractions. She constantly uses do not instead of don't, can not instead of can't, etc. This makes the dialogue feel wordy, awkward and extremely formal. I feel like I am reading an essay rather than a novel.

Overall, a complete waste of my time so far.

UPDATE: I have finally finished this book. There were some slight improvements in the second half but not enough to make this book surpass the two star mark. There were new characters introduced who had been mentioned before but I had to really work to make the connection. The side story was focused on more which I was happy about so I bumped it up a star for that.
Profile Image for Rollmops.
100 reviews7 followers
March 24, 2019
Wow this is different!

It was a real page turner, mostly because it was packed with tension (but sometimes the main character looses himself in emotion for eternity)
But also filled with so much emotion that I think I cried a little lake halfway through. In my opinion it was really well written and you could feel the emotions of Leo the protagonist as they were your own..

What I also really liked about it was that there were so many clichés which usually would have happened but not in this book! Sometimes the characters themselves point something obvious out and I thanked them a lot for not being stupid like other chars in other books.

I'm not gonna lie because of a certain event the second half of the book can be tough to read cause the stories progress happens slowly and I struggled to really understand the actions of the protagonist. That whole thing was a bit too much.

The first half I absolutely loved, 5*! And in general it is worth a read, cause its just a different take on a fantasy book!

I just don't understand why the author is soo obsessed with teenage pregnancy?

Like in the book mentioned after you leave it feels like a dream. For me it is not so much about the story but more about dealing with your actions placed in a fantasy setting.
Profile Image for Faith Ang.
29 reviews
February 28, 2023
I first read this book when I was eleven and I remember being impressed with it - keeping in mind that the author was only three years older than I was when she wrote it.

As an adult I found many more faults with this book, as to be expected. The main character is absolutely annoying and dreary. There were many points in the book where I was certain it was the end, only to realise I still had like a gajillion pages left or something. The writing is choppy and stilted, though I think that is partly on purpose to place some distance between the fantasy world and ours…? Still, it reads very awkwardly.

World building is meh. The characters are either unlikeable or not well-developed. Story is super predictable and gets a bit repetitive. Also I saw another reviewer ask why the author is so obsessed with teenage pregnancy and I LOLed. It true :”) The guys all seem to have super potent sperm idk lmao.

The concept is good though, and for a writer that age really quite commendable. I only hope her subsequent novels are better!!
2 reviews
August 14, 2017
When I first looked at the blurb I thought " Hey, this might be cool'. I was very wrong.
1)The charectord were boring, and annoying or useless. Maria and her baby- not important, Leo-selfish Stirling- could have been used much better, Aldebaran-cliché.
2) The book was nearly useless. 300 pages in and so far the book hasn't been used to change, or do anything except tell the story of Ryan and Anna.
3) The writings bad. I know 12 year-olds that could write a story better than this. Its choppy, and everything seems scripted.
4) Very typical fantasy world. White,misogynistic, and no mention of LGBTQ+ characters. All the female charectors are either love interests, mothers, or a very stereotypical girl.
ETC
If you really want a good fantasy book to read, I recommend the Six of Crows duology, which has diverisity , a good plot, humour, actual action not just some sickness and is very well written, unlike this garabage.
2,374 reviews50 followers
October 1, 2017
I'm puzzled by this book.

It has an interesting premise (maybe): It felt like it could have been more - but the primary movers of the events surrounding the POV characters are secondary to the narrative that the author chooses to tell.

Leo's story is a story about grief - dealing with grief and loss, and the actions he takes during this period. Ryan and Anna are about falling in love. In the meantime, the country goes through a revolution - but that's all kept in the background. It was an interesting plot, and Leo's sense of grief is done very well, but it felt that it could have been more - a different, better story, that just wasn't done well.

Which merits a 2-star. I wasn't very into all the 14/15 year olds getting pregnant too, but I guess it happens.
Profile Image for F~.
393 reviews16 followers
May 25, 2021
I love this book mostly because of the memories I have of reading it as a teen. It was the first time I remember reading a book and feeling INTENSE EMOTION. I was shook. Every couple of years now, I end up rereading the book. For me it’s a feel-good book and it has a really special place in my 💜

It’s written in first POV (which I normally don’t read) and has the classic cliche YA romance tropes I enjoyed as a teen. HOWEVER, the plot is fascinating and keeps you guessing. Thank you, Catherine Banner, for this wonderful book. It’s helped me reconnect with my love of reading each time I’ve reread it. The characters are memorable and ngl I always have a box of tissues nearby because this book makes me cry each time 🥲

I finally just ended up buying my own copy of the book this year (since I kept burrowing it from the library) and now I’ve bought the sequels! I’m excited to read those as well.
Profile Image for Sasha.
414 reviews79 followers
February 5, 2011
Leo ist fünfzehn und lebt mit seiner Großmutter und seinem achtjährigen Bruder allein. Sein Vater war einst ein bekannter Schriftsteller, doch er musste mitsamt seiner Frau fliehen, als die neue Regierung diese Texte verbieten ließ. Die Kinder blieben zurück.
Inzwischen besuchen beide die Militärsakademie, um zu Soldaten ausgebildet zu werden, was keiner der beiden will. Da findet Leo eines Tages ein leeres Buch, das er – ohne genau zu wissen, warum – mit sich nimmt. Nach und nach tauchen dort Texte auf. Texte über den Sohn des ehemaligen und ermordeten Königs, der Malonia befreien soll. Texte über Leos Großonkel Aldebaran, ein Erleuchteter, der das beherrscht, was gemeinhin als Magie gilt. Während er noch über dieses Buch grübelt, geht das reale Leben weiter. Der Krieg mit dem Nachbarreich tobt weiter, das Stille Fieber zieht um und rafft einen nach dem anderen dahin – schließlich erkrankt auch Leos Bruder und sein Leben ändert sich schnell und schmerzhaft.
Derweil fristet der Prinz sein Leben in der Verbannung, in England. Dort lernt er auch Anna kennen, in die er sich verliebt. Doch soll es ihm nicht vergönnt sein, mit ihr zu leben. Er muss zurück nach Malonia, um endlich den Thron zu besteigen und seinen rechtmäßigen Platz einzunehmen.
„Das Lied von Malonia“ ist ein zugegebenermaßen schwieriges Buch: Es gibt einige Dinge, die dagegen sprechen, aber genauso Punkte, die absolut überzeugen.
Beginnen wir also mit dem Anfang – bereits da fällt auf, dass der Stil der Autorin recht holprig ist. Hauptsatz trifft auf Hauptsatz. Und noch einer. Und noch einer. Und noch einer, vielleicht mal ein Nebensatz. Und wieder ein Hauptsatz. Dieses Aneinanderreihen kurzer Sätze ist auf Dauer anstrengend. Wenn man es gut meint, könnte man es auf die militärische Erziehung Leos schieben, der ja Erzähler der Geschichte ist, doch meist redet er nicht so und leiden kann er all das schon gar nicht. Der Schreibstil wirkt einfach unausgereift, was sich im Laufe des Textes zum Glück etwas ändert, so dass das Lesen leichter geht.
Ein anderer Makel zieht sich leider durch das gesamte Buch: Stellenweise wirkt die Geschichte schlichtweg unlogisch und unklar. Das zeigt sich in vielem, zum Beispiel springen Leos Gedanken ab und an von einer Meinung zur anderen. War eine Geschichte für ihn in einem Moment noch wahr, so sagt er kurz darauf, dass alles erfunden sei. Beschließt er, ein Buch zu behalten, weil es mit Erinnerungen verbunden ist, so schmeißt er es kurz darauf weg. Angeblich ist es nun unwichtig, eine Aussage, die er zuvor selbst widerlegte. Leo beschließt ab einem gewissen Punkt, nie mehr zu sprechen – manchmal macht er es trotzdem, dann wieder meint er, er wolle nie mehr sprechen und schreibt die Dinge aber auf. Seltsamerweise verteufelte er kurz zuvor einen Mann, der nicht verstehen wollte, dass es Leo nicht nur ums Sprechen ging, sondern um die Kommunikation im allgemeinen ging. Aber warum schreibt er dann, warum spricht er doch, nur im nächsten Moment es wieder nicht zu tun, weil er angeblich nicht kann? Irgendwann wirkt er beziehungsweise seine Aktionen ein wenig unglaubwürdig. Es hat fast den Anschein, dass die Autorin teilweise vergessen hat, was sie zuvor schrieb. Es gibt noch ein paar Sachen mehr und gerade das ist es, was manchmal die Lust am Lesen nimmt.
Trotzdem wird es nicht langweilig. „Das Lied von Malonia“ baut nicht direkt auf Spannung auf, es wird eben Leos Leben geschildert, in dem die politischen Ereignisse zweitrangig und somit die Pläne des Prinzen und die Zukunft Malonias eher hintergründig sind. Aber es ist sein Leben und je mehr man den Charakter Leo kennenlernt, desto mehr will man erfahren. Anfangs sind die Einschübe über das Leben Aldebarans in England noch interessanter, doch Leo entwickelt sich mehr und mehr zu einem Charakter mit Tiefe, aber auch mit einer Düsterkeit, die furchtbar faszinierend ist. Spätestens mit Beginn der Liebesgeschichte zwischen dem Prinzen, der 15 ist, und Anna, die er gerade mal ein paar Tage kennt, lässt die Neugierde bei diesem Part nach. Leos Geschichte macht dies zum Glück wieder wett, denn trotz aller Widersprüche und Logikfehler zieht Leos Schicksal den Leser unweigerlich in seinen Bann. Was genau dazu beiträgt, wäre an dieser Stelle schon ein bisschen zu viel verraten, aber eins sei gesagt: Trocken bleiben die Augen hier nicht. Im Gegensatz zur Geschichte des Prinzen, bleibt der Leser von Blümchen und kitschiger (und unglaubwürdiger) Liebe verschont, die triste und grausame Seite des Lebens wird gezeigt. Hut ab, dass die Autorin das bereits in jungen Jahren so eindringlich und mit bereits genannten Abstrichen auch glaubwürdig schildern konnte!
Es ist wirklich schade, dass „Das Lied von Malonia“ zum Ende hin teils in eine Liebesgeschichte reinrutscht, die weder dem Alter, noch der Situation richtig angepasst zu sein scheint. An sich ist die Idee wunderbar – doch an der Umsetzung hapert es ganz schön. Womöglich irritieren auch die durch Cover und Klappentext hervorgerufenen Vorstellungen, die sich im Grunde überhaupt nicht mit dem decken wollen, was das Buch zu bieten hat. Malonia ist letztlich wie unsere Welt, nur weniger fortschrittlich. Es gibt bereits Schusswaffen, aber hätte man die nicht aus „unserer Welt“ nachgebaut, würde man noch mit Schwertern kämpfen. Das einzig Übernatürliche ist die „Magie“, die letztlich reine Willenskraft ist, aber dies könnte man auch in England antreffen. Außerdem geht der Fokus auf dem Prinzen verloren, eigentlich ist er nie präsent. Dies ist Leo Norths Geschichte. Und zwar nur seine.
Für eine wirklich gute Bewertung ist das Buch schlichtweg zu durchwachsen. Trotzdem möchte ich sagen: Versucht es. Es kann anstrengend sein, aber inhaltlich ist es das durchaus wert.
Profile Image for diana.
249 reviews
August 1, 2017
Leído para el BookTubeAThon 2017

-Reto 5: Leer un libro completo en exteriores. (Llovió prácticamente todos los días pero lo logré)
-Reto 6: Leer un libro que compraste por la portada. (Que estuviera increíblemente barato también influyó bastante en mi decisión, btw esta no es la edición que tengo, esa no la pude encontrar aquí)

Me gustó más de lo que me esperaba tbh, después de ver tantas reseñas negativas pensé que no iba a poder con él, sí, hay varias cosas que necesitan mejorar (el romance; ¿que fue eso? No era necesario, la manera en la que los dos "puntos de vista" se entrelazan, etc), pero en general estuvo bien.
1 review
May 25, 2018
I did not like this book. The first half was slow, and the whole time I was waiting for something good to happen. Then, something awful happens and the rest of the book is the main character complaining, boo-hooing, and crying the entire time. It was just too much. There’s never any real excitement until the very end, and in my eyes it totally fizzled compared to other books I’ve read. A little disappointed in this book. I will not read the next two in the trilogy.
Profile Image for Diva.
135 reviews
Read
December 2, 2021
I remember my bro getting this book for free from the library after finishing a reading challenge, when we were both in middle school. I read it and loved it, and even named one of my novels that I finished at the time after this. Well, not the same name, but it followed the “Eye of the ____” naming scheme. Ahh, good memories.
Profile Image for ZHAD0W.
2 reviews
March 17, 2025
I'm halfway through this book and as someone who doesn't like reading so much, reading a section of this book is like a reward after a long week. All I picture when reading this book is a Lord of the rings esque nature and I really think the descriptions and narrative. I don't want to finish this book ever!
Profile Image for Biggy Marshall.
71 reviews
March 6, 2018
I just loved the book. Banner's fantasy country is populated with believable characters and her writing style is captivating. I feel as if I have walked the streets of the city. I can recommend the book and am looking forward to read the sequel.
Profile Image for Summer Seeds.
604 reviews39 followers
June 25, 2019
I couldn’t get past the writing style. It was choppy and odd. Whoever edited the edition I have kept putting commas in places commas do not belong. You could tell it was written by someone young with little writing experience. Honestly, I didn’t finish it, but what I did read was pretty bad.
277 reviews
May 23, 2020
Me gusta la forma de escribir la misma historia de 3 formas distintas y es imposible no compartir los sentimientos del protagonista pero me deja con la sensación de que falta trama en la historia o que la historia pasa sin que el protagonista intervenga en ella, Si es que eso tiene sentido.
Profile Image for Meduzilla.
60 reviews
September 17, 2023
L'ho letto velocemente cercando un'evoluzione della trama, che ovviamente non c'è stata.
Il protagonista Leo vuole essere forte ma si rivela un ragazzo che si piange addosso.
Il finale poi non ne parliamo.
Forse era meglio se il principe Ryan se ne andava senza rovinare la vita di Anna
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
26 reviews
September 19, 2025
it did captivate me at points and was quite a quick read, but it failed to have that spark. The writers young age propably played a role in the text being a bit all over the place.
at the same time the main characters emotions and pain came through and made you feel and hope for him.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 110 reviews

Join the discussion

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.