My opinion on this book is biased. Very, very biased. Disgustingly so.
First I'll give a very short review on the book then I'll move on to the show.
This book is so flawed but it's impossible for me to give it less than 4 stars.
The Book
“Will you swear to be loyal to the circle? Never to harm anyone who stands inside it? Will you protect and defend those who do, even if it costs you your life?” -pg. 185
Cassie Blake and her mother have moved to New Salem to live with Grandma Howard. She's not too excited about leaving her friends and California behind. And she certainly doesn't want to attend a new school full of people she doesn't know, but she has to. On her first day she gets on Faye Chamberlain's bad side, which is, as she'll find out, one thing you don't want to do. Then Diana Downey comes to the rescue. She takes her under her wing and introduces her to people in the Club. Nobody's ever been this nice to Cassie. Now, if only Cassie wasn't in love with Diana's boyfriend...
This book isn't any good. It's full of two-dimensional characters, stereotypes, and love at first sight. BUT I LOVE IT!
Cassie is annoying with her lusting after Adam after seeing him ONCE and she's selfish. Faye is a bitch, Deborah is mean as hell, Suzan is...just there I guess, Diana is the “Purity Princess”, Adam is so 2-dimensional it hurts, the Henderson twins are neither here nor there, and talking to Nick is like talking to a brick wall.
Their parents are never around. Every single character is extremely attractive (except Grandma Howard), and they're all hooking up with each other. Even though they're kinda related.
Cassie is threatened and bullied, and the adults don't care. She opens her locker to find anything from a doll hanging from its neck to rotting hamburger meat and when she goes to the principal (with proof!) he tells her to solve her own problems. I believe he uses those exact words.
Usually, all those things would make me throw this book down in frustration, but I didn't. I read it in less than a day and I will read it again one day. Because I really do like it. It was nothing new and it didn't exactly shock me or anything, but LJ Smith is to me what a V.C. Andrews book was to those who grew up in the 80s. A guilty pleasure.
It calls to me, lures me into a van with candy, then takes me on a very short ride around the block, then drops me back off again like nothing ever happened.
And I willingly get in the van every.single.time.
No regrets!
Quotes:
”The silver cord can never be broken. Your lives are linked. You can't escape each other any more than you can escape destiny.” -pg. 24
“I hoped you'd never be in enough trouble to need it, but I wanted to be there for you if you were. If you'd ever done what I told you, held it tight in your fist and thought of me, I'd have known, and I'd have tracked it down, no matter where you were.”
The Show
I am fascinated by witches, shocking betrayals, and certain supernatural TV shows. Unfortunately, this book contains witches, betrayal, and it was made into a short-lived tv show. & I watched it religiously.
Damn you, CW for canceling this show after it's first season even though it was nominated for (and in my opinion, won) New Fall Show You're Excited For, Best New Series, Best Sci-Fi or Fantasy, Favorite New TV Drama, Best-Youth Oriented Television Series, and Best Main Title Theme Music.
And now that I remember, the soundtrack was so good. It couldn't have been better, I found new songs I had never heard of before and LOVED. Damn you, CW!
The show was freakin' sweet! There were plot twists that made me scream, magic, and all of that aggravating teenage angst and lust I claim to hate but secretly like.
And the actors and actresses were very attractive. In fact, the lady who played Diana (who by the way also stars in the very popular show Teen Wolf) was Miss Louisiana Teen USA in 2004 and Miss Teen USA. And her acting wasn't too bad. I wasn't too keen on Thomas Dekker playing the main character Adam on account of me not finding him attractive at first, but he grew on me, dammit. Then close to the end they brought along Grey Damon and I was like “daaaaaamn, where has this random little white boy been all my life?!” Even Cassie's dead-beat dad, Joe Lando, was fine!
And I've always been secretly jealous of Britt Robertson... so very pretty, so very small and pretty.
I don't understand how Vampire Diaries is still being filmed and Secret Circle isn't. They're both by L.J. Smith and they're both Paranormal Romances.
Is the fascination with vampires that real?
The CW really dropped the ball on this one. But what's done is done.
Overall, I would recommend reading this book if you, like me, love witches and drama or if you though the show was great (even though the 2 are very different). By the way, it's on Netflix so if you're even a tiny bit curious go check it out!