EVERYONE Has Read This but Me - The Catch-Up Book Club discussion
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Children of Blood and Bone - Buddy Read
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I've got my hands on another virtual copy so I'm ready to begin.
How do you feel about reading at our own pace and checking in when we have something to say?
We can title our posts with the chapters we're going to speak about so the others are warned. Then people aren't spoiled accidentally.
Let me know what you think and if you have any ideas.
Thanks!

This sounds like a great idea to me. Looking forward to reading with you!

I've already delved in!
Chapters 1 to and including 6:
okay, I'm enjoying it a lot (very easy to read and fun) but there is something almost too digestible and fast food about it. Do you agree? The storyline feels predictable and the characters are not so complex, at least not yet.
I like the idea and premise of a world where people born with magic command different aspects of nature. Then the classic hatred and massacre, loss of magic that results in the diviners never becoming maji. There is the possibility of two or even three sides to the story (Zelie = diviner, Amari = princess, Inan = prince) so there hopefully will be more angles to play with but I have my predictions...
Inan and Zelie already falling for each other FROM ONE LOOK?! come on.
Amari feels weak at the moment and pretty boring.
I know I'm being overly critical, and I can't complain because I'm enjoying the experience enough to carry on, but it feels like a screenplay to a movie: the sentences are short and to the point, there is not a lot of description, and things are quite black and white, making it easy for the reader to understand.

(The Kindle version is currently £0.99 from AmazonUK if anyone is trying to get this.)

SO CHEAP - great news :) I'm borrowing an ebook from my library via Overdrive.


I've read up to chapter 19 and still am finding it pretty tame. This just seems to be a light and easy read, with little to comment on.
Perhaps the question to ask if what are you enjoying about it Trisha?

I've read up to chapter 19 and still am finding it pretty tame. This just seems to be..."
Sorry Betsy - I missed seeing your comment earlier. I’m ahead of you at the moment, finished reading chapter 33 early today. The author’s imagination? - I find it strange, the descriptions of some places are fantastic with huge amounts of detail, but we’re given no detail about the creatures except that one type has large horns. As the names include real animal names, I assume we are to think these creatures are similar to the real ones.
I have a question too - do you (or anyone else) know if the writing in a foreign language with different symbols is based on a real language, or if it’s completely made up for the book? I guess the printers had fun producing it! It’s a bit irritating as no explanation is given about what it means.
What do I like about it? I started to get bored yesterday, but read a lot early today. For me it’s a book that’s easier to read in large chunks, reading a bit at a time wasn’t working very well. The short chapters make me read “just one more”, then another - & suddenly I wonder why I haven’t got other things done! I like the descriptions of places, some are beautiful. The early chapters seemed to give some sort of framework for the story but further on parts of it seem exciting & more detail is given about past events too. I can’t decide whether it is just a fantasy/adventure or if it’s meant to have any deeper meaning in relation to religious beliefs. Perhaps that will be more obvious later.

I'm losing interest to be honest... I'm at chapter 29 I think and like you said, if you read it in one go it works better than little at a time. The voice has to engage me and I don't see the point of three different POV if they all sound the same. How can she be a creative writing coach?!
I've just done some research and apparently Orïsha is indeed a real native religion of the Yoruba people, so this is kind of imagining a world where this was really going on? That makes it a lot cooler; like I said, I love the premise, it's just the writing that's killing me.

You’ve also noticed what I missed about the writing - that the different people all sound the same. Now you’ve mentioned it, I realise that several times I have had to go back to the start of a chapter to check which character is telling the story at that point.
It’s strange how different things irritate different people! For me, it’s often the use of other languages, probably because I’m so bad at them. Some of the classics, written in English, suddenly include a section written in French or whatever. It just seems pretentious to me, a way for the author to show off their language skills. Perhaps it’s meant to add atmosphere, but it just makes something incomprehensible to some readers. If a translation is included - which it isn’t in this book - then the original language is superfluous.

Yeah, it is funny how certain things bugs different readers. But I'm glad I'm not the only one not sure who's talking.
That's such a good point about the author using languages, and as you've said, in this case it's quite superfluous. I mean, maybe she's trying to create atmosphere but what's the point really if we can't understand it?
Hahaha! I ALWAYS felt like you when encountering French in a classic but I've been told it is meant to be pretentious, right? We're the normal ones thinking this way Trisha :)


Enjoy your other books, Betsy. I’ll let you know whether I continue with this one properly or not.


I'm putting this book away: I've started The Secret Garden and am loving it.


I'm putting this book away: I've started The Secret Garden and am loving it."
I prefer books in a real setting, with real people! For me, the fantasy I like best is something that seems real but has a fantasy twist. I especially like the series that starts with Rivers of London by Ben Aaronovitch. It’s set in London, obviously, & named places can easily be identified. It’s clever. I have also started reading a series that starts with Just One Damned Thing After Another by Jodi Taylor. It involves time travel, but relates to real historical events & is quite funny.

Lina, don’t be put off. If you usually enjoy fantasy you may love the book. I loved the earlier sections of the book as the descriptions of places were beautiful. For me, it became disappointing once the emphasis was on the characters.
Books mentioned in this topic
Just One Damned Thing After Another (other topics)Rivers of London (other topics)
Children of Blood and Bone (other topics)
Authors mentioned in this topic
Jodi Taylor (other topics)Ben Aaronovitch (other topics)
Tomi Adeyemi (other topics)
Let's keep each other updated on when we have the book so we can set a start period. I currently am first in line for an ebook from the library.
How would you like to read together? Should we set limits on how much we read so we're roughly in the same place at the same time? For example, each week approx 100 pages / equivalent in chapters? Or would you rather it be more free and put spoiler html in our comments?