(Camazotz Trilogy #1)
Publication
Date: February, 2015
Paperback, 279 pages
Genres:
YA, Paranormal
Connie Phillips has never told a
lie—until now.
An anonymous letter shatters the
world Connie thought she knew and trusted. The news that her parents aren’t
really her own leaves her angry, devastated and alone. The search for the truth
leads her down a dark, desolate forest road where she meets a boy in the
shadows who has secrets of his own.
Rockland’s life has been ruled by
an ancient curse since the day he was born. Forever labeled a misfit and a
rebel, he is desperate to convince his leaders that integration with the modern
world will be the salvation of their kind—not their demise.
After their worlds collide in the
middle of a dark forest, Connie and Rocks strike a deal to help each other find
the answers they both need—away from her lying parents and the judgmental
sneers of his colony. But, can they find love on their journey to discover who
they are and where they belong in the world?
My Review
Connie Phillips is in way over her head. Her parents aren’t
her real parents, her best friend wants her to work at a wiener stand, and let’s
not forget her new friend who just so happens to shift from a six-foot-four
hunky man-boy to a much smaller vampire bat. What’s a girl to do with all of this going on?
There’s only one word that comes to mind when I think about
the happenings in this book—awkward. But the awkward wasn’t all bad types of
awkward. There was funny awkward, sad awkward, weird awkward, and just a lot of
different emotional ranges of awkward. I mean there’s a boy flipping into a
little, itty bitty bat! And he’s not a vampire! Just a vampire bat.
Connie is a typical teenage girl main character. She’s just
found out something devastating about her past and now she doesn’t know what to
do. She’s a good character, but I think what made her character better was the
interaction between her and Rocks. Rocks is the vampire bat. He’s also a moody,
hilarious, and you guessed it, an awkward person? Shifter? Bat-boy? I’m not
sure what to call him… I really enjoyed his character. He was the one who
brought the interesting stuff to the scenes. Otherwise the story would have
just revolved around Connie angst-ing over her parents.
Oh, and btw, the paranormal element here was so weird to
read about at first. A boy that turns into a little bat? How sexy could that
be? But once you keep reading you’ll see just how unsexy and hilarious being a
boy-bat can really be. (*giggles* bat
nipples *giggles some more*)
I guess I should explain the awkward stuff a little more,
right? Well, for the first third of the book, I wasn’t too sure what the heck
was going on. I felt like I missed some conversation between Rocks and Connie
that was vitally important to the book. Suddenly the two just became really
good friends and I couldn’t see the leap in Connie’s head from “OMG! He’s a boy
who can turn into a bat!” to “He’s so nice and not a serial killer at all. Let’s
be BFFs.” But once I allowed myself to get past that issue, I actually found
myself enjoying what was happening in the story. Connie and Rocks had such
weird and LOL-worthy conversations. And while there wasn’t a whole lot of action
in the story until closer to the end, those conversation managed to keep the
book from dropping off. Although, some of the conversations were a little hard
to follow at times. Once again, I found that I was missing some short piece of
a conversation or some piece of logic in their arguments.
I also have to say that the ending for this book made me
very unhappy. Cliffhanger endings are the worst! Ugh! And this cliffhanger was so
mean! Things were just getting good. I had to actually reopen the book and make
sure I wasn’t skipping the last few pages or something. #ReaderProblems. Grr…
All in all, Sanguine
Mountain is a good start to what could be a promising new series. It has a
fresh take on the paranormal, as well as some awkward and interesting dialog to
keep you laughing and cringing and doing all manner of –ing things.
*Note: I received
a copy of this book from the author for review. This in no way altered my
review/opinion.
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