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Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 1

Harry Potter and the Deathly HallowsWe went to watch Harry Potter and the Deathly Hollows Part 1 last weekend and it was much better than I expected. yaY! I didn’t expect the graphics to be so realistic (I truly love CGI shylove) and blend in to the “Muggle World” so naturally. For example, even though I loved Avatar the movie, the CGI was quite obvious at some parts (although maybe that could be due to the 3D?)

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hollows Part 1 is the first Harry Potter movie I’ve watched in cinema, both Philosopher’s Stone and Goblet of Fire were on TV by the time I watched it and watching Order of the Pheonix on the laptop just doesn’t quite compare to the massive screen and surround sound in cinema.

13 years on (yes! Harry Potter came out in 1997!! omg) and Harry Potter is still as much loved and idolised as it was all those years ago, albeit the fan base has aged somewhat…. giggle

I have to say though, despite the movie looking and sounding super (in IMAX no less)… no flashy graphics or swanky sound fx can beat the power of imagination. Hogwarts and the world of magic seemed so puny on the big screen than compared to what I had created in my mind.


Anyhow, off I go to try and remember what happened in the Deathly Hallows Part 2. I bought all the Harry Potter books when I was living in Beijing except for one which didn’t have the matching cover… and of course it had to be the Deathly Hallows! blee1

Extended Holiday…

I’ve been a little preoccupied since coming back from my vacation…

House of Night Book Series (review)
Hospital Visit & Recovery
Going under GA
Meditation Retreat
Jhana Grove - Meditation Retreat
Sookie Stackhouse Book Series


True Blood TV Series (based on Sookie Stackhouse Books)

House of Night Series – P.C. & Kristin Cast

There’s just something about these blood sucking vampires which latches onto my curiosity… I thought the whole Vampire saga would be over once I finished reading the Twilight series. Seeing as I was quite reluctant to start on the Twilight thing, I didn’t think the whole idea of Vampires and their world would keep my interest for very long.

But then I stayed with my relatives in KL for a few days, and with little else to do… my cousins convinced me that the House of Night series (P.C. & Kristin Cast) was worth reading. I resisted at first because it seemed too high school for my taste, a vampire school for vampire fledglings with vampire issues plus the typical American high school drama? No thanks.hahano

I was even more reluctant to start reading it after finding out that the books are still in the making with no definite end in sight. MarkedBetrayedChosenUntamedHunted, and now Tempted… these one-word titles are thankfully a reflection of the novel itself. If they had been the size of the Twilight series, I’m not sure if I would have finished them by now. Welcome to the wonders of free time and the lure of a book.

MarkedBetrayedChosenUntamedHunted

The House of Night series is told in the point of view of 16 year old Zoey Redbird, but once you get over the initial chapter of “ugh, this is a typical high school drama” (think Gossip Girl love triangles and bitching), you can forgive Zoey for being…. well, the typical teenage girl that she is.

MarkedMarked is like many of the first books to a series, it introduces characters and the setting for the reader to discover. I was a bit disappointed that it wasn’t the most captivating introduction book I’ve read, to be honest it was curiosity and the potential for a great plot that kept me reading … I just couldn’t relate to Zoey! It really does seem like I can no longer read just any ‘young adult’ novels now…

*Mild Spoiler Warning*

BetrayedIn Betrayed we’re introduced to the Red Vampire Fledglings, the ones who have died and ‘lost their humanity’. It’s an interesting addition, but I thought there were just too many loose ends for them to be realistic rather than something the author decided to throw into the mix. For example, it was very convenient for humans to start dying after Zoey arrived even though the Red Vampire Fledglings have been around for a while… even more convenient that Zoey is the only one that stumbles across them.

Betrayed also introduces Neferet as the ‘bad guy’ plotting something evil and sinister. Trouble is, how can someone as old and powerful as Neferet be an equal to a fledgling like Zoey? Because she’s “special”.yuck Yuck, what a lame excuse… almost as bad as the oh-so-powerful character of Bella from Twilight.

ChosenBut it was Chosen which I thought brought it back to a more realistic level. Maybe I just have a thing for drama and bad things happening to the heroes in the novel, but I enjoyed the way Chosen brought Zoey down to Earth. It teaches us that all our choices have consequences, and the only ones responsible for these consequences are ourselves.

UntamedreadBy the time I got to reading Untamed, it had become a habit to just skim over the first few pages of the House of Night books as well as every time they cast a circle and reintroduce characters. It reminds me of Harry Potter and how annoying it was to re-read all the introductions to characters and updates on who was good or bad etc. I know the authors do it for the benefit of new readers, but it doesn’t mean I have to like it.

So Untamed introduces us to a new character, James Stark. And to no surprise, he’s hot as hell and has a thing for Zoey. I really don’t understand these vampire stories… Why does it always seem like there’s an abundance of testosterone hovering around the main character?

Untamed also had me wondering about the Red Vampires and their purpose… I just thought it was awfully convenient that Neferet had James Stark transfer from the Chicago House of Night to Tulsa just before he dies and turns into a Red Vampire Fledgling, and then Neferet conveniently has Stark under her control so that she can unearth Kalona the fallen angel god and gain super powers to kill the super duper queen vampire… but I suppose I’ll have to read more to discover the answer to this question.

bakaThe constant boy-fledgling-vampire-god trouble (Heath Luck, Erik Night, Loren Blake, James Stark, Kalona…) circulating around Zoey seems interesting, but with her group of fledgling friends (who remind me of your typical high schoolers) and their continuous talk of testosterone, it just becomes plain annoying after a while.

HuntedAnd of course Hunted… it is definitely not a favourite of the House of Night books because of the ease which everything unraveled….
Need to defeat this mighty ‘God’ Kalona? no problem, the instructions are in the a poem.
Need to escape from the House of Night full of Raven Mockers? Just let the cats lead you to the Vampires who will get you out.
Can’t solve the riddle of a poem? Don’t worry, your gut will tell you what’s right and wrong.

I just feel that Hunted pokes too many holes in the plot.  The authors really should have made it more realisitic (difficult) for a bunch of teens to overturn such powerful and evil characters. I mean, how how many times can you use the excuse “you’re special” to explain how the heroine has her escape route paved for her? How fun can it be to know that no harm could come to the hero? and more importantly, how convenient is it that the human nuns and Zoey’s Grandma were live and kicking around the Red Vampire Fledglings when it was emphasised again and again how volitile they were?… I suppose the excuse for that one is because old people just aren’t as tasty to vampires anymore.

*End Spoiler Warning*

Anyway, I’ll see where the story takes us… Hopefully it’ll answer all my questions as well as improve in style as Zoey matures (I can only handle so much teenage drama!). I thought the cover art was a bit deceiving because it looks so dark and slick, I expected a bit more than all the typical bitching and gossiping of a regular high school…

Twilight + New Moon + Eclipse + Breaking Dawn

TwilightYeah I know Twilight is old news, but C‘s post reminded me that I wanted to write about it, plus I’ve finally gotten around to watching the Twilight movie!

‘Why the Twilight movie‘ you ask? nerdWell I considered my addiction to all types of series (be it movie, tv shows, books or comics) and I figured it was best I take it easy and just watch the movie first. There was a chance it wouldn’t be worth reading despite the ranting and raving I’ve been hearing about, the very same ranting and raving which happened with LOTR (Lord of the Rings) and Harry Potter.

Okay sure, LOTR and Harry Potter weren’t completely horrid, but at the end of the day I don’t think it would be something I would re-read since there’s a movie version (even then I doubt I would re-watch them either).

So that brings us back to the Twilight movie that’s taken me so many months to watch. The crap reviews it received didn’t help speed things up, and I probably wouldn’t have actually watched it yet if I didn’t leech it off P. Anyway, despite the unrealistic acting and tacky sfx, it’s got me started with the book series by Stephenie Meyer! There’s just something about blood sucking vampires which appeal to me. And yes I’m a fan of Anne Rice too!

*Spoiler Alert*
reading beyond this point is at your own peril
you have been warned

Stephenie Meyer CD Pack

kawaiiI love the way Stephenie Meyer and Anne Rice gives their vampires life, there’s just so much depth in the characters which makes you want to learn everything you can about them. But what makes Twilight appealing to me is the focus on the human-vampire relationship (very Romeo and Juliet), and throwing in werewolves doesn’t hurt either!

Before I knew what happened, I had consumed the whole Twilight Series within a week! That’s including the partial draft of Midnight Sun, and the chapters/sections which were edited out of the story, which btw you can find at stepheniemeyer.com (pdf)

New MoonAlthough I’m a bit curious about how New Moon (the movie) will turn out, I’m not looking forward to it at all. thumbs downNot only do I think the Twilight movie completely trashed the book, but I also didn’t particularly enjoy New Moon itself. I admit the progression in New Moon is necessary in the whole Twilight Series, but reading New Moon was just too angsty for my tastes.

What I really enjoyed, and would recommend, is the extras Stephenie Meyer put up on her website (New Moon Extras pdf’s). The edited sections for New Moon were quite good too, I thought The Scholarship would have been an interesting addition… I’m not sure if it would have made it seem like Edward was just torturing poor Bella though.

EclipseAnyway, the next book really made up for the angsty mood of New Moon. Although Eclipse isn’t as good as Twilight, I found it a lot better than New Moon. The best thing about Eclipse is that you learn about how the other Cullens changed, and I really enjoyed how everything pieced together. Reading Eclipse was like putting together a jigsaw puzzle, we’re given little fragments of information and everything just started to fit into place.

But I have to admit, by the time I got to Eclipse it felt a bit like I was reading just to get to the end. I thought it was stupid how easily Bella turned her back on Jacob when you spent the whole of New Moon building up a tight bond between the two. suicideAnd seriously, how can Bella forgive and forget everything that happened to her when Edward left? She was catatonic, delusional and suicidal! And when Mr Love-of-her-life returns, everything is back to normal to the point of marriage?? wth? Bella has got to be demented or something.

Breaking Dawn (The Twilight Saga Book #4)yeahrightBreaking Dawn was harder to enjoy because of how completely unrealistic everything turned out. It sort of made the whole Twilight Series seem more like a fairytale where nothing bad could ever happen to the main characters… The bad guys never even had a chance, I don’t know why they were even involved!

I’m also a bit peeved with the honeymoon in the beginning of Breaking Dawn… not that I was expecting this to turn into a graphic novel (this is a teen novel after all),contract but it felt like watching a movie where the scenes were just completely cut out. They didn’t edit it, or even make an attempt at smoothing out the scene so that it could flow into the next. Couldn’t they have just put in a kiss? a hug? some kind of physical contact? geez!

kawaiiThe best thing I liked about Breaking Dawn is Renesmee, the idea of a hybrid human-vampire. Very cool. But besides that, nothing else really jumps out at me. thumbs downI hate that Bella is the oh-so-powerful-no-need-to-go-through-blood-lust character, Meyer should have just made her some other breed of vampire or something! Again, very very unrealistic, especially considering Jasper still has problems with it.

Okay, I think I’ve ranted for long enough. Minus the inconsistencies, the Twilight Series is something that I just might read again… well maybe just the first book. At the end of the day I still love vampires, and I wouldn’t mind reading more from the world of Twilight.

P.S. If you want to get your hands on the Twilight Series, you can get some decent secondhand books at AbeBooks.com for a few USD~!

A Thousand Splendid Suns by Khaled Hosseini

A Thousand Splendid SunsPropelled by the same superb instinct for storytelling that made The Kite Runner a beloved classic, A Thousand Splendid Suns is at once an incredible chronicle of thirty years of Afghan history and a deeply moving story of family, friendship, faith, and the salvation to be found in love.

Born a generation apart and with very different ideas about love and family, Mariam and Laila are two women brought jarringly together by war, by loss and by fate. As they endure the ever escalating dangers around them-in their home as well as in the streets of Kabul-they come to form a bond that makes them both sisters and mother-daughter to each other, and that will ultimately alter the course not just of their own lives but of the next generation.

With heart-wrenching power and suspense, Hosseini shows how a woman’s love for her family can move her to shocking and heroic acts of self-sacrifice, and that in the end it is love, or even the memory of love, that is often the key to survival. A stunning accomplishment, A Thousand Splendid Suns is a haunting, heartbreaking, compelling story of an unforgiving time, an unlikely friendship, and an indestructible love.

A Thousand Splendid Suns is definitely one of one of my favourite books. After my sister recommended it for me to read, it sat on my desk for weeks before I eventually got around to picking it up. But when I finally started reading, I just couldn’t stop myself from finishing it up!

It’s been a long time since I’ve had a book draw me in like A Thousand Splendid Suns and it has brought me back into the world of books again. I like the fact that A Thousand Splendid Suns deals with the very real issues which are occurring in the world today, and it introduces readers like myself to the sacrifice and hardships which we never quite understand in the war torn countries.

Hosseini brings his characters to life by keeping them real, and their story real. Warning: this is not a fairytale, it’s a tear jerker.

The only fault I could find with the book is the way Hosseini changes the point of view throughout the novel. The first portion of the book is from the point of view of Mariam, then we’re introduced to Laila and from then on the point of view interchanges between the two. I personally found the first change confusing because so much of the story was Mariam‘s story that I didn’t expect Laila to be of any significance.

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