Book Review

Easy Prey Review

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Easy Prey by Catherine Lo

Only three students had access to a teacher’s racy photos before they went viral. There’s Mouse, a brainy overachiever so desperate to escape his father and go to MIT that he would do almost anything, legal or not. Then there’s Drew, the star athlete who can get any girl’s number—and private photos—with his charm but has a history of passing those photos around. And finally there’s Jenna, a good girl turned rebel after her own shocking photos made the rounds at school last year, who is still waiting for justice. All three deny leaking the photos, but someone has to take the fall. This edgy whodunit tackles hot-button issues of sexting and gossip and will have readers tearing through the pages to reach the final reveal.

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This book surprised me. In a good way, of course. I started reading it and wasn’t too sure what to expect, the premise is interesting. Someone has leaked “nudes” of their teacher and it appears it has to be at least one of them (who had a project together), but the question is who is it?

The book had me guessing for a big part of it (mostly because I kinda suspected who it was, but I kept telling myself that wasn’t what was happening, there was no way… well, yes way!) but it kept me wanting to read more, to find out how exactly they went from becoming a team to this disaster.

Why would anyone leak the pictures? Was someone outside of them trying to frame them? So many questions, and it was nicely wrapped up at the end.

One of my favourite characters was Jenna’s mother. And it was interesting to see what family and life situations were behind each of the three main characters. I liked that it wasn’t just doing cliches, but rather asking why do we follow the cliche? And it was a good read.

(This is so hard to review because I want to gush about the ending and who actually did it, but I can say that it was a genius idea and I really really loved it).

What I can say is that it is a very feminist read. It was in a way empowering and it also questioned a lot of what happens when nudes are leaked on the internet. How it affects the parties involved in different ways. And how it is usually the girl’s fault for letting someone take the pictures (which is very unfair! this is done under trust and there is not a consent on them being shared online to everyone) with little consequences for the one who took them and the one wo leaked them. It does well in making you ask those interesting questions about gender roles and gender expectations, specially during teenage years, when you define your “role” in life a little more and try to find who you are and where you stand.

All in all, this was a good “mystery” and it was also a good “thinking” piece, and feminist.

Moon recommends

For feminist reads and the mystery, Easy Prey definitely wins. I would also recommend One of Us is Lying (it touches more on the effects of expectations and social media and relationships) and It Ends With You (it touches on social cues and prejudices, more scary).

Book Review

Raven Child and the Snow Witch Review

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Raven Child and the Snow Witch by Linda Sunderland and Daniel Egneus

Anya lives with her mother and father in the shadow of the icy glacier where the Snow-Witch reigns. Every spring, Anya’s mother journeys to the glacier to pick the blue gentian flowers that grow there. But this time, she does not return. She has been captured by the Snow-Witch and imprisoned in the ice. Anya and her father set off with the ravens to rescue her. It’s a treacherous journey, and there is no knowing what they will find…

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You can see it, but the snow is all glittery and delightful and all through the book there is glittery snow in it and it is gorgeous and just made my heart happy (even though in general I am not a fan of glitter, but somehow it fit so well in here). And of course, there is a fox in this story, which is probably a big part of why I got it, but also the title sounded great and the story seemed sweet.

The illustrations aren’t over defined, they’re more “blocky” but that gives it a very personal flavour and it also goes well with the whole snowy crafty theme of the book and it is good.

Anya loves where she lives and loves her mother and father, but when her mother goes out to pick flowers, she has a dream and suddenly wakes up. She feels like her mother spoke to her through the dream about being imprisoned by the Snow Witch.

So both Anya and her father set off (this made me fall for this book, the father was involved, he was part of the adventure!) and as they make their way towards the town closer to where mother has gone and disappeared, Anya rescues a Raven and a Fox.

It is a lovely adventure and there’s an IT vs Meg Murray kind of moment (and I liked that) and in general I liked it. When it came to an end I wished for a little more but it still was a good short read.

Moon recommends

Definitely try this one out as it is gorgeous and will make you smile as you read it. I would also recommend (for older readers, but still MG) The Wolf Wilder by Katherine Rundell.

Book Review, Books

Dragon Post Review

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Dragon Post by Emma Yarlett

A fiery story about friendship and asking for help from award-winning author-illustrator Emma Yarlett.

One day Alex finds a dragon living under his stairs. He isn’t sure what to do – but luckily he knows just who to ask for help. Open the envelopes and read the hilarious letters Alex receives from the fire brigade, the butcher and more as he tries to take care of his new friend. Who would have thought having a dragon for a pet would be so tricky? A joyful, touching and vibrantly-illustrated interactive book.

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I can’t remember how I stumbled unto this cute book (probably suggested by Amazon or Wordery due to all the dragon books I buy plus some of the MG and younger reads I get too. I do not have children, those book have all been for me) but I am glad I did.

Alex finds a dragon in his house (who doesn’t want to find a dragon in their house, right?) and he starts asking for advice, first to the fire department. What do you do to avoid the dragon burning the house down? And there comes the reply (which is in a cute envelope, and you take it out, open like a real letter) suggesting something to fix it. Then he wonders what to give his dragon to eat, and there also comes a reply.

And so it goes, until we end up with a postcard.

I loved the interactive part of this book. It was fun to “open” the letters, and to read the replies. And some of them are double sided, so that’s a lot of effort. The story is cute and made me smile. And the artwork was colourful, encouraging and just right for the story.

Moon recommends

Read this super cute interactive book about a boy and a dragon! I also recommend Franklin’s Flying Bookshop, and The Boy Who Grew Dragons as fun reads about dragons for children (and for those of us who have a child’s heart too).

 

Book Review

The Light Between Worlds Review

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The Light Between Worlds by Laura Weymouth

Five years ago, Evelyn and Philippa Hapwell cowered from air strikes in a London bomb shelter. But that night took a turn when the sisters were transported to another realm called the Woodlands. In a forest kingdom populated by creatures out of myth and legend, they found temporary refuge.

When they finally returned to London, nothing had changed at all—nothing, except themselves.

Now, Ev spends her days sneaking into the woods outside her boarding school, wishing for the Woodlands. Overcome with longing, she is desperate to return no matter what it takes.

Philippa, on the other hand, is determined to find a place in this world. She shields herself behind a flawless exterior and countless friends, and moves to America to escape the memory of what was.

But when Evelyn goes missing, Philippa must confront the depth of her sister’s despair and the painful truths they’ve been running from. As the weeks unfold, Philippa wonders if Ev truly did find a way home, or if the weight of their worlds pulled her under.

Content warnings are available via the author’s website: https://www.lauraeweymouth.com/books

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[This review contains SPOILERS.

Trigger warning: Suicide, Depression, Anxiety, Self harm]

This was one of my highly anticipated autumn/winter reads. I bought a book twice at YALC just so I could get the ARC for it. Then I somehow managed to preorder twice, realised it came inside Book Box Club Fantasy Lands, cancelled the UK preorder and forgot I had a US version preorder. So I ended up with two copies (which are actually slightly different, with them starting completely different and you never get to read that first chapter of the US edition in the UK one).

I regret nothing.

The writing itself is wonderful and flows. A very few times I wanted to skip some of the descriptions but that has got more to do with the fact that I know the places where things are happening and as such require no description (say London, yes, it is post war London, but I have read a lot of WWII books and been in Lonodn and done museums, so it isn’t something new to me). Still, that’s not the point. It was easy and fast to read, immersive.

Now on to the story, and please excuse me, I’ve been trying to write this part of the review in my head so many times and I just can’t help but mix the story with real life (my real life, sorry).

The story starts with Evelyn’s (Ev, Evie) side of the story. She wants to return to the Woodlands, and that’s that. I understand part of Evie, as I have had depression, I have struggled with motivating myself to be here. I get that, however, you get the back story of how life was in the Woodlands and how life is in the present., and the only thing that is really different for Evelyn is the lack of “magic” and Cervus. And that she isn’t putting any effort whatsoever in having a life here, which she did a little bit more in the Woodlands. So she’s unhappy because in her head Woodlands = much better. However, from my own way of reading the book, Englad would’ve been perfectly fine and even better than the Woodlands if Evelyn had only just actually tried. But after coming back from the Woodlands, she decides she wants that and not this life, so who cares? Zero effort, therefore, nothing to actually motivate her to stay here. This annoyed me a LOT. And it was even worse because I saw my little sister in her.

When we were young, close to Phillipa’s and Evie’s age, life happens and my sister was depressed and boy did I fight a battle for her. As hard as Phil did, so did I, and my sister didn’t care. She set herself on a path of self destruction, angry because I cared, angry when I stopped trying to hold her up. I could never win. And in the end, I also left (but I moved from the continent of America to the UK, so I did the inverse). But because I knew I was leaving, I did what I thought was best (after covering for her, and her self harm, and destructive life). I told the truth to my mother, who didn’t believe me but once she saw facts and reality, she took my sister into her wing. This made her angry and we had a very strained relationship for a very long time. Today we talk, and we’re sisters, but there’s not much there. And of course, she realised there wasn’t any “Woodlands” for her to go to, so she ended up putting some effort. But she still treats the world and life as a bothersome thing and barely makes an effort and expects everything handed in a plate.

So it broke my hear to read Ev’s story, because I knew exactly where she was going. I had saved my own little sister too many times, so this was familiar grounds. Evelyn decides not even Tom is worth it because she doesn’t actually want anything good from this world, Woodlands is better (even though she didn’t have many friends, kept to herself, and did almost the same activities than in England, sans school). So she decides enough is enough, time to stop just self harming to feel something (one of the things that I struggled with is that she self harms in the Woodlands, and brings that with her, so in general, the Woodlands were toxic for her yet she seems them as “perfect”).

Then we get Phil. Who has been making penance in the Woodlands, and after the Woodlands and even gives herself an ulcer trying to save Ev several times, and to hide all the crazy bad things she does. Because she believes in her. And of course I saw myself a lot in her. She talks about the fact that if she didn’t get busy she would fall apart. And that’s the thing, I am the same. After a life changing event, that left me homeless, unemployed, without apenny to my name and in a foreign country, I knew I could let myself fall apart like Ev, but instead I became busy, kept myself going so that the pieces wouldn’t just scatter. And that helped, it pushed me through and helped me survive some very difficult times.I do not do pumps and powder as my armour. But organising and being able and there became my go to (and even now, I do, I keep busy, I actually do fall apart a little if I don’t have something to do, which isn’t great, but at least it is somewhat productive).

It was hard to read about Phil’s story because you can see all the effort, all the help she tries to give, how much she is working hard not just for herself, but actually, mostly for her sister. There is so much love in there (which sadly Evie seems to not notice or brush aside, because Woodlands).

When I finished the story, I was almost in tears. I felt as if Laura (who had already welcomed me into clan Weymouth, we both keep chickens) had travelled back to my past and written about me and my sister (who now goes by the name Laura, which is weird for me as I called her something else all her life) and added a magical aspect. It was cathartic, and odd, and sad and glad. Such a mix of feelings I didn’t expect in this book.

Also, I love the male characters in this book. They’re flawed, and they are so far away from the bad boy stereotype that it was a relief and some good fresh air to read. Tom and Jack and even Jamie, are all trying to live, to move forward, and they are such sweet men. I loved them all.

Also, this is probably my longest review, woops.

Moon recommends

Definitely read The Light Between Worlds. If you don’t mind the religious bits in it, Narnia is a good idea too (My favourite ones are The Horse and His Boy & The Silver Chair). I can also recommend some other books that have impacted me very much. Try After The Fire by Will Hill. Or White Rabbit, Red Wolf by Tom Pollock. Lastly, my absolute favourite, the Damar duology, The Blue Sword and The Hero and The Crown by Robin McKinley.

 

Book Review, Books

A Monster Calls Review

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A Monster Calls by Patrick Ness

An extraordinary novel of love, loss and hope

12.07. There’s a monster at Conor’s window.
It’s not the one from his nightmare. But it wants the most dangerous thing of all from Conor.

It wants the truth.

Now a powerful and haunting film, Patrick Ness’s modern classic is a heartbreaking but uplifting tale of healing and, above all, the courage it takes to survive.

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Nikki from Books and Lemon Squash recommended this book, and it had taken me a long time to actually decide to read it. Part of it is because I have read his other books and didn’t like them at all. But then, I was reassured the original bit of story wasn’t his, so I finally gave it a go.

This is the story of Conor, and the monster that comes to his window. This monster promises to tell him three stories and then Conor has to tell the last one, the truth. Because once he does, the monster will help him.

We see two things happening in this story, one is the stories the “yew monster” tells Conor, which frustrate him, and confuse him. There is no clear white and black in any of the stories, and this frustrates Conor, for he wants the predictable easy good vs bad in them. The stories do not comfort him.

And we have the reality, his mum and her treatments, her bald head. We see how he slowly becomes invisible to his school, and to the world. And how he sometimes sees himself as invisible. He’s doing the best he can, and holding on to hope.

But what is this nightmare, and how is the monster going to help? And what is the truth Conor refuses to accept or acknowledge?

It was an interesting book to read, especially as I recently lost my aunt to cancer, so it hit close to home and made me tear up a little as I knew where this was going and it was just that sadness seeping into me. But it was also good to read and I liked it.

Moon recommends

Why not support a Cancer charity like Cancer Research? Also, you can go read this particular book (I can’t really recommend any of his other books, alas).

 

Book Review, Books

Princess Jellyfish Volume 2 Review

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Princess Jellyfish Volume 2 by Akiko Higashimura

With the geeky paradise of Amamizu-kan threatened by redevelopment plans, Tsukimi and the Amars must spring into action. Buy the wily Inari and her hold on Shu forces Kuranosuke to pull out all the stops: money, blackmail, and…fashion?! Though Amamizu-kan still struggles with Kuranosuke’s stylish ways, the neighborhood fashionista has too much to lose, whether it’s a hidden identity or priceless friendships. Tsukimi gets the chance to make her jellyfish dreams into a glamorous reality, but that means breaking out of her bubble! Can these misfit princesses save their castle?

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This particular volume of Princess Jellyfish features more of the funny interactions and gorgeous artwork. On the other hand it is a slow story development. Not that it doesn’t have a story to tell, but more as in it is figuring out how they all get along, and what defines each of the AMARS ladies, and Tsukimi, Kuranosuke, and Shu.

It does develop a little on who Shu is, and why he finds Tsukimi attractive. And in general we learn more about how Kuranosuke gets along with his family (not much of his usual frineds before he met Tsukimi), but it is also a case of asking why he likes AMARS so much?

We still see little to no progress in saving the building, but at least AMARS seems to be warming up to it more and to be a team, which is a good team, considering how much they struggle with interacting with others.

Moon recommends

Go read the first volume of Princess Jellyfish, but if you are following, keep reading the series with Volume 2 (I have now all the volumes and may do a joint review of a few of them soon).

I bought the cute octopus/jellyfish at a craft fair, and it is cute and somehow fits well with this series.

Book Review, Books

Fox 8 Review

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Fox 8 by George Saunders

An enchanting and darkly comic fable of human greed and nature, from the Man Booker Prize-winning author of Lincoln in the Bardo, exquisitely illustrated by Chelsea Cardinal

Fox 8 has always been curious, and a bit of a daydreamer. And, by hiding outside houses at dusk and listening to children’s bedtime stories, he has learned to speak ‘Yuman’.

The power of words and the stories built from them is intoxicating for a fox with a poetic soul, but there is ‘danjur’ on the horizon: a new shopping mall is being built, cutting off his pack’s food supply. To save himself and his fellow foxes, Fox 8 will have to set out on a harrowing quest from the wilds of nature deep into the dark heart of suburbia.

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This was an impulse buy. I mean, it has a fox, was signed by the author and it looks gorgeous and has some illustrations on the top of the pages. How could I resist? (Just in case you were wondering, I couldn’t, literally as soon as I was shown this book I went and preordered).

The story starts by Fox 8 introducing himself and explaining that his English may not be best written but he has learned it and well, what did you expect, he is indeed a fox.

But not just any fox, but a smart fox that likes bedtime stories and watching humans. And as such, he learns, not only to “spell” but to talk human. And he tries to use this to his advantage, as he can read it so he can help his friends.

Then they find out a mall has been built in the middle of their grounds, and they have to figure out how to find food and water and not die. So Fox 8 goes to the mall and tries to find a way to help.

This is the story about that, and it is cute, and sad, and so real, and it made me feel so many feelings as I read this.

Moon recommends

I should read more fox stories! But meanwhile go read Fox 8. It’s good, and the illustrations are superb.

Book Review, Books

The Poet X Review

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The Poet X by Elizabeth Acevedo

A young girl in Harlem discovers slam poetry as a way to understand her mother’s religion and her own relationship to the world. Debut novel of renowned slam poet Elizabeth Acevedo.

Xiomara Batista feels unheard and unable to hide in her Harlem neighborhood. Ever since her body grew into curves, she has learned to let her fists and her fierceness do the talking.

But Xiomara has plenty she wants to say, and she pours all her frustration and passion onto the pages of a leather notebook, reciting the words to herself like prayers—especially after she catches feelings for a boy in her bio class named Aman, who her family can never know about. With Mami’s determination to force her daughter to obey the laws of the church, Xiomara understands that her thoughts are best kept to herself.

So when she is invited to join her school’s slam poetry club, she doesn’t know how she could ever attend without her mami finding out, much less speak her words out loud. But still, she can’t stop thinking about performing her poems.

Because in the face of a world that may not want to hear her, Xiomara refuses to be silent.

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So, I have to admit I had put this book off because it is basically a story in poetry form and I wasn’t sure how well that would go down for me (I like poetry but I am picky, mostly because poetry in English is different to poetry in Spanish and I find it harder to connect with it).

However, I am glad I finally picked it up as it helped move from my slump (there is the reason for so many graphic novels and manga and Middle Grade books recently being reviewed). But back to the book, we meet Xiomara, and she lives with Mami and Papi, and Twin (Xavier).

And the poetry is good, and it doesn’t break the story too much (though I admit it took me a while to realise the “title” line wasn’t exactly always a title but at times the first line of the poem and then I had to go back and reread it as “part of the poem” rather than “the title”). It also was an interesting read.

I am not from Dominican Republic and I didn’t move to America, but I am Latin, and I moved to the UK, and I know friends and family that moved to America, so I am not that far from this story.

Actually I wish I could say I was far from it. But I also had a fierce mother who would expect a lot of me (she was a Christian rather than Catholic) but church was very important and we didn’t get the choice of not believing. Neither does Xiomara.  (Yes, I know, I am talking about me, but you see, the thing is, as I read this book, I saw a lot of me in it. I didn’t write poetry, I wrote stories, and made friends online at a time when no one made friends online because that wasn’t an everyday thing as it is now. And I also tried hard to figure myself out and what my voice was. And my younger sister had all the leeway in things I didn’t).

That was the part I loved, the way I found a lot of myself in this book, and that the poetry worked well with it to make it the right way to have it. My only “but” was the poem in Spanish (it is my mother tongue), I read it in Spanish, not knowing there was a transalation on the next page and it felt like it had been written originally in English. And that bothered me, because it was the moment I was broken from the story. Because once I turned the page and read it in English, I knew the original wasn’t in Spanish, or if it had, it had been written in Spanish while the English “translation” was being written. Small thing I know, but it was a sad thing for me.

All in all, it was one of my favourite in representation and it was a refreshing new way of reading/writing a book.

Moon recommends

Reading The Poet X. Alas, I do not have much poetry or slam or anything like that to recommend, so I will have to leave it with just that as the main thing to go read.

 

Book Review, Books

Princess Jellyfish Volume 1

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Princess Jellyfish Volume 1 by Akiko Higashimura

Tsukimi Kurashita has a strange fascination with jellyfish. She’s loved them from a young age and has carried that love with her to her new life in the big city of Tokyo. There, she resides in Amamizukan, a safe-haven for girl geeks who regularly gush over a range of things from trains to Japanese dolls. However, a chance meeting at a pet shop has Tsukimi crossing paths with one of the things that the residents of Amamizukan have been desperately trying to avoid—a beautiful and fashionable woman! But there’s much more to this woman than her trendy clothes! This odd encounter is only the beginning of a new and unexpected path for Tsukimi and her friends.

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I love jellyfish(es). They are beautiful, and I remember finding this manga online and falling utterly in love with it (I even have a jellyfish tattoo).

And it is obvious our author does too because the pages of jellyfish are awesome, and Tsukimi is super cute. She thinks she’s not, and she struggles socially, but then Kuranosuke appears and somehow starts ploughing into her world and shaking yingup. Even worse because she isn’t a she but a he that dresses up as a woman, and one thing Tsukimi and the group of women she lives with, the AMARS, can’t do with is men!

But Tsukimi feels slightly in debt as Kuranosuke helped her save Clara (a jellyfish) from slowly dying. And at first thinks Kuranosuke is a girl, but alas, finds out he isn’t and has to hide it from the rest of the AMARS.

Each of the AMARS has their own “otaku” obsession, dolls, the Three Kingdoms, old men, jellyfish, trains.. And most of them are over 30 (except Tsukimi who is 18) and dependent on their parents.

Yes, it sounds odd, but it is a funny comic story with gorgeous clothes, amazing jellyfish and cute Tsukimi.

Moon recommends

You can read the first volume of Princess Jellyfish, or maybe try the anime (as there is one, which I haven’t seen because I wanted to re-read up to where I stopped reading and collect the manga first).

Book Review, Books

A Storm of Ice and Stars Review

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A Storm of Ice and Stars by Lisa Lueddecke

Ice, myth, magic and danger in this bone-chilling, page-turning, beautifully written fantasy novel set in the same world as A SHIVER OF SNOW AND SKY. Blood-red lights have appeared in the sky over the frozen island of Skane, causing a cloak of fear and suspicion to fall over the village like a blanket of snow. In a desperate attempt to keep out the plague, the village elders barricade its borders – no-one, no matter how in need of help, will be permitted to enter in case they bring infection with them. Teenager Janna refuses to turn her back on people seeking refuge and is banished to the swirling snow and lurking darkness beyond the village. Can she survive?

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This is a prequel sequel (as in it’s the second book but it technically happens before book 1). And those usually turn interesting in one way or another.

For me, this one had the same lovely prose and the same interesting Skane dynamics that where in A Shiver of Snow and Sky, but I struggled a little because as much as it was close the first one, it was too close.

There were times when it felt too much the same, too similar. Yes, the story is interesting and it is a good backstory, answers some “questions” if you’d like and makes Osa even more special in a different way. But on the other hand it is a book of leaving the village and being sp[ecial and not fitting fully in the village. And the quest to get to the end of a thing. Both did it, and it helped Skane.

Still, I love Siiva and Enja and wish the story told us more about them and Solvi, rather than just Janna spending most of the quest mulling over Solvi. I know grief is an interesting thing, but considering in Skane people die relatively frequently and easily and Janna manages to be near the ones that die, you would expect her to get over it a little bit better (or if not, to have had the rest of the villagers go “hey, you’re an adult, we all need to survive here, no free lodgers!”, specially considering the village is all for closing borders and not helping those who don’t help themselves).

Moon recommends

Somehow as mcuh as this is a prequel, it is best to read the original first, so I recommend A Shiver of Snow and Sky.