Book Review: My Fair Godmother (My Fair Godmother, #1) by Janette Rallison

My fair godmotherTitle: My Fair Godmother

Author: Janette Rallison

Summary: Finding your one true love can be a Grimm experience!

After her boyfriend dumps her for her older sister, sophomore Savannah Delano wishes she could find a true prince to take her to the prom. Enter Chrissy (Chrysanthemum) Everstar: Savannah’s gum-chewing, cell phone–carrying, high heel-wearing Fair Godmother. Showing why she’s only Fair—because she’s not a very good fairy student—Chrissy mistakenly sends Savannah back in time to the Middle Ages, first as Cinderella, then as Snow White. Finally she sends Tristan, a boy in Savannah’s class, back instead to turn him into her prom-worthy prince. When Savannah returns to the Middle Ages to save Tristan, they must team up to defeat a troll, a dragon, and the mysterious and undeniably sexy Black Knight. Laughs abound in this clever fairy tale twist from a master of romantic comedy. -Goodreads

 

Review:

One day, I was looking at books on Goodreads, and I saw this book, My Fair Godmother.  What made me order it was that it had a pretty similar cover to another book I read, The Secret Keeper.  Well, at least, aside from the shades, the pink (awesome) hair, the title, the big pink X across the word ‘fairy,’ and the word ‘fair’ scrawled in above it, it would have had the same cover as The Secret Keeper 😀

I hadn’t been too sure about this book because of the summary.  I mean, Cinderella?  Snow White?!  I was never into those Disney princess things–ew!  But, this was a great book!  Excellent, excellent, excellent!  It was funny, romantic… and, well, just PERFECT!

I’ve read one of Rallison’s books, All’s Fair in Love, War, and High School, and that one was great too, from what I remember, so I began to get more and more excited about My Fair Godmother.

I was immediately drawn into the book.  It just sucked me in and then spit me out at the end, haha!!!

My thoughts on Savannah in the beginning were that she was a spoiled brat who deserved to go back to the Middle Ages and see how people there lived.  They didn’t have luxuries like shampoo and flashlights.  She needed to know that she couldn’t take anyone or anything for granted.  By the end of the book, I’d say she definitely learned that lesson.

In my eyes, I think this book had a great moral.  Don’t take anything/anyone for granted.

The relationship between the two sisters reminded me of something–maybe another book?  I don’t know.  I can’t quite put my finger on it.  Maybe the relationship between Savannah and Jane reminded me of that between Claudia and Janine from Ann M. Martin’s The Baby-Sitters Club.  Both older sisters were smarter than the younger sisters, both younger sisters didn’t pay attention in school because whatever they were passionate about (Savannah: beauty, Claudia: art), they didn’t think they needed the education that school offered.

Anyway, I felt that Savannah was too quick to accept the whole “fair godmother” thing.  She barely questioned it.

Well, like I said above, this book was amazing, and I never once felt like closing it.  5/5 stars!!!  I can’t wait for the sequel, which is hilariously titled, My Unfair Godmother… BWHAHAHA!!!

There are a few things I’d like to complain about, though… these complaints don’t really affect my rating…

 

Book Review: Cinder (Lunar Chronicles, #1) by Marissa Meyer

CinderTitle: Cinder

Author: Marissa Meyer

Synopsis: Humans and androids crowd the raucous streets of New Beijing. A deadly plague ravages the population. From space, a ruthless lunar people watch, waiting to make their move. No one knows that Earth’s fate hinges on one girl. . . .

Cinder, a gifted mechanic, is a cyborg. She’s a second-class citizen with a mysterious past, reviled by her stepmother and blamed for her stepsister’s illness. But when her life becomes intertwined with the handsome Prince Kai’s, she suddenly finds herself at the center of an intergalactic struggle, and a forbidden attraction. Caught between duty and freedom, loyalty and betrayal, she must uncover secrets about her past in order to protect her world’s future. -Goodreads

 

Review:

*Warning: Spoilers lie ahead*

I’ve been wanting to read Cinder for a few months now.  Every time I thought about it, I would think to myself, “I thought I ordered this from the library last week.”  So this went on for a while before I finally did order the book.  Hehe… yeah.

I’d like to take a moment to praise the design of this book.  I absolutely love the way Cinder is written on the cover.  Then, you can see a leg (Cinder’s) and it’s kind of like an x-ray photo because you can also see metal “bones,” because she’s a cyborg.  I thought that was an interesting touch.

The font was also different from most books, which made it pretty different.

Cinder is yet another Cinderella story–which I hadn’t known.  Of course, I should have been tipped off when I saw the title and the glass ruby slipper on the cover.  No, wait, ruby slipper was the Wizard of Oz

But I wasn’t tipped off, because you know how I am with hints: completely CLUELESS!

I have this habit where I’m drawn to a book by its cover and I don’t, um, even read the summary… but that’s beside the point!

I like how Marissa Meyer made the whole Cinderella part more believable.  The step-mother, or rather, the guardian, wasn’t over-the-top cruel, and the sisters acted pretty much normal.  Cinder was actually friends with her younger sister, Peony.

As I read Cinder, I wasn’t thinking “dystopian.”  I was thinking “science-fiction.”

During the beginning of the book, I was thinking that there was still room for improvement.  There… er… wasn’t much improvement.

The romance was pretty blah.  Nothing interesting.  I think I preferred… TWILIGHT’S romance.  Just kidding, but seriously, the romance could have been better.

The twists and turns were pretty obvious–even for me!!!  Before I was halfway into the book, I knew that Cinder was the one and only Princess Selene.

Cinder wasn’t as good as I expected, so I don’t know if I’ll read its sequel.  2.5/5 stars.

Cinderella Cleaners Book 2: Prep Cool

Hello, hello my Wonderful Readers!

Once again, I am SO happy to say that I will be staying on WordPress!

Moving forward, I am currently reading the Cinderella Cleaners Book 2: Prep Cool.  I’ve read this book before, but have completely forgotten the details.  I’ll tell you more about it after I’ve passed page 19.

I got a few extra books from the library:

The Nine Lives of Chloe King by Liz Braswell

The nine lives of Chloe KingAnimal Farm by George Orwell

Animal farmShakespeare Made Easy: Hamlet

HamletWOW, that is a big book cover.  I wonder what went wrong there.

Until the next post…

-littleonion

Cinderella Cleaners: Change of a Dress

Hello, hello!

I finished reading Cinderella Cleaners Book 1: Change of a Dress.  I think it was okay.  I definitely found a number of similarities to another series called The Allegra Biscotti Collection.

Change of a Dress is about a girl named Diana who works at her father’s business after school and finds tickets to a show in the pocket of a coat.  There is a lot in between, but eventually, Diana lies to her father and stepmother and she and her coworker go to the show.  She meets a very famous movie star and she has a huge crush on him, they dance, etc.

As I mentioned before, I found several similarities to The Allegra Biscotti Collection.  The main characters in both stories live on the east coast, they both LOVE fashion, they are both DYING to have their dreams come true, they both have a guy best friend and a girl best friend, they both have mothers (stepmother, in Diana’s case) who don’t understand them, in both stories it’s the father’s family business that the girls work at after school.

Overall, this was a good book.  It got a little boring near the end, I really wished there was more drama between the stepmother and Diana, but I also wish that the stepmother wasn’t so stereotypical.

This book, in my mind, is for children between the ages of 8-10.  I think I’m going to rate it 3 stars out of 5.

Wow, this turned out to be a sort of book review.  Is it okay if I can post it in Book Reviews???  Can I cheat?  I think I can.  Muahahaha!

Pip pip cheerio!

-littleonion