This book I got from a different site this time. I don't know how
requests work and the time I decided to test I was lucky the one title
that caught my eyes was free for immediate download. Yay!
RJ is
an inconvenient queen bee whose soul is collected by mistake. Unlike
others reaped, she is fully aware of her surrounds and will take it to
the final consequences to see the unfairness fixed and her life
restored. The catch is that such has never been done and the guys in the
Afterlife are less than willing to open a precedent, which could cause
an upheaval among those who believe to also be entitled to a second
chance in life.
This is
probably an YA for a younger audience, despite some harsh themes such as
disease, death and depression. The discussion and lessons that come
from reading these would help those in their earlier teens, such as
middle school age, I believe.
My first impression is that such an
instigating theme deserved better edition. Until I got used to the
style, many actions and dialogs felt abrupt, and I had to read through
whole scenes too many times to my taste. For a less interesting or less
entertaining story, I may have given up before getting into what the
author wanted to tell me.
Now this is mostly the author to
blame, the beginning was ideal in pace but the elements presented in her
world-building were far from original. I saw a mix of contemporaneous
and classic plots mixed, and not on purpose. The book as a whole has a
love of creative points but they were all after at least a third of the
book, consisting its beginning of a replay of some TV movie.
Last
negative was the main character. I did come to rather like RJ, though
it took too long. Characters would criticize her for being stubborn when
I would probably have complained the same or even more, I think she was
entitled to a second right away and they barely recognize their fault
at that. RJ came off as annoying when she wasn't supposed to be. Perhaps
this could have been fixed with a more thorough revision as I first
suggested. It's funny to note that I started appreciating her more when
she really misbehaved. I couldn't stop laughing at her dialogs with
Death Himself and at how much she was able to upset the other angels.
And
talking about them, Death Himself and all the non-human characters were
very well delivered. I looked forward mostly to their scenes instead of
the ones in RJ's life.
Though I recommended more editing, I
found the author's style to be the highest point. She got me to laugh my
heart out and then cry that all away. Lighthearted and yet endearing.
Her narrative was so easy on the eyes I spent hours reading nonstop
until the end. Her sense of irony is also something to look forward to,
might I add.
Also the ending, of course I won't reveal it here,
but it was very satisfactory. I would have shortened the book, I felt it
was too long and this ending that never ended would have probably been
the part that suffered more. Nevertheless, I wouldn't have changed any
points of the plot, it was simply perfect to the tone the author used
the entire book. I certainly recommend this, and want to follow this
author's works in the future.
Rate: 4 out of 5.
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