Book Review: The Serpent’s Curse

Forbidden Stone was amazing. I wish I could say the same thing for The Serpent’s Curse.  Though it did not suffer the second book syndrome, I cannot say that it lived up to the stellar performance of its predecessor.  True, there are still the globe-trotting adventures, codes to be deciphered, and a parent to be saved; everything was not just the same.  The story felt long winded and I just couldn’t establish a connection to the story.  Maybe it’s because some of the twists were predictable or that they were revealed in the wrong time or maybe the important reveals…

Mini-Reviews: The Wacky Families

I’m going to bonk anyone in the head who says that MG books are boring. My Uncle Gus, The Garden Gnome is a heartwarming tale about a boy, Leo, who has a crush on a ghost named Fra.  And he’s really trying his best to make Fra’s ghostly life interesting.  But the trouble is, Grizella, a beautiful witch and Leo’s classmate, is sort of crazy about him.  So when Leo turned down her dance invitation, Leo’s life has suddenly gone to the dogs.  See? Middle grade books are even crazier than YA and Adult books. So with Leo’s life going…

Book Review: Villain Keeper

Villain Keeper is one of those books that I really wanted to shove down people’s faces and rave about.  But sadly, it didn’t just reach that I-am-gonna-build-a-hype-train-around-this-book status.  Villain Keeper is about a young eighth-born prince, Prince Caden, of the magical Kingdom of Razzon who got transported to modern day America (North Carolina) due to some mysterious circumstance. He has two sidekicks, a prodigy sorceress who’s also a childhood friend and a boy whom Caden met after arriving in modern day America.  These two sidekicks are called Brynne and Tito, respectively. Villain Keeper’s story starts rolling upon Caden’s and Brynne’s…

Book Review: The Rogue Knight

I am not sure if I am outgrowing Middle Grade books or Brandon Mull is losing his touch.  I can still remember how the Fablehaven series (my first Brandon Mull series) hooked me to the point that I sacrificed many a good night’s sleep just to finish the five books as soon as possible. And after that, find myself rereading the whole series after two months.  That didn’t happen to me with the Five Kingdoms series.  Sky Raiders, the first book of Five Kingdoms, was just OKAY. Not good, not bad either.  There were interesting stuff—like the shaping abilities and…