Saturday 30 November 2013

Becoming Human (Exilon 5 #1) - Eliza Green

*I received a free copy in exchange for an honest review. This review is also available on Goodreads*


I found it difficult to start this book, but once I was immersed into the world, I found it very difficult to leave! The characters were well developed, and, towards the end, I found that the characters all easily linked with one another, whereas at the beginning I found it difficult to distinguish between all of the POV's as it changed at an impeccable pace.

Overall, I enjoyed it! 4 stars!

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/18078340-becoming-human

Friday 8 November 2013

Review: Sebastian Falls by Celeste Holloway

*I received a free copy in exchange for an honest review*

I've had to force myself to read this, which is unfortunate. I read 65% and just couldn;t finish. I wanted to, I really pushed myself but I just couldn't.

The first... third of the book seems to be telling a horror story, and then from then on, it gets so confusing as it seems to be telling about 5 different stories. This book goes in one direction, starts to get some traction, and then redirects to something else. It seems like there is no definitive plot.

I didn't feel any connection with the characters, at all. I can't put my finger on it, but there was something that wasn't quite right. Meadow (MC) --- I could not connect to her at all. I wanted to, oh so much...but it just was not to be.

*This review is also available on Goodreads*

Sunday 27 October 2013

Time is running out!

Oh my gosh, I'm a complete idiot. I signed up for so many BR's on Goodreads (most of which I'm not too far behind on, yay!) It's just ridiculous! Now it's half term, which means NO SCHOOL FOR A WEEK but I still have things to do so that means that I won't get much extra reading time, unfortunately.

Even though it's half term, it's jam packed!

  • seeing Thor 2 
  • driving lesson
  • halloween party x2
  • READING SO MUCH

Sunday 13 October 2013

Good Intentions ( The Dead Qar Series) by DN Simmons - Book Tour


GOOD INTENTIONS BY D N SIMMONS -  (note) I haven't had a chance to read this yet BUT I will do because I do have a copy. I'll be reading it soon!

Goodreads Summary
SciTech Labs was handsomely commissioned by the United States Military to design a revolutionary serum that would create the ultimate soldier. If successful, the soldier would have an increase in endurance, strength, awareness and overall speed. They would become the true super soldier. That's if everything went according to plan. 
SciTech put its best scientists on the project and gave them a time limit to complete the job or else. With the pressure on and the stakes high, Vincent Masterson and his team put everything they had into the project. Everything was looking hopeful until an experiment went horribly wrong. The scientists mutated their specimen's DNA, turning it into something monstrous. Now, life as we know it will never be the same. 
As it stands, the only thing that can save the human race is one of the two things they should be running from.

Can the human race survive being caught in a bloody war between two vicious predators?



Doesn't this sounds AMAZING?! 

Having read other reviews, I can tell you that this book will not disappoint. I believe it has all the elements a great Urban Fantasy book needs. 

  • ZOMBIES
  • SCIENCE
  • SUSPENSE
  • A GREAT WRITER WHO KNOWS HOW TO WRITE!

Saturday 28 September 2013

So many books, So little time

So... for some reason I decided to sign up for what seems like a billion Buddy Reads on Goodreads for the next couple of weeks. I guess I thought it would be a good idea. :?

I also accepted a few R2R books, which are all overdue, but hey, it's going well.

So lots of reading for me in the coming weeks...

http://www.goodreads.com/user/show/18543875-kathryn

Wednesday 25 September 2013

Review: You Are Mine by Janeal Falor


Goodreads Summary
Serena knows a few simple things. She will always be owned by a warlock. She will never have freedom. She will always do what her warlock wishes, regardless of how inane, frivolous, or cruel it is. And if she doesn’t follow the rules, she will be tarnished. Spelled to be bald, inked, and barren for the rest of her life—worth less than the shadow she casts.

Then her ownership is won by a barbarian from another country. With the uncertainty that comes from belonging to a new warlock, Serena questions if being tarnished is really worse than being owned by a barbarian, and tempts fate by breaking the rules. When he looks the other way instead of punishing her, she discovers a new world. The more she ventures into the forbidden, the more she learns of love and a freedom just out of reach. Serena longs for both. But in a society where women are only ever property, hoping for more could be deadly.

*I received a free copy from Netgalley. This review is also available on Goodreads*

First off, I feel I should say that I didn't *actually* finish this book. I made it about halfway, and couldn't force myself to read any more. As a reader of mainly dystopia and post-apocalyptic novels, romance (which this is, really) isn't mostly my thing. IT'S ALL ABOUT LOVE, therefore is not 'dystopia'. Yes, there are different societies, but ugh I just...ugh. 

There are overbearing tones of anti-feminism, as the whole book is basically about a woman who is owned by all these people and how they use her for everything...so if you're like me and really hate that sort of stuff, then yeah, I wouldn't read this.

Apart from that, the writing is just fab (good point!) It's good to have a book that has at least one redeeming quality. Ms Falor does well throughout (what I read) to create atmosphere and to evoke emotions in the reader. Fair play Ms Falor, fair play.

Book: http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/17406760-you-are-mine

Friday 20 September 2013

Review: Fire Country by David Estes

*I received a free copy in exchange for an honest review. This is also available on Goodreads*


First off, this book was written in slang, which at first, is disconcerting and hard to get used to. But it works. 

I really wanted to like this book, all the reviews I'd read were really positive, but I didn't really find it that good, to be honest. The plot was well thought out but I just found it difficult to read and get in to.
I had no motivation to finish this book, which was one reason it took me so long to read. I found it hard to judge where the plot was going, which I suppose could be a good thing? 

This was the first novel by David Estes that I've read, but I've not seen anything that has really jumped out at me, at all.

Book: http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/16160701-fire-country

Sunday 15 September 2013

Review: Supernatural Freak by Louisa Klein

*I was given a free copy in exchange for an honest review*

Goodreads Summary

When paranormal expert Robyn Wise is offered an outrageous sum of money to cure a boy who is turning into a dead tree, she's very skeptical  A politician ready to pay that much to make his son stop growing branches instead of hair? Come on! She's more likely to be abducted by aliens. This is a trap. Or much worse. And, of course, it's much worse.

The child is turning into a dark portal, created by a powerful entity determined to absorb Fairyland's power. This means that not only queen Titania and her court are in danger, but the very balance of the magic fluxes.

Robyn'd rather stick a pencil in her own eye but, to learn how to destroy the portal, she has to sneak into the Wizardry Council, a place full of wizards who are hiding something—though it’s certainly not their dislike of her.

There, she discovers a terrible secret that could help to overthrow Fairyland's enemies for good, but puts her in the midst of an ancient and deadly war, and not as a bystander, but as the main target.


This was an interesting concept from the outset, for me. I liked the unique idea and it was, for the most part, well executed. 

The beginning of the novel is just action, with what seems like random supernatural occurrences, and I (still) don't see how they fit in to the rest of the novel, but hey, that's just me. Also, Robyn didn't seem very 'British'. As a Brit myself, I found little in common with her, and I feel like she has no clue about the UK and London. But again, that's just me. 


Don't let this put you off, apart from these things, this was not a bad book. It was well written, and the pacing wasn't half bad (although the end seemed a little rushed, and it took half the book to actually get to the REAL story). 

I hope this is part of a series, because I personally feel that this world needs to be explored more to reach its full potential. 

4 stars. 


Book: http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/15764886-supernatural-freak

Thursday 5 September 2013

Backlog

I really need to stop applying/accepting read-2-review books... although I was almost caught up, applied for another, and got one off of Netgalley too! I really know how I'll catch up again, especially with school starting in less than a week!

Tuesday 3 September 2013

uuuggggghhhhh

I don't know if you've noticed, but I've been away a few days and managed to get quite a bit of reading done! I'm almost caught up on my Read2Review books too!

Review: Dawn of the Apocalypse by E.S.P

Goodreads Summary
January 1, 2000.
May 21, 2011.
December 21, 2012

These are just a few of the days humans prophesied as bringing catastrophic events that would end the world. We predicted nuclear warfare. Drastic climate change. A call from God.

We were wrong. 

Cue the gargoyle invasion—laboratory bred mutants designed to slaughter humans. When the government goes AWOL and gargoyles are swarming by the hundreds, it's up to the citizens of the United States to regroup and save themselves. 

Meet Cliff Matthews, a teenage boy separated from his entire family with the exception of his younger sister, whom he is desperate to keep alive. Along the quest to save their lives, he encounters people who aren't all that they seem. Everyday's a battle, but if he can't trust his own species, where does that leave his family? 

And we can't forget the man who may be willing to sacrifice Cliff's life, if it means world domination.

In terms of doomsday, no one could've seen this coming. The dawn of the apocalypse…


*I received a free copy for an honest review. This is also available on Goodreads* 

For the first 25% of this book, I had no idea what was going on, and I was just as confused as the characters. Which is good, in a way, but I didn't want to keep reading because I was so confused. But continue, I did, as I felt I owed it to the author, and found it quite pleasant after I knew what was happening. 

The only thing that did get on my nerves a bit was, what I felt was overuse of violence, and the vivid gory descriptions.  Like, I get it, someone's being eaten downstairs, but I don't need to know that they could hear the limbs being ripped off one by one and the persons heart has been wrenched out. I understand that quite a bit of it was necessary, but there is such a thing as too much. 

Cliff was actually pretty cool. Often he didn't act 15, but then that is to be expected when being attacked by HUGE GREEN UGLY GARGOYLES THAT WANT TO EAT YOU WHOLE!

Hunter. Well, I don't really know what to say. I like that there wasn't total insta-love between her and Cliff, but let's be honest, we all knew it would come eventually. I don't really know if I like her or not. 

Cliff's little sister is so cute! I'm confused about what happened to Andy, but that was probably because I read this very quickly. 
I'm also confused about how Cliff just suddenly thought of a plan that just so happened to work. 


But, overall, not a bad read. 

Book: http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/18134642-dawn-of-the-apocalypse

Review: Earth Star by Janet Edwards

*I received a free copy from Netgalley for an honest review. This is also available on Goodreads*

Goodreads Synopsis
Sequel to Earth Girl 

18-year-old Jarra has a lot to prove. After being awarded one of the military’s highest honours for her role in a daring rescue attempt, Jarra finds herself – and her Ape status – in the spotlight. Jarra is one of the unlucky few born with an immune system that cannot survive on other planets. Derided as an ‘ape’ – a ‘throwback’ – by the rest of the universe, Jarra is on a mission to prove that Earth Girls are just as good as anyone else.
Except now the planet she loves is under threat by what could be humanity’s first ever alien contact. Jarra’s bravery – and specialist knowledge – will once again be at the centre of the maelstrom, but will the rest of the universe consider Earth worth fighting for? 

Having not read the first book, Earth Girl, I really didn't know what to expect. I found I didn't need to have read #1, because I'm told what I need to know about what happened as I read through the book. 

Jarra, I felt, did not act her age, in fact, many times I felt she was about 25, instead of 18. She's stubborn and I feel sorry for Fian to put up with it sometimes. The way she lets her upbringing define her got annoying after a while. 

Fian. New book boyfriend alert! If Jarra doesn't want him, I call dibs! Although he's from a very strict planet, I like him. He doesn't let his upbringing influence him that much, whereas Jarra does. 

The other characters like Drago are fab, and some of them are more likely to become my favorite, instead of the main characters. 

Overall, I liked it.

Book: http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/16069783-earth-star?from_search=true

Review: Tattoos by Denise Mathew

Goodreads Summary
Seventeen-year-old Marilee Mackie has everything going for her, beauty, money and a bright future. But when she’s diagnosed with Stage 3 Hodgkins Lymphoma her world falls apart, and instead of finishing her senior year she begins the fight of her life. 

Nineteen-year-old Jax, an enigmatic hospital orderly, lives on the Strip, the proverbial other side of the tracks. With his edgy attitude, sleeves of tattoos and rocker look, he’s the kind of bad boy that Marilee has always steered clear of.

But when Marilee’s cancer strips away every bit of her identity, leaving her a shadow of the person she once was, all the things that mattered to her before no longer hold any meaning. Determined to make a difference in the world before she dies, Marilee enlists Jax to help her with something she calls the Peace Project, a way to use her college fund money to help the people who need it the most on the Strip. 
With Marilee’s money and Jax’s knowledge of the Strip, the teenagers embark on an unforgettable journey. Where two people from completely different worlds find that miracles do exist, and that the darkest cloud of your life may be lined with the brightest rainbow. 

Tattoos is a story about love, hope and the preconceived notions and barriers that we put between us for no reason other than the way someone looks or where they live. It’s about letting go of all the things that we thought were important in the quest for our true purpose. And that sometimes the people you never thought you could love, may be exactly who you needed all along.


*I received a free copy in exchange for an honest review. This is also available on Goodreads*

This was a cancer book. I found it similar to The Fault in Our Stars, by John Green. This novel became quite gripping, eventually. I found myself rooting for the characters, wishing 'don't die' and it was, primarily, a romance, with some cancer thrown in to the mix. 

For me, there was too much emphasis on the cancer, and sometimes not enough on the people and their relationships, which I would like to see more of. I also think that the turn-around that Marilee's parents make is too dramatic for it to be believable. 

Overall, this is one cancer book that I liked :)

Book: http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/17983611-tattoos?from_search=true

Review: What The Faeries Left Behind by Amber Cook

Goodreads Synopsis
After coming home from a monotonous office job to the apartment where she lives alone, thirty-something Abigail Watson is having a tough day in a hard week in a rotten month, and don’t even get her started on the year. Until that night when something wonderfully impossible shows up at her door and rings the bell insistently.

You’re not supposed to answer the door late at night to strangers who come knocking unannounced, right? 

Right. But Abigail does,

Because how can you be scared of someone with translucent wings like those of a dragonfly?

WHAT THE FAERIES LEFT BEHIND is an urban fairy tale ‘antidote’ to those times when the dullness and drudgery of grown-up life seems inescapable, and to the misconception that wonder and play are just for children.


*I received a free copy in exchange for a review. This is also available on Goodreads*

I really wanted to like this story, I really did, but I felt no connection to any of the characters, which made this almost a chore to read, unfortunately. I think most of this come from the short length of this, and personally, in such a short novel, I think it's hard to create depth and connection with your characters.

Abigail didn't act 36. This was problem #2. To me, she acted like a teenager.

I'm not sure if I like the way that all the action starts right at the beginning. And I mean that, It's on like the first page, so I got quite confused.

Other than that, it was a good little anecdote.

Book: http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/17280506-what-the-faeries-left-behind

Review: Ethereal Fury (Gemini Rising #1) by Jessice O'Gorek

Goodreads Synopsis
BEWARE! THE PLANET IS WOUNDED... THE GEMINI ARE RISING AND OUR TIME ON EARTH IS LIMITED

Angry at the human race and its methodical destruction of her resources, Mother Earth recruits souls who have just left their bodies to serve Her, and turns them against humanity. Gemini, a clan of paranormal beings, picked from these possessed humans, emerges. A powerful, rising force proceeds to carry out Mother Nature’s plan to systematically destroy towns, cities, states… and eventually, the world. Amidst the chaos, a forbidden relationship between a human girl, Violette, and Onyx, a lead Gemini, begins. They will both find themselves in the middle of a revolutionary war that will either save, or destroy our world.


*I received a free copy in exchange for an honest review. This review is also available on Goodreads*

To start with, I wasn't hooked. The first few chapters seemed to have no relevance to the actual main part of the book. As I got to the end, I realized the significance of chapter 2, but still the very beginning got me confused, as it seemed off topic and just, out of place. I know it contained key info, but I just wasn't hooked. 

Also, insta-love? Seriously? 

The religious aspect was strong, and I think it was sometimes unnecessarily strong. In parts, I felt like Christianity was being shoved in my face, but it was worth it because some of it was essential to the plot. 

Violette was cool. I like her. Although she sometimes doesn't act her age, who does? Let's be honest. I never act my age, so I sympathize with that. 

Overall, it was an OK read. 

Book: http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/17977415-ethereal-fury?ac=1

Sunday 25 August 2013

Hectic-ness!

This last week has been busy for me, what with getting GCSE results, parties with friends, and, of course, reading. I've been quite a reading machine in the last few days, catching up on everything, especially Buddy Reads on Goodreads (my favourite website EVER!) and this weekend I hope to catch up on some Read-2-Review copies of books that I've been given and haven't gotten to yet. It's just been so busy! It's been busier than I thought my holiday at home would be, to be honest. I thought, ugh staying at home for all the summer holidays, what a chore, but it hasn't been too bad. I still need to write my essay for Sixth Form, so if anyone's good at essay writing, help please?


Wednesday 21 August 2013

I read too much.

So I have things to do in preparation for Sixth Form, which starts in less than 3 weeks, and I still have to write an essay. Ouch. But instead I choose to read first, essay later. I know I should write the  essay...but it's boring and no. No thank you. I would rather wax my eyebrows.

I guess I should at least attempt to do something school-y though...

Review: The Help by Kathryn Stockett

Goodreads Summary

Three ordinary women are about to take one extraordinary step.
Twenty-two-year-old Skeeter has just returned home after graduating from Ole Miss. She may have a degree, but it is 1962, Mississippi, and her mother will not be happy till Skeeter has a ring on her finger. Skeeter would normally find solace with her beloved maid Constantine, the woman who raised her, but Constantine has disappeared and no one will tell Skeeter where she has gone.
Aibileen is a black maid, a wise, regal woman raising her seventeenth white child. Something has shifted inside her after the loss of her own son, who died while his bosses looked the other way. She is devoted to the little girl she looks after, though she knows both their hearts may be broken.
Minny, Aibileen's best friend, is short, fat, and perhaps the sassiest woman in Mississippi. She can cook like nobody's business, but she can't mind her tongue, so she's lost yet another job. Minny finally finds a position working for someone too new to town to know her reputation. But her new boss has secrets of her own.
Seemingly as different from one another as can be, these women will nonetheless come together for a clandestine project that will put them all at risk. And why? Because they are suffocating within the lines that define their town and their times. And sometimes lines are made to be crossed.
In pitch-perfect voices, Kathryn Stockett creates three extraordinary women whose determination to start a movement of their own forever changes a town, and the way women - mothers, daughters, caregivers, friends - view one another. A deeply moving novel filled with poignancy, humor, and hope, The Help is a timeless and universal story about the lines we abide by, and the ones we don't.


This novel is just fantastic. It will never fail to impress. It tells a story so moving and, well, words fail me to describe any more.

The writing is done in different POV's. And that can get a little confusing at times, but it doesn't affect the book at all.  

There isn't much else to say, except GO READ THIS!

*This review is also available on Goodreads*

Book: http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/4667024-the-help?from_search=true

Tuesday 20 August 2013

Review: BoX by Lucas Heath

Goodreads Summary
How far would you go to save yourself? Would you compromise your religion, morals, or integrity to avoid death? 

Twenty-seven people wake up to discover they are imprisoned in isolation cubes. They are forced to endure multiple trials in an experiment designed to test the limits of human nature. 

In each cube is a pistol. During any test an individual can use the gun to end the torment and take their own life. In doing so, they believe the test would immediately end for everyone and potentially save the lives of others. 

Would you lay down your life to save another? Would you pass the tests?

It's the ultimate trial for human nature and the will to stay alive. 

Would you survive the experiment?
This story is a novella, at around 100 pages, or 26000 words.

Right from the outset, this book is intriguing, fascinating, and, well, I loved it.

The large amount of characters in the beginning was difficult to keep up with, as there were 27 of them, but as that number became smaller, I felt more attached to the characters.

The concept is original, which is something hard to come by. The writing is compelling, but the change of POV every half a chapter is off-putting, but it is a good read.

*This review is also available on goodreads*

Book: http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/18069250-box?from_search=true

Friday 16 August 2013

Review: Seed Savers: Treasure (#1)

*I received a free copy in exchange for an honest review. This review is also on Goodreads*
Goodreads Synopsis
Clare, Dante, and Lily live in a future where gardening and owning seeds is against the law. Some, however, encourage the children to change the future, and instruct them in the old ways.

Can the children learn enough before being stopped by GRIM, the government agency controlling the nation's food?

And can children really change the future?

(Book 1 in the Seed Savers Series)


The writing is fab, the story's not too bad, but I didn't feel connected to the characters at all.

The first half of the novel is slow, and the second half doesn't get much faster. The element of dystopia is strong, as there is quite a bit of world building, to 'set the scene' I guess.

The main problem for me, was the religious text. I felt that, by the author including passages from the Christian Bible, religion was being forced down my throat, especially in the first half of the book.

Also, Clare and Dante do not act 12 and 7. Not at all. More like 16 and 13.  And Lily? She just disappeared half way through the novel!

For me, unfortunately, this book lack pazazz. It lacked spark. I don't think I'll be continuing the series.

Book: http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/13630113-seed-savers?from_search=true

Wednesday 14 August 2013

Review: Poisoned Waters by Ermisenda Alvarez

Goodreads Synopsis
Bloody mistakes, ugly scars, and beautiful lies. A tale of corruption.

Helen Gardener is murdered on a trans-Atlantic cruise. The Diamond Royale sails from Southampton to New York with her murderer aboard. Set in the 1950s, Poisoned Waters follows the stories of seven unfortunate characters and how they are affected by her death. Was it merely an accident? Mr Phillips, the owner of the ship, and sponsor of the cruise, rules with an iron fist, in search of something or someone.

Lies spiral out of control as the suspects try to survive the final days on board. Conflicted by their sense of morals, greed, and lust, they realise what kind of people they really are. Who will rise? Who will fall? Who was Helen's murderer?


*I received a free copy in exchange for an honest review. This review is also available on goodreads*

In the beginning, it was just an awkward bunch of people doing things entirely unrelated. As the novel progressed, they became less unrelated, and more tangled in a web of lust, conspiracy and deceit. 

The different points of view were hard to keep up with in the first few chapters, but gradually became easier to read throughout. 
The events right at the beginning had me hooked, and I had no idea who/what had really occurred. It was only in the last few chapters that everything came together and made sense. 

In the main section of the novel, it all seemed to be the same. The detective going around, chasing a few folks, the usual. It seemed rather repetitive and revealed very little, except small facts and tidbits here and there. It turns out these things were very important. 

The characters were well defined and different from each other, although a lot of the things going on were the same. It was great to see how the different characters interacted with each other through many different points of view. 

The historical aspect wasn't that important, except for the treatment of those who weren't valued in society. This seemed to be one of the only notable differences between this and a mystery set in current time. 

Overall, it was an easy, good read, and lovers of mystery should read it.

Book: http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/18040482-poisoned-waters?from_search=true

Tuesday 13 August 2013

Review: A Killing Frost by John Marsden

#3 in the Tomorrow series.  Life in the war zone enters its sixth month of heart-stopping tension in the latest installment of the internationally bestselling Tomorrow series.

In the third installment of the Tomorrow saga, the anything-to-survive existence of Ellie and her friends has sharpened their senses and emboldened their plans. They aren't merely on the defensive anymore; they're also striking back. Their strategy? Attack the enemy not just on land, but also on water. If they have any hope of sabotaging the formidable container ship at Cobbler's Bay, then stealth is a must, but so, too, is one very big explosion.
And if they fail, they may face a whole new kind of terror -- imprisonment.


I've been waiting to read this for a while, and I was anxious that it wouldn't be worth the wait. Well I was wrong. I'm glad I waited, because it took me about 24 hours to read. 

We know from the blurb that Kevin returns. Fab. I like Kevin, but I also like Corrie, so I wonder when she'll return. He is a vital part of the team, but could also be seen as the reason behind the content of the rest of the book.

Ellie, the narrator, does a good job telling the story from her point of view, I'd like to see someone else take over for a bit, to gain insight from another point of view, but that's personal preference. 

The pacing is perfect in the first half, full of adrenaline and action. The attack of Cobblers Bay is fueled by their drive to destroy. 
The second half of the novel is more docile, but builds tension, making it just as good. And the ending is just ...well. You'll have to read it, won't you.

*This review is also listed on Goodreads*

Book: http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/71863.A_Killing_Frost?from_search=true

Happy Days

Yay! I got myself on NetGalley earlier today, and already got a book, and got auto-approved for a publisher! This makes me ver ver happy. I'm thinking of going onto Edelweiss as well, but I think it might be too much at the moment.

I shall be going to bed a very happy bunny :)

Reviews

These will have reviews soon as I am currently reading them

A Killing Frost by John Marsden
The Help by Kathryn Stockett
World War Z by Max Brooks
Les Miserables by Victor Hugo
Poisoned Waters by Ermisenda Alverez


Heyyy

Hello folks!

This is gonna be my book blog, within which I shall review books I've read.

Me: I'm Kathryn and I'm a UK teen who likes to read.
Find me on goodreads http://www.goodreads.com/user/show/18543875-kathryn