22 November 2013

The Raven Boys and The Dream Thieves by Maggie Stiefvater

The Raven Boys by Maggie Stiefvater
The Raven Cycle #1 
Release Date: September 18th, 2012 (UK)
Publisher: Scholastic Paperbacks
Source: Bought
Rating: ★★★★

 

Even if Blue hadn’t been told her true love would die if she kissed him, she would stay away from boys. Especially the ones from the local private school. Known as Raven Boys, they only mean trouble.

But this is the year that everything will change for Blue.

This is the year that she will be drawn into the strange and sinister world of the Raven Boys. And the year Blue will discover that magic does exist.

This is the year she will fall in love.

The Dream Thieves by Maggie Stiefvater
The Raven Cycle #2
Release Date: September 17th, 2013 (UK)
Publisher: Scholastic Paperbacks
Source: Bought
Rating: ★★★★★

Blue didn’t mean to fall for the Raven Boys, but she has - and the more her life entwines with theirs, the more dangerous it becomes.

Ronan is the most dangerous of all. he’s the haunted one, the darkest, the most raven.

His dreams invade reality and confuse what is true.

With magic growing stronger around them, now is a time to be wary. Before everything unravels... Friendships will be tested. Someone will get hurt.

And a kiss will be shared.

Okay, this review is kind of a two for one deal, because I read both The Raven Boys and The Dream Thieves within a week of each other, despite having had the former lounging around on my bookshelves for almost a year. The reason for this was that I had read Stiefvater’s Shiver series and... I hadn’t been all that impressed, if I’m honest. I actually think that was more my fault than Stiefvater’s, because while her prose was beautifully lyrical, I just didn’t like either the story or the characters (Sam and Grace, oh honeys, I wish I could like you but you were just so terribly dull tbh), which was more a personal reason rather than a literary one. The Raven Cycle series however, is right up my street, and I’m going to tell you all why:


Let me start by telling you what not to pay attention to. See that blurb up there ^ ? Yeah, pay no attention to the man behind the curtain anything written on the back of these novels, because they’re so far off base I’m like 98% certain it’s slander. These books are not about some dippy romance between a cursed girl and some uptight boy. There is romance in these books, of course, but Stiefvater does what a lot of YA authors manage to miss entirely - she keeps the romantic elements as sidelines to the plot. These books have magic, ancient mythology, mystery, a little bit of horror and a lot of what the heck is going on in much more volume than the romances, which is how everything should always be in my opinion. Four for you, Maggie.

Now let me tell you a little bit about the characters, and I’m going to start with Blue Sargent, because Holy Hell did I need a female character like this in my life. There are so many facets to this girl that even after two books worth, I feel like I am still only scratching the surface when it comes to knowing her. She’s slightly vain and she knows it, she’s a bit of a raging feminist and does not care, she’s insecure about her place in life and her family and yet loves them dearly, she’s sensible and yet strong willed when it comes to doing what she wants, she’s hilarious in a deadpan and sarcastic way, and despite her insecurities and her lack of experience with boys and general social interactions outside of her family, she knows exactly how she should be treated and won’t stand for anything less. She's also occasionally slightly irritating, because we as readers know that her snap judgments of the boys aren't correct, which is wonderful. In short, she is perfect, and all female characters should be this complicated and weird and wonderful, because that’s what us girls are. Basically, if you don’t love Blue, you’re wrong okay? Okay.

I should also tell you a little bit about her family, mainly because they’re all women. Need me to say it again? THEY’RE ALL WOMEN. Yep, Blue has an extended family made up of her mother and her two best friends, and various aunts and cousins, who all live under the same roof together. And they’re all psychic. Yep. The characters with all the power in this series are the women. Maggie I love you.

Okay, now for the boys. Although there are four of them, only three of them ever get their own narrative point of view, so I’ll concentrate on those. First of all, there is Gansey or, Richard Gansey III. Yeah, he’s rich. He comes from old Virginia money, complete with parents in politics and a sister who owns a helicopter. But, don’t let that put you off! Because he knows this about himself; he knows that he came into this world with advantages that others didn’t, he knows that there are some things that he just can’t connect with other people over because of this, and the way he goes about rectifying this imbalance between himself and his friends is at once respectful and selfless.

Then there is Adam Parrish, who lives at the other end of the Gansey money spectrum. Yeah, this is the poor boy with the scholarship to the fancy school trope, except in the way that he totally isn’t. He works hard to be where he is, and he has myriad confidence issues and an inferiority complex a mile wide, and the insistence that he won’t accept any pity from anyone is so vehement, that you’ll find it hard to pity him as a reader, just in case you piss him off.

And now we come to my personal favourite, who is basically the embodiment of every character trait that I adore and then some. His name is Ronan Lynch, and he comes from slightly newer money than Gansey, as his father was an Irish self made man. Ronan is... damaged, irreparably broken beyond repair, and his sadness is an almost tangible thing, especially in The Dream Thieves, in which his point of view becomes more prevalent. He’s also cruel, mean to almost every other character he interacts with. He doesn’t ever lie, but then he doesn’t have to; he knows how to wield the truth with the accuracy of a just-sharpened blade. But if you prove yourself worthy of his time, then he’s loyal, and he will follow you wherever you’d want to lead him for whatever reason. He’s also terrified, of a number of things; of who and what he is; that he won’t grow to be the man his father wanted him to be; that he will and it’s not who he’s supposed to be; that he’ll disappoint people; that the person he wants to be won’t be accepted. And he can be unbelievably kind and sweet, and when it happens, it comes from so far out of left field that hardly anybody even notices that it happened at all.

Oh, and he’s gay. Yes, ladies and gents, in a world where women have the power and the main female character is as complex as any woman you would meet on the street, we also have queer representation hallelujah praise Jesus. It’s also equal, with as much weight given to his romantic feelings as there is for the way Blue and the other boys all feel and, I feel I should reiterate this point: absolutely none of it has any bearing on the plot.

I could tell you a bit about the plot, talk about ley lines and corpse roads and weird forests but I really wouldn’t do it any justice. I will just say that the bad guys are all remarkably well fleshed out, with not a single one ending up being just a cookie cutter Bad Guy. They all have their reasons for why they do what they do, and they're all sympathetic in their own way, which I adore. Suffice to say that there’s a lot of magic and mysticism, mysteries and ancient kings, and it’s all weaved together with Stiefvater’s incredible imagery and lyrical prose. When I read her words, I can feel myself sinking into the humidity of a hot Virginia summer, hear the insects buzzing and feel the heat of the sun on my face, and the juxtaposition of the supernatural elements hidden amongst all of this makes the hairs on the back of my neck stand up and gives me literal goosebumps. The way she writes is almost too beautiful to be just prose - it’s also poetry.

The only bad thing I have to say is about the ending of the first book, because it feels very abrupt, as though a piece was literally just chopped off the end, which is why it dropped a star for me. I find it very distasteful when a book jumps from the climactic showdown to a brief roundup of what happened to the characters afterwards, and The Raven Boys did exactly that, which was very unfortunate. It also has the worst last line I think I have ever read in a first installment of a series:

“I guess now would be a good time to tell you...”

(the rest removed because of spoilers), because what? How is now a good time to tell us anything? Are you high? That’s not a hook for the sequel, that’s a sharp left turn into What The Fuck’sville. Thankfully, the ending to The Dream Thieves is far more subtle, as the cliffhanger is at least connected to what has been going on with the rest of the book. There’s also a nice bit of symmetry going on with the prologue and the epilogue, which the literary buff in me appreciated.

Basically, you all need to go read these books, and then come cry with me over Ronan and the fact that we have to wait a year for the next installment of The Raven Cycle to come out. Go on, do it now, *whispers insidiously into your ear* you know you want to...

16 comments:

  1. I love love this series! Although I think I like Gansey a bit more then Ronan =P I'm glad this Maggie book is something you enjoyed, she is one of my instaread authors!

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  2. I love love this series! Although I think I like Gansey a bit more then Ronan =P I'm glad this Maggie book is something you enjoyed, she is one of my instaread authors!

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    1. Haha, Gansey is gorgeously sweet, so I get it! Anyone who knows me however knows that broken boys are my weakness, and Ronan fits that perfectly (it probably also helps that he's Irish tbh, it calls to me). I'm definitely glad I decided to give Maggie's writing another go, to think I could have missed out on all these feels!

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  3. Spot on! I enjoyed The Dream Thieves more than the Raven Boys too. I actually think that TDT is my favorite Maggie has done yet. So perfect in every way. So happy you enjoyed :-)

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    1. TDT is definitely the superior book, but I can't completely tell if it's just because I knew the characters better once I got there, or if it's a combination of other things. And now I have almost a year to wait until the next book comes out! *cries*

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  4. I love this series! Some people find it slow and in some ways I agree that the pace I unlike other fantasy YA rather its more lit fiction. It still worked well for me, I love that MS is taking her time in telling he story. Plus the myth is awesome!

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    1. It is a bit slow, I agree, but I find that the slower pace here really works well with building up the mystery, as well as giving us plenty of time to fall in love with all the characters.

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  5. Great review! You hit the nail on the head in describing how perfect this series is. Although, I don't think Maggie has yet confirmed if Ronan is gay, I 100% think he is as well but I think that's going to be something that subtly develops as the series goes on if he is.

    I have the same problem with The Shiver Series, there's just not enough going on other than a perfectly nice girl falls for a perfectly nice guy who just happens to be a perfectly nice wolf some of the time. The Scorpio Races is a pretty good novel though, I liked it quite a bit because more is going on that the slowly building romance that happens in it.

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    1. I follow Maggie on Tumblr, and I know she refuses to confirm whether or not Ronan is queer yet, but the last chapter of the book pretty much makes that confirmation for her without ever explicitly stating outright. Which is part of why I love it so much - she's showing that it's very easy to include queer representation without turning it into a Huge Thing That Must Be Addressed. It only makes me look forward to the rest of the series, because I can tell I'm not being yanked along only to get a non-subtle NO HOMO thrown at me by the end.

      Yeah, Shiver was, well it was boring tbh. I could appreciate the literary style of of it, but the characters were just too *nice* for me to really connect with them in the end. And thanks, I shall check out The Scorpio Races soon!

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  6. This series is amazing! Ronan was also my favourite character and I even FORCED my sister to read it and the only thing she said about The Raven Boys was "Ronan is fabulous" which I totally agree with. I also really enjoyed how the prologue and epilogue of The Dream Thieves matched up, it was just great. Awesome review! :)

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    1. Both you and your sister have fabulous taste tbh, because Ronan is the bestest. I love the prologue/epilogue bookending, where the examples of the 3 types of secrets are all laid out as to how they apply once the story's been told. I'm glad you loved it!

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  7. I just finished The Raven Boys and have now started The Dream Thieves. I totally agree with your character assessment. I love the characters in these books. I think you're right on not reading too much in to the synopsis. I can only speak for the first book so far, but it is so not about Blue and Gansey and some so called relationship. Great review!

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    1. I do love nuanced and subtly fleshed out characters, especially female ones, because we can never get enough of that tbh. And those synopses ohmygoddd! The second one isn't so bad, as it does at least reference what happens in the book, but that first one is absolutely terrible! I hope you'll come back to tell me what you thought of TDT!

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  8. I bought The Dream Thieves the second it was out ... but I still haven't read it. Your review makes me excited all over again to get back to this story and to these characters!

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    1. Eeeeeeeeeeep! I'm so glad my review got you excited to read it! Come back and tell me what you thought!

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  9. "Stiefvater does what a lot of YA authors manage to miss entirely - she keeps the romantic elements as sidelines to the plot." Oh god, this needs to happen more often. I'm getting very tired of romances pretending to be dystopias and science-fictions and fantasies. It needs to stop. And like with the Patrick Ness book I told you about, I love that one of the characters is gay and that it's NOT the main plot point. And that there are badass women everywhere. Those things need to happen more often too. I will have to give in and read these books eventually, even though I've never been interested in them until you started raving about them. I'm very curiousss.

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