This post first published March 16, 2013.
Author: Laini Taylor
First Published: September 2011
Publisher: Little, Brown Books for Young Readers
Series: Daughter of Smoke & Bone #1
391 pages (eBook)
I’ve been meaning to read this book for a while. When it was first
released and the reviews started pouring out on blogs and Goodreads, the
overwhelming majority that I read were very positive reviews. Needless
to say, this book piqued my interest but I didn’t get around to reading
it until now (an excuse I use for almost every book I read — “I didn’t
get around to reading it …” Hah). I tried not to have my opinion of the
book subconsciously swayed by the hype, though when it feels like
EVERYONE loves this book, I feel pressure to love it too. Anyway, I
definitely think this book is amazing, fun and creative, and I enjoyed
it very much. I can totally understand why everyone loves it. I don’t
think I love it quite as much as some other readers too, but I do think
it is a very good book.
The story is about a young girl named Karou (pronounced ka-roo), who
lives in Prague, alone in her own apartment, and attends an art school.
She loves to draw and her friends love seeing the monsters she creates
in her sketchbook. Little do her friends know, these monsters aren’t
figments of Karou’s imagination; they are real. They are the monsters
who raised Karou and Karou loves them as her own family.
Her “father figure” is Brimstone, who appears to be the leader of the
four monsters. His life’s work is to collect teeth. All kinds of teeth,
from humans to animals and even other fantastical creatures. Karou has
no idea what Brimstone does with these bags and bags of teeth, she’s not
allowed to ask. However, she runs errands for Brimstone and in return,
he gives him small beads that allow her to make minor wishes, such as
changing her hair colour to a natural blue, or giving her enemy
caterpillar-bushy eyebrows.
When black handprints start appearing on doorways all over the world —
the doorways to the world where the monsters reside — Karou’s world
starts to change drastically. Suddenly, she loses all contact with
Brimstone and the others and worse, she is being hunted by a beautiful
but dangerous male angel named Akiva. However, little does Karou know,
Akiva knows all about Karou’s true identity and how she is connected to
him. Before she knows it, she and Akiva are embroiled in a forbidden
love.
Before I say anything else, I want to make it clear that I did,
indeed, fall in love with this book. I haven’t read a book this creative
or imaginative since … well, it feels like a very long time. The best
part of the creativity, for me, was the use of the teeth and wishes. I’m
not going to spoil what Brimstone was using the teeth for, for those of
you who don’t know, but I really liked that twist. Teeth! So simple,
but so genius at the same time.
At its core, it’s still a pretty ‘common’ story. I would say the core
of this novel is similar to the basic plot of Romeo & Juliet: two
starcrossed lovers who cannot be together due to their affiliations. But
in Daughter of Smoke & Bone, I feel Laini Taylor took that common
story and re-imagined it on an epic grand scale, with angels and demons
and an eternal war. The chronology of the story is also a bit different
as well, telling the end first (although as the reader, you do not know
it is the end) and then explaining the beginning, with how Karou and
Akiva originally met and so on.
I really enjoyed the beginning of the book (or the ‘end’ of the
story). I was totally loving being in Karou’s world, her art classes,
her secret visits to Brimstone and her monster family, her annoying
ex-boyfriend doing stupid stunts to try to win her back and all the
little, and sometimes petty, wishes she made. Where the book began to
falter, for me, was when the story shifted and began to tell the tale of
how Karou and Akiva originally met. It was very removed from the
setting I was already used to, and I was really not expecting that at
all. I went from being on a slightly magical/paranormal Earth to a
completely different world altogether, one where angels and monsters
fought a war on a daily basis. New city names, new geography, new
culture to know. The problem wasn’t the newness, it was just such a
sudden shift for me that it almost felt like a disconnect between the
first half of the book to the second half. The more I read, the more far
away I felt from everything I read prior. It almost felt like a
completely different story I was reading.
I wasn’t too crazy about was Karou and Akiva’s relationship either.
It’s very sweet, but as I mentioned earlier, it is at its core, a Romeo
& Juliet kind of story. Even though I praise the author for being so
imaginative with it, the relationship is still as simplistic as what
you think a Romeo & Juliet story would have. Their relationship is
powerful, deep and passionate — and also quite instant. Even though
Karou and Akiva started off as enemies, they very, very quickly put that
all aside and, well, fell in love. I know, I know — you are thinking,
“Uh, did you not READ the book? There is a reason!” I’m perfectly aware
but I think even when Karou and Akiva met originally in Karou’s past
life, it was still a lot of, “Wow, he’s so beautiful” and “Wow, she’s so
beautiful”, with some “I saved your life” mixed in. I’m afraid I just
didn’t feel the same fiery passion that these two character felt
whenever they were with one another.
Now, with all that said, I did love reading this book a lot though.
It was very fun and I became victim to the “just one more chapter”
syndrome that all good books seem to be able to inflict on its readers. I
liked Karou’s character a lot — not so much her “alter ego” (or rather,
her original form) because that personality seemed way too Mary Sue for
my liking. But I liked Karou and how she interacted with her human
friends and her monster family. I loved the idea of a monster hidden in a
little shop collecting teeth — don’t ask my why, but I’m very attached
to that idea and this book did a very good job driving me crazy with
wanting to know what the heck Brimstone was using the teeth for! You do
get to find out in the end, no worries. The book also did a good job
driving me crazy with who Karou was in her other life, but that one
became somewhat predictable and therefore, less mysterious once Akiva
entered the story and you see how they’re interacting.
I certainly recommend this book to anyone who enjoys YA novels, I do
think this is one of the better YA novels I’ve read in the last little
while. I eagerly look forward to book two: Days Of Blood &
Starlight!
My Rating: 4/5
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