A Court of Thorns and Roses by Sarah J. Maas (A Court of Thorns and Roses #1)
A list of things I am suppose to be doing instead of this:
1.) Laundry- Always laundry
2.) Potentially paying attention to my children- They have Legos and Play-Doh. They don't need me
3.) Finishing invoices and taking inventory after being at sales events all weekend
4.) Figuring out how badly all of these new f'n tax laws are going to screw me over- My accountant is probably going to kill me
Other things I will probably do instead of any of the above things:
1.) Make another pot of coffee- How am I suppose to do any of the other things without more coffee?
2.) Update all of my reading challenges
3.) Schedule Facebook posts for my business
4.) Take a look the spirit schedule for the week and figure out how to wear yoga pants to work for the next four days
Anyway.
Let me start by saying this book is not anything I would normally pick for myself. It has all of the characteristics of a books I avoid. Some of those things include over-promotion on sites like Amazon and Goodreads (which makes sense because they are the same) or books classified as romance. I'm not a huge romance reader. I'm just not.
So then why did I read this book? It was gifted to me two years ago in a secret Santa book swap. One of my reading goals this year is to read more of my unread books on my physical bookshelves. I'm plotting a trip to my favorite used bookstore in the near future. Worst case scenario, I don't like the book and I can trade it for something else on my trip.
This wasn't a bad book. I have definitely read worse and I have most definitely read better. However, I made the mistake of reading reviews at about the halfway mark. I try really hard not to read too many reviews about a book I am currently reading. Occasionally when I am on the fence about if I want to finish a book, I will see if any friends have read the book and read their reviews. In this case a lot of friends have read this particular book. Most of them mentioned how this novel was a re-telling of the Beauty and the Beast story. After digesting this nugget of information, the story telling became predictable. I was hoping for at least one plot twist but it never came. I was hoping that with this book being part of a larger series, the end would not be one of those happy endings wrapped with a big bow. This bow was big and it glittered.
Maybe at this point you are asking yourself "How did you give a book three and a half stars when it doesn't sound like you really liked it?"
That's an excellent question. Here's my answer- The writing wasn't terrible. Once I was through the first 100 pages, things took off. The plot moved along quick enough to keep my interest. The heroine wasn't overly whiny but at the same time she wasn't really anything special. Although I found myself confused about why she would find herself attracted to Tam in the first place. In my defense, I wonder that every time my children watch Beauty and the Beast. Don't get me wrong, gifting me a library would probably get you something but not a life long-head over heels-leave my family- kind of commitment. At the end of the novel, I found myself wondering why this book hasn't been created in to a cheesy movie franchise. It certainly has all of the necessary requirements along with the potential for Hollywood to get it all wrong.
At the end of the day what does all of this mean? Not much. Will I pick up the next book in the series? Maybe when the day comes that my oldest daughter wants to pick up this series. It seems like it could be an entertaining mother/daughter buddy read. For now, I'm returning to my regularly scheduled mystery and historical fiction reading channel.