#4

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finished reading Dawn on a Distant Shore by Sara Donati (Into the Wilderness, #2)

Sara Donati: Dawn on a Distant Shore (Paperback, 2001, Bantam Books) 2 stars

In an icy, untamed world of pristine beauty, a husband and wife are torn apart …

Seldom did I read a more boring book than this one. I was having a hard time to get through it, lost the thread more than once and asked myself why I keep on reading it.

Every series has at least one book that is chewy and takes some time to get through. With most of the series I read it was #4 of #5. With this series it was #2 already.

The story dragged on and on an on. I had a hard time to follow the story. And - like the 1st book - the end came too sudden. Sudden because finally the story gained.

I will start #3 and if this book is not catching me I'll sell the series.

reviewed Ronin Games by Marion G. Harmon (Wearing the Cape, #5)

Astra has returned to Chicago and the everyday life of a cape: getting kittens out …

Best book so far

5 stars

After book #4, I had pretty low expectations for this one. But it turned out to be really, really good. I loved it.

In this book, Astra & co go (uninvited) to Japan. Japan's method of dealing with supers is very different from the US, and more than a little affected by manga & anime. All supers are required to required to register with the government and undergo training, and all superhero teams are sponsored by the government. Anyone who doesn't register is called a ronin, and can be arrested on sight. Both heroes and ronin have fan clubs that gleefully dissect every scrap of news media about them, must like like modern idol groups.

(All this isn't just because the goverment feels like it -- the country is regularly besieged by kaiju and other threats. It needs a strong, coordinated defense.)

But Hope's life seems to depend on …

Astra has become one of the most popular Sentinels in Chicago, past scandals notwithstanding, and …

Not really part #4

2 stars

This is book #4 in the series, but it's not the fourth part. Apparently there's a short story, "Omega Night", and it contained both plot and character developments that significantly impact this book. However, even on the official author's website it's not listed between books 3 and 4. It's listed after the final book, among other "related works".

And the author doesn't really do a good job of recapping what happened, it's just an abrupt jump, and now Hope/Astra's angsting over a new crush that started during that book, freaking out over a danger to one of her friends that's due to events in that book, and a number of other sudden changes.

And these changes continue to casually come up over the course of the entire book, so that put a serious damper on my enjoyment of it.

Beyond that, the premise/setting was unique and somewhat interesting, but a …