Showing posts with label laurie lawlor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label laurie lawlor. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 26, 2017

AMERICAN SISTERS 1905 & 1912

I finished my reread yesterday and I've actually decided to sell this set of nine books. I don't think I'll be missing anything if I never reread them.

Pacific Odyssey was good because it was a different story, but it still had the asshole parents element combined with some horrible racism going on between the different ethnicities in both Hawaii and California.

The story kind of fell apart at the end. Things happened far too quickly, I thought.

Still you don't often have Korean protagonists in one of these books, just Chinese and Japanese, so points for that.


And I did not finish this one. The younger sister Erna is an ungrateful brat and she's the only one of the two that survives. Another of the girls on the ship is portrayed badly, and the thing that bothered me is that the author used actual people for this. Not their actual experiences, just their names. She did this with previous books, but she had more written sources, diaries, books, etc. to work with so you got an idea of the people. Not here. She literally just picked some names. So after reading that in the back of the book, I closed it and did not finish.

Next up is the Life and Times miniseries. I don't want to call them a trilogy, because there are 3 but they're not connected, and I don't want to say series because again, there are only 3. These books take place in ancient times, so we've got Maia in 1463 BC Egypt (with the most gorgeous cover art ever), Pandora in 399 BC Athens, and Atticus in 30 BC Rome. The Greek and Roman books were written by Barry Denenberg, who we all know and sometimes like, sometimes don't. The Egyptian one was done by Ann Turner, who wrote a couple Dear Americas.

Tuesday, September 19, 2017

AMERICAN SISTERS 1852 & 1864

These next two American Sisters may as well my titled "My family members are useless twunts."

Duck, the girl from the Wagon Road book, lost her mom and her dad turned into a solid ass. Her older sisters are all nasty bitches. The boys are barely characters, except for the one that ends up dying. Duck eventually does some day-saving, but it's yet another trail book and I'd say skip it and read Dear America instead. I'm not here for this nasty sister shit.


Eda from the Colorado book also has bitchy sisters, but she's got delusional parents, too. Her father went broke back in Pennsylvania, so he brought the family to look for gold with him. Her mother still acts like she's in high society and spends the majority of the book being a completely useless moron. Her oldest sister has one leg shorter than the other and a screwed up foot and lords everything over everyone, expecting to be waited on constantly. Her other older sister is not so bad, but she's like the mother a bit and still trying to do things the society way. The father does stupid things. The mother does stupid things. The two sisters get a bit better by the end. Also, the book's title is misleading, because the majority of it is the four females sitting around in a cabin or a tent, not crossing the Rockies.

Man, I remember this series being better than this. Might end up selling these!

Saturday, September 16, 2017

AMERICAN SISTERS 1775 and 1829

These next two books are quite similar, not in their subject matter or characters, but in that the action takes over the story and the character development falls by the wayside.

Wilderness Road takes place on the journey from Tennessee to "Caintuck." It follows two families, one more upper class and one very much not, the upper class family's slave and a couple single guys on their trip along a very dangerous road. They're constantly on the watch for Indians, although the ones they do meet are good people.

The eldest sister is the only one you get to know. The younger sister that plagues her constantly is only seen through her eyes and not really characterized. It's also completely unclear why the elder sister so wants the approval of the two older girls from the more upper class family when the entire trip they an their mother have been nothing but bitches. But she finally sees the light at the end.

It's a decent read, though I wish we could have gotten into Martha, the younger sister's, head. I mean, the series is called American SisterS, plural.

The Rio Grande book is quite different and I actually enjoyed it a lot. Rosita is 16 and her stepsisters are 17 and...I think 15? I can't remember how old Maria, the youngest one, is.

Rosita is about to be married to an old man and she's not happy about it. Nor is the 17-year-old because as the eldest, she thinks she should be first. Rosita's beauty is viewed as troublesome so the town basically told her father to marry her off, which is why she's the one being married first.

When a steamboat piloted by Americans comes by, Rosita runs away and hides on it, followed a short while later by Maria, who idolizes the older girl.

Maria is in disguise as a boy for most of the trip. Rosita pretends Maria (AKA Jose) is her servant, but the two are eventually found out as having no money, so they're turned into the ship's cooks.

There's a lot of drama with near mutiny, cholera, bandits and Indian attacks, but it's still good and the ending is decent.

Friday, September 15, 2017

AMERICAN SISTERS 1704

The next American Sisters book follows a pair of twins down the Boston Post Road in 1704.

The pair is indentured to a businesswoman. She receives a letter telling her to bring the girls to New York. She initially only takes one twin, but the other follows thanks to what isn't 100% clear but I consider a plot by the woman's mother.

Pretty much every character in the book is odd. The twins have typical twin oddities, the businesswoman is an opportunistic poetess, her daughter seems to only care about clothes but is better at the end, and the woman's mother speaks like a sailor.

This one is definitely full of Characters. It's another quick read, but not unenjoyable.

AMERICAN SISTERS 1630

American Sisters is a 9-book historical fiction series all by the same author, Laurie Lawlor. The series follows different sets of sisters on different journeys during different times in American history.

As with Dear America and all the other historical series I'm reviewing, I'm going in chronological order not order of publication.

The earliest book is set in 1630, when sisters Abigail and Hannah travel with their father and pregnant stepmother from England to America. They're Saints, so they have strict rules on how to behave.

Hannah is the most often used PoV character. Abigail is seen either through her sister's eyes or in short diary entries.

Hannah is the younger sister and the least like a typical "Saint." She's interested in people different than herself, but doesn't think badly of them, unlike her sister. She befriends a boy on the ship that isn't of their religion, which her sister both dislike for that reason and I think she's a bit jealous, too.

Abigail, the elder sister, is a pious twat. She fills her diary with rambling about religion, but also is obsessed with pretty clothes. She's judgmental of others in a bad way, where Hannah is open-minded.

Abigail's character never got turned around. She landed in the New World still overly pious and not very nice to her younger sister. I don't think she ever apologized for being a rat on the ship and getting Hannah's friend in trouble.

Abigail also bears a secret, one which makes this book quite bizarre. You see, the sisters' young stepmother is pregnant, but it's not by the girls' father, but their older brother! Caleb stayed behind in England and it's never made clear if they were found out by the father and that's why he went off to America, to separate them, or what. I don't think he knew, but I'm not sure. The relationship is very confusing, because the stepmother is an ass throughout the book and Caleb was nice during his short appearance, so I have no idea how they even hooked up. They're about the same age at least. One of the girls noted that early on. Abigail figures out the baby's real father, but ends up burning her diary at the end of the book, making sure no one else can learn the secret through her writing. The baby is stillborn, so that's how that ends up. It was a very bizarre addition to what is otherwise a typical kids' historical fiction book. And it's never really dealt with, which is frustrating. You've got a very adult storyline there and it's just not handled well.

The book was an easy read and I enjoyed the characters of Hannah and her friend Zach, but not the others. It's been a long time since I've read this, so it's going to be fun rereading them. I don't remember much about them at all!