Wednesday, June 16, 2010

hush, hush

“hush, hush”by Becca Fitzpatrick

Three Stars – I liked it.

If you loved Twilight … then you’ll probably think ‘hush, hush’ is alright.

Okay, first off, I actually read this book over a month ago and then loaned it to my friend, so I don’t have it readily available to fact check, but hopefully my memory will hold up well enough.

I do not understand the title to this book at all. I think they went with it mostly because “Fallen” was already taken by another novel about fallen angels, but why they picked ‘hush, hush’ I will never be able to guess. But they do get serious props for the cover art – love it.

Nora leads a fairly normal teenage life (except for the fact that her father was recently murdered) until the day that she gets a new, mysterious lab partner in biology (sound familiar?). She is instantly attracted to Patch and not sure if his bad boy rep is holding her back or just adding to his allure. Then weird, scary events start to happen, the only problem is that Nora’s not sure if they actually are happening or if she’s just loosing her mind, and she’s pretty sure she’s being followed. Add in the fact that her mom has a job that takes her away from home for days at a time, leaving Nora home alone in their secluded old farmhouse and the stage for disaster is set.

I don’t feel like I’m ruining any surprises by mentioning that Patch is a fallen angel, and not just any angel, an Arch Angel (I’m pretty sure the cover art gave it away). The angel mythology was my favorite part of the book. Towards the end, it started to go into how fallen angels first came to be, how and why they fall, and the different ranks and jobs of angels. I really got into this idea and hoped that the author would expand on this aspect of the story, but, it was not to be. I was really left hanging and wanting more on this topic.

The rest of the story was okay. It really was a bit juvenile, and a lot of the situations seemed forced and awkward. Like the author was just trying too hard to create romance and sexual tension. And once again, I just didn’t really bond with the main character. Everything about her and her situation just seemed forced. Especially how the author kept making a big deal of the fact that she was anemic and needed to pop iron pills all the time. I’m pretty sure this was included just to make her seem more ‘vulnerabe’with a medical problem and to allow for one scene in particular to work. She wasn’t exactly annoying per say, but she wasn’t very interesting either.

I was more interested in most of the minor characters, their relationships, and the subplots going on. They were far more interesting with much better background and motivation for the most part. You know, I’ve read several books lately with the same issue, maybe it’s me …

The book still scores three stars because it was a fun read, and because it has a sequel coming out later this year, “Crescendo”, on which I am pinning my hopes that the angel mythology will become a much larger part of some overall plot.