Product details:
Publisher: Little Bird Publishing House.
Paperback, 384 pages.
Release date: December 1st 2010.
Rating: 2 out of 5.
Ages: 14+
Source: Received from publisher for review.For seventeen year old Mina Singer, falling in love with an Arthurian Knight on a white horse was never part of the plan - especially being that she's an ordinary college girl living in the twenty first century.
As Mina finds herself catapulted into a land she believed only existed in the bedtime stories of her childhood, she soon discovers that Fairyland is not quite as innocent as she imagined.
The question is...who will come out alive?
Haunting, beautiful and sexy, The Forest of Adventures, is a dark romantic quest into the land of true and forbidden love.
If I could use one word to sum up Katie M. John's The Forest of Adventures, the first book in The Knight trilogy, it would be inconsistent. Essentially, this book is a modern fairytale, with it's roots in Arthurian Legend. It comes complete with a knight on a white horse in the pleasing form of Blake Beldevier and has a wicked villain in sorceress Morgan Le Fay. The idea here then, is interesting as is the exploration of Arthurian myths and legends, which is well researched and enjoyable. However the plot, pacing and writing style here is inconsistent, and the characters, especially the main character, Mina, did not appeal to me at all. Overall, the book for me was a case of good idea, poor execution.
When we meet Mina, she is going about her life pretty routinely. She's attending college, and has a long-term boyfriend, Sam, sometimes known as Sammy, who loves her dearly. Mina lives at home with Mum, who she sometimes refers to as Martha. Referring to characters by different names for no apparent reason at all is confusing for the reader, and I really don't know why the writer used this device. If you're going to do that, tell me about it instead of just deciding to refer to a character by a whole other name out of the blue. Anyhow, Mina seems pretty happy with her life, and yet, as soon as the mysterious Blake Beldevier arrives on the scene, she decides that she is completely and utterly in love with him, is no longer in love with Sam, and just for good measure, she promptly ditches all of her friends too. I didn't really understand what Mina found so appealing about Blake, save for his drop dead gorgeous looks. Granted, I guess that might be enough, but as a reader I need to know more about a character for them to appeal to me. Blake and Mina have a bond, and are seemingly linked by a prophecy, but we are never told all that much about this prophecy, which made their instant attraction and strong bond to each other a little unbelievable to me. Furthermore, for all of her seventeen years, Mina struck me as being wholly naïve and childish. I just couldn't connect with her character at all.
As soon as Blake arrives on the scene, Mina's life begins to get a whole lot more interesting, and many mysterious happenings occur. First of all, tragedy befalls somebody very dear to Mina, which you would think would have a major effect on her, but mainly she's too wrapped up in Blake to notice. Seriously, this girl needs to wise up! Various characters are introduced – friends of Mina's, members of her family, but their stories are never fully developed and aren't of much consequence to the plot. We're also introduced to Morgan Le Fay, the villain in this piece, and the plot follows on fairly predictably from here. There are attempts at a love triangle or two, but ultimately these just fall flat.
I also have to point out the numerous grammatical and spelling errors in this book. It's not something that I usually do, even if I am annoyed by it, but the mistakes in this one seriously affected my reading enjoyment. I received an e-book of this one for review, and I just hope that in the print copy of this book, these errors have been corrected.
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