sewerhill's reviews
138 reviews

Demian by Hermann Hesse

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5.0

This book astounded me in the first 100 pages. I was rather disappointed by the ending; it didn't match the beginning very well. Demian's refutations of religion in the beginning feel formulaic and logical, yet creative. As the story goes on, it loses this perspective and changes into something more metaphoric and at times even feels like the author probably did acid. I don't necessarily mind this, but when it came to the Frau Eva stuff I was not as patient. I know that Hesse was considered one of the first authors to use Freud, and it shows, but not in what I would call a rather.... Hinting at incest way (?) There's no incest in the book but the idea that sons secretly want to marry their mothers is... present. Of course, I understand that much of the book is metaphorical and/or needs more interpretation than what's on the surface. However, this will not stop me from critiquing it. Intellectualism doesn't protect books from criticism, and neither will my love for the first part of this book protect it from mine. Honestly probably one of my favorite books despite my gripes with the end.
A quote to sum up the experience:
"The bird fights its way out of the egg. The egg is the world. Who would be born must first destroy a world. The bird flies to God. That God's name is Abraxas."
Rating 4.3/5
Leonard Cohen: Poems and Songs by Leonard Cohen

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1.0

This is by far one of my most hated books of all time. I'm sorry to all the Cohen fans out there, but his poetry is quite awful.
Scythe by Neal Shusterman

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3.0

Okay, so I finished this book a few weeks ago, and now I've sat on it for a while I think I know what I want to say. I haven't read any YA fiction in quite a few years just because I got sick of the "Hunger Games" formula, and to be honest it still follows it to an extent, but it felt different enough from the Hunger Games that I wasn't particularly annoyed by this.

The Good Parts: Scythe is unique a in few way. Instead of a dystopia, it's a utopia (if the author intended this to be a dystopia then the goal wasn't really realized imo). The world building is interesting despite the nonsensicality of it at time. The Scythe journals are honestly more interesting than the book itself if I'm being honest but that might just be my own classic lit nerd tastes coming through. I read it because I was very immersed in the world building and the Scythedom itself; I didn't read it because I was invested in the characters (at least the main two).

The Bad Parts: The world building is, as stated before, at times nonsensical. Why do Scythes get to kill whoever they want, however they want? That doesn't seem right, especially in the utopia they live in. It can be defended with the idea that "it's a human thing because death is human blahblahblah" but honestly that just doesn't cut it. Mass gleanings by fire is ridiculous. On to the next segment: the characters. Scythes Currie and Faraday were very interesting characters and mentors. I enjoyed segments relating to them greatly. The main two fell flat. The romance was half baked, which is honestly probably part of why I enjoyed this book (I get sick of YA romance quickly so it being underdeveloped meant there was more focus on other things, which I enjoyed, not the halfbakedness of it). Then the villains. Honestly the most disappointing part of this book. It's extremely black and white. Goddard and his gang kill people in the most cruel ways possible and lack empathy. Boohoo. Allowed by nonsense world building and a disappointing copout in terms of what a convincing and relatable antagonist could have been. Especially considering what happened with Rowan.

All in all: I enjoyed this book a lot. It had me hooked and I'll probably read the other books in the series because I still found it interesting. Objectively? 3/5 but I almost gave it 4/5 just because of my personal enjoyment.
Tuck Everlasting by Natalie Babbitt

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4.0

Listened to this as an audiobook on a road trip. It's beautifully written and the way it presents death isn't something you often see in children's literature.