Fictitious Musings review of COLD LIGHT
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Fictitious Musings review of COLD LIGHT

A fun new review of COLD LIGHT, just in time for my birthday….

Check out the intriguing and lively Fictitious Musings Blog “where  bookish people share their thoughts,” and read what they have to say about COLD LIGHT….

The After trilogy is a post-apocalyptic romance story that is as heart-breaking as it is realistic. …Slatton once again has created a brilliant post-apocalyptic world that will have you on the edge of your seat. I couldn’t read it fast enough.”

 

The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo Trilogy: Modern Classic

The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo Trilogy: Modern Classic

I finished the last book with a sharp pang: I had read them all. There were no more to read. I felt a sense of loss.

Stieg Larrson simply wrote three of the most compulsively readable, engaging books I’ve read in decades. The characters were fantastic, complex and multi-dimensional and intriguing, flawed but heroic. I cared about Lisbeth Salander and Mikael Blomkvist. I liked them and I was rooting for them.
When I discussed the books with my mother, who reads continually, she said, “When Lisbeth got her revenge, I stood up and cheered!”
I could see my mother at her kitchen table with a cup of coffee, standing up to holler as Lisbeth took her vengeance. It’s that kind of novel. It moves you to your feet.
The books are suspenseful: the engine of the plot works robustly. I always look for that in a novel. Does the story move forward? Does it build suspense and tension? Yes, yes, yes for this trilogy.
One of my rules for writing novels is that every story is an argument for a specific value. The value at the heart of the Millennium trilogy is suggested by its original title “Men who hate women.” It has something to do with sexual politics, with the power dynamic between men and women, a power that, at its basest level, comes out of physical strength alone, without making reference to intelligence or character. But that’s at the most base, least evolved level.
Tiny, waifish Salander with her multiple piercings and autistic affect gives the lie to the importance of physical size. She is a trained fighter. She is a resourceful person with hidden gifts. She doesn’t give up and she takes her power into herself. She isn’t traditionally beautiful, she isn’t seductive or pleasing, and she doesn’t fit the stereotypical sitcom image of the good girl we all root for.
But we all root for her. She stays in the reader’s imagination for long after the back cover closes over the pages.
Contrast Salander’s complexity with the nauseating and stupefyingly stupid simplicity of the female character in “Fifty Shades of Gray,” who has a fictional life solely to dither about whether or not to let her naughty handsome billionaire boyfriend spank her. Oh yes, and to surprise herself by having orgasms. Lots of orgasms.
That female character was so insipid and forgettable that I’ve forgotten her name. I couldn’t bring myself to read more than the first half of the first book; the prose was embarrassingly badly written, appallingly badly written. It’s fascinating to me that the author is making so much money with such a pile of crap.
Don’t misunderstand, I had high hopes for “Fifty Shades” of silliness. Mommy porn? Sounded fun to me: I’m game! But the disappointment that I felt wasn’t that the novel was over, it was disappointment that prose this poorly written, and characters this vapid, and a plot this nonexistent, was being published so extravagantly. I would have welcomed well-written mommy porn that didn’t feature an inane female protagonist.
But this goes to show the power of my rule of novels: Every story is an argument for a value. The value behind “Fifty Shades” of mental retardation is that female orgasm is good. Oh, yes, yes Yes YES IT’S GOOD!
Women like that value $$. Duh.
Fortunately, there is a character like Lisbeth Salander to offset the rank idiocy of “Fifty Shades.” Lisbeth is the agent of her own sexuality. Lisbeth chooses her pleasures.
According to Wikipedia, Larrson witnessed the gang-rape of a young woman when he was young, and it haunted him. It led him into thinking deeply about gender relations, and The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo trilogy is a meditation on the power dynamics between the genders, and how men feel about women, especially strong women, women who defy traditional roles and categorizations.
Basically, insecure men want to hurt women they can’t control.
It’s not an accident that Blomkvist’s magazine profiles sex trafficking in the second book, “The Girl who Played with Fire.” Men who hate women see them as objects for their use.
At one point, I think in the last book, Larrson refers to Salander as ‘the girl who hated men who hate women.’ I’m paraphrasing because I was too caught up in the story to remember exactly, though I took note of that phrase. Lisbeth Salander personifies defiance of the approved female roles. She just isn’t going to be objectified.
So the trilogy was deeply pleasurable on many levels. It worked as a riveting story with characters who grabbed you and didn’t let go no matter what. It also worked on the intellectual level, with ideas that matter.
Read The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo trilogy. I recommend it. It will satisfy you and make you think, both at the same time.
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
Tynga’s Reviews: Review and Giveaway of FALLEN
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Tynga’s Reviews: Review and Giveaway of FALLEN

Tynga's Reviews

Tynga’s Reviews is a fun and far-reaching blog out of Ontario. Here’s the link to the Giveaway for FALLEN and COLD LIGHT and here’s the link to the review:

Emma is one of the few who has survived and she has gained the ability to heal with the touch of her hands. I loved her as a main character because she is so solid and strong…. Some type of romantic relationship develops between Emma and Arthur. I love the basis of the relationship, although I totally didn’t expect what happened between them in the first chapter. I have to admit, their bickering and their fighting is quite engaging and it’s the reason the love story behind the book is so interesting. I don’t want to spoil any surprises but it’s quite obvious, as you read the book, that secrets will create a lot of tension, not only between Emma and Arthur, but between the whole group of survivors. … As a whole, I really enjoyed this novel. It’s quite dark at times with the death of so many people and the fighting amongst gangs of survivors…Traci L. Slatton added a great amount of these details, creating a realistic image of a brutal world…Slatton is  a wonderful discovery and fans of the genre will be satisfied with FALLEN since, not only is it very original, but it also has a good solid love story at the heart of the book.”

A new great review of COLD LIGHT
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A new great review of COLD LIGHT

COLD LIGHT on Night Owl Reviews

I have wonderful readers. I’m grateful to them all.

Here’s a thoughtful and impassioned review of COLD LIGHT on Night Owl Reviews.

By the way: I love getting emails from readers!

COLD LIGHT on Night Owl Reviews

Cold Light

After, #2

It has been over a year since Emma returned to the safe zone. She and her daughter Mandy have been reunited with Emma’s husband, Haywood and Beth, her oldest. For a year they have been living as a family in a relatively secure area in Canada. That is until bandits raid the town and kidnap Beth. Now Emma must go alone into treacherous subzero temperatures and travel many miles on foot to save her. Along the journey she runs into Arthur, who sailed across the Atlantic with their friends to find Emma. As she travels with them she is torn between the love of her husband and Arthur, who she has never been able to forget. With their destination drawing near, she must make the hardest decision of her life.

The last time Emma had seen Arthur on the shores of France, she was heartbroken and certain he was as good as dead. Having Arthur in her life again is sweet torture. How can she return to a life with Haywood when Arthur owns her heart and soul? The only thing she is sure of on the entire journey is that she must save her daughter. Everything else would have to wait.

Arthur has only ever loved Emma. He dreams of ridding the world of the mist, permanently and he knows he needs Emma with him if he is to succeed. Not only to complete him emotionally but also to use her special psychic powers. The mist is stronger and has changed somehow. His power to control the mist is not enough without her.

This series continues to haunt me. I fell in love with the characters in the first installment, Fallen. Within this story, the characters have changed for the better. The tension was high throughout the story. As the reader joins in the adventure, they continue to wonder if Emma will be in time to save her daughter, if she will give into the overwhelming love and desire between her and Arthur and if the mist will catch them. The surprises were thrilling and sprinkled within the story adding fun to an already compelling plot. The ending is left open allowing for the possibility of third installment. For which this reader, hopes is more than a possibility. I have loved both books in this series.

Guru Purnima
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Guru Purnima

Guru Purnima

I enjoy the holidays of many religions. Today July 3 was Guru Purnima, the day of celebrating divine teachers. The word “Guru” breaks down into “Gu” darkness and “Ru” dispel, eliminate. So this day is a day to honor the teachers who bring divine light to dispel ignorance.

Many teachers throughout the years have blessed me with their wisdom and light. To all of them I say: Thank you. To my teachers both in and out of the diverse schools I’ve attended: Thank you. My life is richer and brighter because of all those beings who have graciously shared their light with me.

Thank you also to the wonderful Komilla Sutton who has guided me in mantras and jyotish. I recommend her heartily.

 

Review of Dystopian Romance book Cold Light (After Series) by Traci L. Slatton
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Review of Dystopian Romance book Cold Light (After Series) by Traci L. Slatton

Review of Dystopian Romance book Cold Light (After Series) by Traci Slatton

Paromantasy blog is lively and exciting. Check out their new review of COLD LIGHT–the first blog review of this novel!

This book in one sentence: A haunting, heartwrenching, action-packed emotional roller coaster of a read that will leave an impression on you long after your finish the book.
To say that I love this book or this series would be an understatement. Traci Slatton has done an immpecable job with what I thought would be an impossible hurrdle for her two main characters to overcome after the ending of Fallen. Not only did she do the impossible, but she made me love the characters and the new additions to the book even more.
Emma has seen, faced and survived the impossible. She has seen the world destroyed by mists that ravage everything in its path. She survived while caring for her child and several abandoned children. She offered her body to a man, Arthur, in exchange for his protection and shelter in his camp and  found unexpected love in a world filled with grief. She found out that her husband and other daughter survived in a safe-zone in Canada. She also discovered that Arthur is the cause for the mists and that her husband risked his life to come for her. She leaves with her husband to Canada, but her heart remains with Arthur…