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swankivy

swankivy

Me am swankivy. Among other things, I am a writer, a daughter, a sister, an editor, a webmistress, an artist, a singer, and an administrative assistant. I will kick your butt in a game of ping-pong.

I like corn.

I'm a graduate of a four-year college. Degree is elementary education. Not too happy about it as I never wanted to... more »
  • Tampa, FL, USA
  • member since May 14 2008

Reviews

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Displaying 41-50 of 664 reviews
  • Wizards at War
    • Rated 5 stars

    I can't believe I didn't get around to reading Young Wizards 8 until now, but so be it. It was excellent as her books always are. I enjoyed the story of this rather different battle with the Lone One, and how the characters reacted when wizardry got turned on its ear. I don't think I'd have what it takes to be a wizard in their universe. . . .

    swankivy wrote this review Monday, June 29 2009. ( reply | permalink )
  • The Witches
    • Rated 3 stars

    This book was creepy . . . it's weird how Dahl managed to create his own mythology here. The witches were kind of a special kind of nearly-human monster. And the main character dealt with his predicament well--surprisingly well.

    swankivy wrote this review Monday, June 29 2009. ( reply | permalink )
  • Witch Child
    • Rated 2 stars

    I thought this was okay, and I read it because it seemed to have a somewhat historical perspective on the witch hunts. But it wasn't an actual true story, and it turned out a bit cheesy.

    swankivy wrote this review Monday, June 29 2009. ( reply | permalink )
  • The Wish List
    • Rated 4 stars

    It was an interesting idea, and even though I wasn't really in love with the characters or the ideas, I had to admit it was done well. Just about everything Mr. Colfer does he does well.

    This was a fantastic story, with some twists and turns a reader didn't anticipate and very likeble, varied characters. Motives were occasionally a tad weak, but then, not everything can be perfect. It was not very well edited, I found a ton of mistakes.

    swankivy wrote this review Monday, June 29 2009. ( reply | permalink )
  • The Wish Giver: Three Tales of Coven Tree
    • Rated 4 stars

    Scared the crap out of me at times when I was a kid. This was about a rather evil dude who comes through a small town and grants some wishes, but gives the people exactly what they ask for in as horrible a way as possible. A girl wishes people would listen when she opens her mouth and she finds herself unable to make any sound except bullfrog noises, I think. A young woman wishes her boyfriend would "put down roots" near her and he turns into a damn tree! It takes one smart, honest guy to undo the evil that's been done in these three related tales. I was very caught up by this book even though it sorta gave me nightmares.

    swankivy wrote this review Monday, June 29 2009. ( reply | permalink )
  • The Wish (rack)
    • Rated 2 stars

    I read this because I liked Ella Enchanted, but this wasn't as good, though it was an interesting concept and actually had the main character getting what-for for her actions rather than everything being hunky-dory at the end.

    swankivy wrote this review Monday, June 29 2009. ( reply | permalink )
  • Will the Last Person To Leave the Planet Please Shut Off the Sun?
    • Rated 4 stars

    This is a book of short stories that I read as an adolescent and just kind of latched onto. It is full of stories from every "mood" and really gives you a taste of lots of different kinds of science fiction, though I don't think I've read anything else of his (I should). "Death is an Acquired Trait" is my favorite story in the book. Ever thought about immortality? You'll never think of it the same if you read this.

    swankivy wrote this review Monday, June 29 2009. ( reply | permalink )
  • Wild Seed
    • Rated 5 stars

    One of my favorite books. Ms. Butler goes way back in time and invents Doro, a disembodied character who routinely possesses people and uses their bodies like clothes. It's both a curse and a great power, because he can't die and he'll end up in the body of the person closest to him when the body he's in dies. And over time he begins "breeding" people according to his tastes. Usually he just prunes his particular stock, but once in a while he adds "wild seed" to his flock in the form of a rare and talented individual.

    Enter Anyanwu, the nigh-immortal shapeshifting medicine woman who can heal people with a kiss. (Okay, it's more complicated and disgusting than that, but hey, it sounds cool.) They kinda make a good team. But she's wild in more than one way. . . .

    Really fun, intriguing book about a dark guiding force among humanity . . . and what eventually comes of such "meddling." It's hard science fiction, but like most of her books, Ms. Butler makes it personal, too.

    swankivy wrote this review Monday, June 29 2009. ( reply | permalink )
  • Wild Cards
    • Rated 4 stars

    This is a book of short stories set in one universe but written by different people. It's cool 'cause the basic idea is that the "wild card virus" got introduced to humanity from some aliens and it affected each person a different way. A lot of them died, a lot of them were transformed, and mostly the transformations were very bad--the ones who lived but were disfigured were "Jokers," and the select few who got some kind of beneficial transformation were called "Aces." This book had stories about both kinds of people, as well as about Dr. Tachyon, one of the aliens who helped develop the virus (but was against introducing it to humanity--obviously, he lost). I for the most part enjoyed the variation and the imaginativeness of both the universe and the stories themselves. I would read more "wild card" stories.

    swankivy wrote this review Monday, June 29 2009. ( reply | permalink )
  • The Wide Window: or, Disappearance
    • Rated 4 stars

    "If you haven't got the stomach for a story that includes a hurricane, a signaling device, hungry leeches, cold cucumber soup, a horrible villain, and a doll named Pretty Penny, then this book will probably fill you with despair."

    The third volume of A SERIES OF UNFORTUNATE EVENTS by Lemony Snicket begins with the Baudelaire orphans being sent to live with their Aunt Josephine. Josephine is afraid of bizarre things like doorknobs, ovens, and telephones, and therefore all food is cold, among other things. She is a grammar freak and expects impeccable grammar from all the children; even Sunny, who is pre-verbal because of being a BABY, is not excused from this. Aunt Josephine lives on a high mountain and is deathly afraid of almost everything outside, but somehow she is not afraid of Count Olaf when she meets him in his disguise of "Captain Sham." (This cannot be said for the Baudelaires; he frightens them quite a bit, even in his pirate-like guise as he attempts to woo Aunt Josephine.) Olaf slimes his way into the house and shares his mistyped business cards, revealing his bad grammar. And later, during a hurricane, Josephine is kidnapped, though Olaf forces her to write a pretend suicide note to explain her disappearance. Purposely making lots of grammatical errors, she is able to get a message to the children, which Klaus decodes, and the three children attempt to rescue her from the water-soaked cave where she is being held. Unfortunately she does not survive the ordeal, though that is expected because the author tells you she won't about halfway through. And of course the Baudelaires narrowly escape, and so does Olaf.

    swankivy wrote this review Monday, June 29 2009. ( reply | permalink )
Displaying 41-50 of 664 reviews

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