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Natalie Wright

Autor von Emily's House

14 Werke 131 Mitglieder 19 Rezensionen

Über den Autor

Beinhaltet den Namen: Natalie Wright

Reihen

Werke von Natalie Wright

Emily's House (2011) 38 Exemplare
The Deep Beneath (1872) 32 Exemplare
Emily's Trial (2012) 15 Exemplare
The Makers (2016) 6 Exemplare
Emily's Heart (2013) 5 Exemplare
Origins (2017) 5 Exemplare
Make in a day : modern frames (2017) 4 Exemplare
Garlands (2017) 3 Exemplare

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Wissenswertes

Ausbildung
Ohio State University, JD
Ohio State University, B.A.E.
Berufe
Attorney
Fiction Writer
Organisationen
Society of Children's Book Writers and Illustrators
Alliance of Independent Authors
Kurzbiographie
Natalie writes young adult and adult science fiction and fantasy. She lives in Tucson, Arizona with her husband, daughter and two cats. She was born in Ohio and grew up on a farm. She moved to the desert southwest in 1994 and practiced law in Tucson for 20 years but not writes full-time. Natalie travels extensively across the western U.S. meeting readers and appearing on panels at comic cons and book festivals.

Mitglieder

Rezensionen

Did someone say dragons? I love stories about dragons and getting lost in fantasy worlds, but it took a while for me to get involved in the story and connect with the characters.

Quen knew she was not like others, with two different colored eyes and…well, that’s a secret. Did her father want her hidden because she’s a shapeshifting Rajani sorceress dragonmancer destined to destroy the human world?

Her curiosity and need to know what Kovatha Imbica wanted with her father, made her leave her home and walk into the desert, searching for answers. What she finds is more than she could have expected. She finds a friend, a love interest, Mishny (who cracked me up and, most definitely, is not a friend), Nivi, mages, dragons, and so much more. There are those that want to love her and help her, and those who want something else from her. Will she be able to save herself and merge her souls, or will the curse be the end of her?

The world building takes us across the desert, to the mountaintop, into caves and villages that hold intrigue and danger.

I think the fact I read Season Of The Dragon on my computer may have lessened my enjoyment. Also, I feel this is for teens and young adults, so the hot dragons and sexy scenes that I long for are absent. My three star review does not stop me from wanting to know what comes next.

At the end of the book is a list of pronunciations for the names and words that are probably foreign to you, a glossary of terms, and an explanation of the religion and mages.

I voluntarily reviewed a free copy of Season Of The Dragon by Natalie Wright.

See more at http://www.fundinmental.com
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sherry69 | Mar 6, 2023 |
Enjoyable YA sci-fi with likeable teen characters. I loved Half9 and his friends, and cried toward the end. I wonder if it would have made more sense to set it in the 90s though. I think in 2020 the kids would have immediately made videos of Half9 on their mobiles and uploaded them to the internet. There’s no mention of mobiles at all in this book, which felt a little anachronous to me, especially with a group of teenagers. But that's a minor quibble, I enjoyed it and have added book 2 to my wish list.… (mehr)
 
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EvBal | 6 weitere Rezensionen | Nov 4, 2022 |
Meh. Based on the writing style I'd say this is a tween/early teen book. Now, that's not a bad thing necessarily. However, if you're going to write a book clearly for younger readers, lay off the swearing! Maybe there are enough parents who don't really care, but I wouldn't feel comfortable recommending this book to a 12 year old knowing there are F-this, shit-that, damn-here and ass-there. I figure the quantity and severity made this an older teen book, but the writing just wasn't there.

It drug in the middle...bah...it SO stalled out I almost gave it up.

The editing was pretty bad. I've seen worse, but it was pretty bad.

The really trite cliches got on my nerves.

If there is a second book I will not read it. (Unless of course after ten minutes I completely forget about this book and don't realize it's the sequel?)
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Amelia1989 | 3 weitere Rezensionen | Jun 10, 2019 |
*I was given this free review copy audiobook at my request and have voluntarily left this review.

We pick up where the second book, The Makers, ended with our characters. They are all still separate in a work of turmoil as a few major cities on Earth are attacked by a deadly alien. Erika, Jack, Ian, Tex, and Alecto learn what they must do to save the world.

Dylan voices the story with different feelings in his voice for the characters, even different tones for our characters. One thing that I struggled with though, the audio sounded as though there was an object that moved in front and away from the microphone, blocking it and sounding muffled from time to time. I always wonder if it's my iPod or if it's the actual audio when I hear these things. There is one small section that's repeated, missed in editing. But these are small if you are looking to listen to the ending of the series.

Everyone's in tough spots. They've all done things they aren't proud of, and still doing those things to survive. There are attacks in Europe - London and Paris - putting the area in darkness. The attack on Earth has started. The world feels to be falling apart and Tex, Erika, Jack, and others feel to be the glue to bring it all together and save the world.

We get a few POVs that tell us what is happening as information is gathered from different directions. We stay with our friends, all in different areas as they fight to survive. Erika, Jack, and Tex. We also get to see through William Croft's eyes. He's one of The Makers and has insight to what was created to save them when the attacks started. Ian wasn't as much a main character in this book as he was in the past. And we got a point of view for the captain of the M'Uktah who have invaded the Earth.

Our friends learn much about themselves as they age in feelings and mind through this book. They live through terrible tragedies and have to do things to survive they don't want to do, like kill. But through this they see things are changing, and so are they. They even find loves in their lives they never thought they'd find, and worry about what their dear friends would think.

The M'Uktah we see here learns much about his world and what was to happen to him based on those who were around him. I thought at the end that there's possibly more to the story with M'Uktah and on their world. But things care cleared up here on Earth for everyone.

We see Tex and our friends figure out what to do with the M'Uktah along with what happens to the The Makers organization that had plans in place for when the M'Uktah arrived. This was the reason all of this started, with Tex and Alecto, bring the story full circle for the reason Tex and Alecto and the underground city were created.

Tex grows as a person as well. He makes some huge discoveries but also learns what it's like to be a teenage boy in love. He has some huge decisions to make. Alecto struggles a little with not being commanded by Lillian Sturgis. Alecto feels she was created to take and follow commands, so this is something she needs to learn to work through, and become an individual.

The title of the book is true to the story. Origins. We learn where the human race along with others came from. This is a journey that Tex needs to make to figure out how to save the people he's come to care deeply about. In doing so, he learns of the origin of his people along with humans and other races in the universe. This is where the story stretched further than just aliens in science fiction fantasy.

There are lines in the story that feel as though they were lines the author wanted to use like others have. These lines are ones that feel to be said in about every other book. I would have loved these to be written differently. All I do and will do are for you, where one ended and the other began - in a love scene, emotions run high, they are a matched pair, she fits perfectly to him. Ugh. Put these in different words. It would have felt to have fit the writing style better for me if the author reworded these sayings.

These small sayings aside, the book came to a conclusion for the series. It all comes together as things tie up.
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MelHay | 1 weitere Rezension | Jan 20, 2019 |

Auszeichnungen

Statistikseite

Werke
14
Mitglieder
131
Beliebtheit
#154,467
Bewertung
3.8
Rezensionen
19
ISBNs
21

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