Autorenbild.

Courtney Brandt

Autor von A Fine Line

11 Werke 61 Mitglieder 6 Rezensionen

Über den Autor

Beinhaltet die Namen: Ann Benjamin, Ann Benjamin

Bildnachweis: photo by Heidi Ryder

Reihen

Werke von Courtney Brandt

A Fine Line (2008) 14 Exemplare
Room 702 (2013) 10 Exemplare
The Line (2007) 8 Exemplare
Life After Joe (2015) 6 Exemplare
Keeping in Line (2009) 5 Exemplare
The Line Up (2010) 2 Exemplare
Take One at Mulholland High (2020) 2 Exemplare
Twenty Year Reunion (2020) 2 Exemplare
Major Pain (2012) 1 Exemplar

Getagged

Wissenswertes

Andere Namen
Benjamin, Ann

Mitglieder

Rezensionen

I loved this book and I thought of my own reunions that I never attended. I thought that Rebecca was a wimp by letting her ex-husband have her cell phone number and after she caught him cheating with his assistant, I wondered why she continued to talk with him as there were no children to consider. She debated going to her reunion and she did want to see her friend and her parents back in the States. Even though she shared a relationship with the now famous, Quinn Martel, that was almost fifteen years ago when they broke up. I liked Quinn and how he treated her compared to her ex-husband even though it was him that caused their break up. Once he learned that she was flying back with Quinn that he became jealous. What is it about the party who cheated couldn't not let go?… (mehr)
 
Gekennzeichnet
HOTCHA | Apr 24, 2020 |
I love the alternate history used in this book. It kept me interested the entire time. Looking forward to the next one.
 
Gekennzeichnet
Sonja-Fay-Little | 1 weitere Rezension | Jan 24, 2019 |
Queen Victoria is dead, killed along with her whole family in a terrible terrorist attack that shook the empire and led to Juliette, young, inexperienced and far from the throne as the next queen

The New World Order has claimed responsibility for the deaths and threatens not just Juliette’s reign but the world itself; Juliette must try to expose this conspiracy while securing her nascent throne, some inconvenient romances and the hunt for Excalibur itself.

Fantastical Steampunk is one of my favourite genres - I do like the whole aesthetic and plot of running around in dirigibles with mechanical arms and steam powered gadgets - but to throw magic, unicorns (unicorns!!!) and arthurian legend in as well and I am sold. We’re taking those elements - magic and machines - and engaged in deadly attempt to take down a shadowy conspiracy that would plunge the whole world into chaos by any means necessary, with battles, shadowy plans and lots of hidden agendas and looking behind every corner for who the enemy is.

If anything I wish this book had explored this more because the world we have laid out here is really excellent. The existence of magic, Excalibur and air ships it all tantalises so much - but that’s kind of the theme of this book: tantalises. We have Excalibur with apparently lots of powers and perhaps its own agenda but we don’t really explore that.

We have a fascinating female crime boss with a shadowy but apparently legitimate past running around doing swashbuckling things… but we don’t really focus on her except as a provider of resources.

We have the American heiress to a major technological corporation pursuing an illicit love affair and ready to offer friendship - but we don’t really explore her

We have a street urchin turned footman with a mechanical arm and lots of streetwise contacts

We have a society of magic users who apparently follow the legacy of Merlin and have done so for generations - but they’re only mentioned.

A county whose principle resource is unicorns, is in much demand by European nations and appears to be African (it’s not explicitly stated but North Africa was implied), but we only get their prince visiting?

It’s like this whole book throws out a million fascinating storylines, characters, world building etc and we don’t actually spend much time on examining any of these amazing things instead focusing on Juliette

Who is a decent fun character but kind of overshadowed by the vast potential of everyone around her. Not because she’s bad, but because everyone else around her, everything else around her, could be so amazing

Part of this is because of the general feel of Juliette. I mean, I like Juliette - as a “plucky adventuress uses grit, determination and intelligence to overcome great odds” Steam Punk protagonist she’s great and would fit nicely with characters from Magnificent Devices, The Finishing School Series, Girl Genius, or even early Parasol Protectorate. Her character is fun and embodies many of the elements I love about the protagonists of these series

But she’s the Queen of England. She is the heir to Queen Victoria (who died, presumably early in her reign since there aren’t eleventy million heirs) at the height of the British Empire. This character running off alone, doing lots of things by herself, being on the front lines and generally not being surrounded by a gazillion staff. Even the assumption of a grand conspiracy from the very beginning seems highly dubious on the strength of one terrorist attack. Juliette has 1 maid, 1 aid of her father’s from before she became queen and a military captain - she picks up a couple of others along the way (complete strangers with no background checks which, again, makes no sense!) but this is a ridiculous lack of support for the Queen of England. The whole framing of her character just doesn’t make sense and we have a weird feeling of dodging between being helpless, alone and lacking resources and then jumping back to “I’m the richest and most powerful woman in the world”. It just doesn’t work and it blends with the odd band of misfits she has around her which… also doesn’t work.

Read More
… (mehr)
 
Gekennzeichnet
FangsfortheFantasy | 1 weitere Rezension | Dec 26, 2017 |
Reviewed by Melanie Foust for TeensReadToo.com

Bronwyn Flueger needs a way in. As the only girl in the highly competitive drum line at Forrest Hills High, it's obvious that the guys haven't taken a liking to her, especially the section leader, J.D. Strauss. Determined to be accepted, Bronwyn employs the help of the super cute drum major, Drew O'Malley.

With his help, they come up with a plan that they think is sure to work. Unfortunately, it backfires badly, leaving Bronwyn not only even more lonely than she was before with a crush that she's sure will never be returned, but also puts the entire band at odds. Bronwyn has to find a way to fix things, or else carry the guilt that the band's impending failure during the competitions is all her fault.

In turns hilarious and heartbreaking, Bronwyn's first year as part of the drum line is most definitely full of drama. Her inability to accept an unappealing situation can be simultaneously endearing and annoying. Brandt's writing gets you smiling and frowning right along with Bronwyn, riding the emotional roller coaster that dominates most any teen girl's life.

The most recent addition to Courtney Brandt's THE LINE series is a perfect read for those looking for an inside peek into the world of a high school band. From the competitiveness that sometimes arises between the different sections, the need to win at competitions, and the wonderful feeling you get when you know the band you're a part of just finished a perfect show, KEEPING IN LINE can make you feel like you're an actual part of the band. And you won't want to leave.
… (mehr)
 
Gekennzeichnet
GeniusJen | Feb 27, 2010 |

Statistikseite

Werke
11
Mitglieder
61
Beliebtheit
#274,234
Bewertung
½ 4.6
Rezensionen
6
ISBNs
7

Diagramme & Grafiken