Winterkill, is the first in a stunning new YA series, perfect for fans of The Hunger Games and Patrick Ness.
No one leaves the settlement if they want to survive.
Emmeline knows this, but the trees in the woods are whispering to her, pulling her towards the wayward path.
Inside the safety of the wall is a marriage she doesn't want, and a boy she can't have. But outside? The malmaci lies in wait, and the freezing Winterkill is coming . . .
'I ripped through, desperate to know the secrets behind this captivating world . . . Thrilling and touching . . . Emmeline is a character I won't soon forget.' James Dashner, author of The Maze Runner
'A great read.' BookTrust
'I could go on and on about this lyrical and memorable novel.' We Love This Book
- ISBN10 057131371X
- ISBN13 9780571313716
- Publish Date 2 September 2014
- Publish Status Active
- Publish Country GB
- Imprint Faber & Faber
- Edition Main
- Format eBook (EPUB)
- Pages 288
- Language English
Reviews
Written on Nov 24, 2014
cornerfolds
Written on Aug 23, 2014
When I first saw this book one thing came to my mind: The Village. I think this is an obvious conclusion to draw from the description and I'm clearly not the only one to go there. Coming out of this reading experience (and it really is an experience), however, this book was so much more than what I'd expected.
Winterkill is about Emmeline as she approaches her sixteenth birthday. She is thrown off guard when she receives a proposal from an unlikely suitor at the same time that she finds herself falling in love with someone else. The love triangle, while technically there, did not feel like much of a "love" triangle at all and was tactfully handled.
The characters in this book were very well developed - especially that of Brother Stockham, the settlement's leader. I found him to be, at first, not that bad. I honestly couldn't understand what Emmeline disliked so much about him. It wasn't until much later (after the onion of his true self started revealing itself) that I found myself truly repulsed. Emmeline herself was an enjoyable protagonist. It was easy to sympathize with her need to discover more of the world beyond what she has always known.
The world building in this book is kind of a multi-faceted issue. What the author shares of the world is amazing. I could fully envision the wall and the woods beyond. Everything about the settlement made me feel like I was there. My problem with the world the author lays out is that there's not enough backstory for my liking. There is no way to know whether this story is set in the future or the past, although, maybe that was intentional. It certainly does add to the mystery surrounding the settlement and its history. While I wasn't sure about the strange, not-quite-placeable dialogue at first, it really did end up adding a lot of authenticity to the story and made me feel even more immersed.
Now my favorite: The plot of Winterkill is outstanding and it really made the story for me! I am all about a plot driven story. I was afraid right along with the rest of the settlement when I was supposed to be afraid and excited when I was supposed to be excited. While the beginning was a little slow, once Emmeline started venturing beyond the walls and into the woods, this book was really, REALLY hard to put down. And I really had to put it down because it was the first week back at my university!
Winterkill is The Village meets The Forest of Hands and Teeth while still being entirely original. The author has done an amazing thing here and I really cannot recommend this book enough!
jnikkir
Written on Aug 21, 2014
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I've decided to conduct a little experiment. I just finished reading Winterkill a few minutes ago, and usually I wait a day or so to start writing my reviews, and I end up writing them in two sittings. Well, I'm gonna see if I can write a full review immediately after finishing this book. I feel like this is a good book to start with, too, because I have a lot of THOUGHTS that are fresh in my mind. Unfortunately, most of these thoughts are not excellent. -_- So let's do this.
First off, Winterkill wasn't all bad. It did manage to grab my attention in the beginning, otherwise I would've DNF'd. The writing was good - the book is narrated by the main character, Emmeline (Em), and she speaks with a slight Western-inspired slang (not like, "talkin' and walkin'", but like, "unnatural quiet"). I found her narration to be easy to jump into, and the world pretty intriguing.
Em lives in a settlement basically in the middle of nowhere. There's no technology, nor mention of it - so think like, early American settlers, kind of thing. The community is surrounded by a high wall and the rules are incredibly strict. Like, capital punishment just for wandering too far from the settlement. ...Okay, I thought, this is crazy but I want to know what's going on. Em has what appears to be a very active imagination, tending to daydream a lot and imagine things when she's in the woods gathering things for the town healer. She's convinced there are other people out there, the Lost People, whom she wants to find, and who seem to whisper to her through the trees. Em is a very isolated character, though, because her family is "stained" by the wrongdoing of her grandmother, and pretty much everyone in the settlement looks on her with disdain. So she sort of keeps to herself, deciding to wander farther and farther from the settlement in search of these Lost People.
This sets things up pretty well... But guys, this. book. drags. I read 50% in one evening, which was fine, I just sort of powered through it hoping it would pick up and sort of enjoying the dreamy quality of Em's narration and curious where things would go. But from that point on, it took me twice as long to get through -- it felt like we were getting nowhere and I had very little inclination to keep going. A couple things happened here and there, but what really got me -- the most boring part of this book -- were the characters. Em, her friend Tom, the handsome Kane, and Stockham, the town leader.
These characters... how do I explain this...? So, okay, you know when you meet a character for the first time, and you get an impression of them, and then as the book continues, that impression changes and grows and (hopefully) forms into a complete picture by the end? Well, for me, not a single character had changed at all by the end of the book. They were -- and still are -- the same as my first impressions of them in the very beginning.
Q: What does this do to a book, when characters are so... static? Boring? A: It kills it. Totally smashes my interest in it. Em was just not an engaging character. She seemed to stay at the same emotional level throughout the whole book, even when she was in perilous situations. Or when she did get emotional, or was put in danger, her tone was still just... boring. The characters themselves all seemed to be one-trick ponies. Em was sort of dreamy and curious about stuff, but still pretty demure (where was that "quick tongue" mentioned in the blurb?! I didn't see it even once); Tom, her friend, is pretty straight-laced and skeptical; Kane is interested in Em... for some reason... and that's pretty much it. And Stockham is creepy and also interested in Em. For some reason. Though some characters' actions were a little surprising in the end, they never really showed a true depth, nor did they have well-explained reasons driving their actions.
This leads me to another issue I had with this book... the fact that two guys (yet again...) were both interested in Em. Okay, I can deal with triangles. But in this case, neither one had any history with her, or real reasons why they loved her sooooooooooo much. O_o Kane and Stockham spend hardly any time with Em through the course of the book, and yet they're both totally head over heels for her pretty much the second she "comes of age" or whatever, and is officially old enough to get married (or "bound" as her settlement calls it). Even if the two of them pooled their Em-time, it STILL would not have been enough time to base a relationship on. It was mind-boggling.
Finally, I was hoping that the end of this book would pull out some twists and excitement, wrap things up nicely, and I'd be left feeling like maybe this wasn't a total waste of time... But unfortunately, that was not the case. Stuff definitely happened, but it felt like fireworks being set off in no particular pattern or without any forethought. Exciting and loud and bright, but sort of just... all over the place and confusing.
In conclusion...
This was not my thing. The characters were boring and the story seriously dragged. Additionally, I was expecting two other things that were not delivered: worldbuilding that made some semblance of sense, and... you know... snow.
Regarding the worldbuilding - it's incredibly sparse. Basically you just have to take the settlement and its crazy rules at face value (there are some explanations but I found the a bit unbelievable), and don't expect answers about the outside world. There aren't any. There are vague hints, but absolutely no answers.
Regarding the lack of snow -- that was a surprise! Look at that cover! I expected them to be fighting blizzards; and with a title like Winterkill... I mean... really? But no. We get a bit of a cool breeze in the first 95% of the book, and then two vague pages of this legendary, terrible winter, and then it's spring again. What?! -_-
Yeah. I really didn't love this one. And in fact, I had no idea until just now when I looked at the author's website, but this is apparently the first in a trilogy. Suffice it to say, I will not be picking up the next book. This was just not for me.
Plus side: Apparently this book was good for something - I finished a review in one sitting! In an hour! This is a miracle for me. So... thanks, Winterkill?
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There were books involved...