Angie
Shadowshaper was quite fun and unique. Although at times I couldn't help but think about that SpongeBob episode Frankendoodle (which is one of my favorites, but still weird). The ability of the shadowshapers is really interesting, but also creepy at times. I mean, pulling a spirit into a drawing and having it come to life to do your bidding is pretty awesome. Unless you're power mad like the villain is, which is when things go terribly wrong. Of course, there's also family secrets. I love family secrets!
The one thing I didn't like about Shadowshaper was that the pacing was very inconsistent. There's infodumps, then Sierra is dancing, then there's some action, then another infodump, more dancing, then more action. Lather, rinse, repeat. It was just very up and down which made my attention waiver. I wanted to know more about how shadowshaping worked and why the villain was doing what he was doing, but it all took the form of "lessons" from Robbie, Sierra's brother Juan, or a librarian named Nydia. Then those lessons are interrupted by baddies, and pick up later on. It was rough.
In the end, I enjoyed Shadowshaper. It was a bit of a bumpy ride and I definitely wanted more world-building. But it was a fun, one-sitting story. I'm not sure if it ended with me being invested enough to want to read more though.
Read more of my reviews at Pinkindle Reads & Reviews.