Reviewed by jeannamichel on
I loved this novel. I do not want to give too much away, so this review will have minimal spoilers. Falling Under has taken me on such an amazing ride that I feel like I am falling under a spell as well. I couldn’t stop reading. I was supposed to be studying for a test that I have and I just could not stop taking my eyes off the pages. I needed to know what happened next. Now that I am finished, I cannot stop thinking of it or thinking what the next installment will bring.
The whole concept is very intriguing. The whole dreamscape creates a plot that I have never encountered before. I have never read a novel quite like this. It was filled with so many twists and turns that I kept audibly making sounds of disappointment or joy whenever the plot got really good. So much so, the other people in the room with me have to think that I am crazy by now. However addicting it was, it was very Twilight-esque. There was the whole I’m-a-monster-I’m-no-good-for-you stuff going on for a while; Haden is too dangerous. Also there was the whole stalking issue before they met, which was a bit creepy (but no creepier than playing the Sims where you control their lives: if that makes any sense at all) and how Theia just had to Google to find out some information about dreams. Being a huge Twilight fan, I am not complaining. I thought the waking-dreams Theia kept experiencing were a new fresh story that I haven’t seen done before. I wasn’t even suspecting anything paranormal to come out of this. Truly, I knew nothing about the novel, going into it. I was surprised to discover that the paranormal factor is not what you’d expect (or at least I didn’t) and after all those vampires and werewolves that I’ve been stuck on lately, this is such a great change.
Theia was a torn character for me. She was so unsure and childish at first. She did everything her father said and no matter how many times Theia had explained the reasons for doing so, I just couldn’t relate. I’m not a natural rebel but I do not go to the lengths Theia did in pleasing her father. By the end, she was more independent. I love how the plot had changed and maybe even improved her character a bit. Haden was the bad boy that I wished I didn’t like, but liked anyway just because he was Haden. He was just so impossible that I felt like Theia every time he was on the page, that I was willing to grant his every whim.
Everyone knows how much I hate cliff-hangers, right? Well, this one is no different. However, I have to congratulate Falling Under for actually leaving me on a note that made me smile but that is still no excuse for leaving me while I still wanted more of the story.
The writing style was wonderful. Gwen Hayes has a voice that speaks and that runs through your mind like a movie when reading. It was so easy to just imagine every single detail in Falling Under. So much so that I think I may have fallen under and only now am I waking up from its lure.
Cover: 5
Characters: 5
Plot: 5
Writing Style: 5
Ending: 4
Overall: 5
Rated PG-13 for sexual references, violence, and some scary scenes.
Reading updates
- Started reading
- 26 November, 2011: Finished reading
- 26 November, 2011: Reviewed