Wednesday 1 February 2017

The Court of Fives


By Kate Elliot

As a child of mixed-race, Jessamy is torn between her duty as a Patron and her longing for the freedom of the Commoners. In particular, Jessamy is determined to compete in The Court of Fives, a dangerous multilevel competition. Through the Fives, Jessamy achieves that sense of freedom and begins making friends such as Kai, a highborn Patron boy. Soon outside forces interfere and Jessamy’s secret activities begin to demand a terrible price as choices of loyalty, love, and honor alter the course of her and her family’s lives and lead her to question everything she once believed in.

The Court of Fives is an entertaining and refreshing novel with an exciting plot and an easy style of writing that makes it smooth and relatively quick to read. Kate Elliot has challenged many of the tired clichés we’ve all come to expect from a dystopian teen novel and created a plot-driven Sci-Fi/Fantasy novel where honor and competition take priority over romance, a subtle touch of magic is intertwined with religious elements, and the unlikely heroine is at times thoughtless, selfish, and overly ambitious. I was hooked almost immediately and I found the plot twists to be genuinely unexpected and emotionally charged.

On the negative side, I have seen better world-building. Some places, traditions, and events are described with a confusing amount of detail, while others are barely explained at all. However, I have always cared more about characters than setting, and Elliot’s characters are believable, if not always admirable, so I stayed interested and invested despite skimming through the occasional paragraph. I am also looking forward to seeing how the series might develop as I anticipate that it will pull back a little from Jessamy’s rather narrow world and to begin to address, and even combat, the brokenness and injustice of her society as a whole.


A few minor flaws aside, The Court of Fives is definitely worth a read, especially for die-hard dystopian fans who have been searching for a new favorite since The Hunger Games. This one will still give you that strong, flawed female lead as well as plenty of action and intrigue, but everything else will keep you guessing.

Book of the Month - February - Paper Hearts


https://yourlibrary.bibliocommons.com/item/show/1250741101_paper_hearts
by Meg Wiviott



A birthday card. Something simple, a sign of affection and love that we take for granted.  But for a Jewish prisoner at Auschwitz in 1944, a birthday card is so much more – an act of defiance, a statement of hope, a crime punishable by death.  Zlatka knew this as she stole and bartered for the supplies needed to make a card for her best friend Fania.


Based on true events, Paper Hearts is a Holocaust story told in verse.  Fania and Zlatka are two Jewish teens who have lost everything – family, home, possessions.  Brought together during the horrors of the Second World War, they become best friends.  Their friendship and refusal to become victims help them both survive.


The story covers quite a bit of ground – from the early days of the occupation, families crammed together in ghettos;  to the disbelief that people felt as the ghettos were cleared and people were transported away; the terror and fear as families are separated, people packed into cattle cars to be transported to concentration camps; the selection process once at the camps, where the sick and weak were culled out right away;  the day-to-day horrors of living in the camp and working at a munitions factory as slave labour, making bullets and bombs that will help kill people who are fighting against the people imprisoning you; to the grueling death march before liberation.


This is a quick, but heartbreaking read.  Be sure to have your tissue box handy.    

Fania managed to hide the card that her friends made for her, and it is on display at the Montreal Holocaust Memorial Centre.



Other World War II stories: The Boy in the Striped Pajamas by John Boyle; The Book Thief by Marcus Zusak; Prisoner B-3087 by Alan Gratz.

Other realistic stories in verse: The Crossover by Alexander Kwame; October Mourning: A Song for Matthew Shepard by Leslea Newan; The Gospel Truth by Caroline Pignat.