Helpful Score: 2
This is the first book in the Trylle trilogy by Hocking. It was a fun and engaging read about something you don't usually get to read about, Trolls. Great start to this series.
Wendy's mother tried to kill her when she was a little girl, so now she is being raised by her aunt and brother. At seventeen years old she still doesn't fit in and people seem to automatically dislike her; then Finn enters her life and tells her that she is a Trylle. Now Wendy is entering a world she never knew existed and she's not sure if it is any better than the world she left behind.
The story was very engaging and the characters well done. It was fun to read about something other than werewolves, fairies, and vampires for once; Wendy is a Trylle or troll. There wasn't a ton of high school angst in this book, Wendy is off to the Trylles pretty quickly, so I enjoyed that.
Wendy is a complicated character who is dealing with a lot of emotional trauma since her mother tried to kill her and she has so much trouble fitting in with other people. I liked how independent she was and how willing she was to accept the big changes that happened in her life.
Finn was a wonderful and mysterious male lead. It bothered me some that his relationship was so on and off again with Wendy and that his personality changed so much. Despite that I still look forward to learning more about him in future books.
The book was engaging and well written; basically a fun light read. The ending is a total cliffhanger though and that was pretty irritating. Luckily the next book is already out, so you if you like this book, be ready to read the next book ASAP.
Overall this was a fun and engaging read. I loved the creativity of having trolls as the main paranormal element. The characters were all well done and fun to read about. I recommend this book for people who enjoy young adult paranormal books. Just beware that it ends on a cliffhanger without much resolution. I will definitely be reading the next book in the series, Torn.
Wendy's mother tried to kill her when she was a little girl, so now she is being raised by her aunt and brother. At seventeen years old she still doesn't fit in and people seem to automatically dislike her; then Finn enters her life and tells her that she is a Trylle. Now Wendy is entering a world she never knew existed and she's not sure if it is any better than the world she left behind.
The story was very engaging and the characters well done. It was fun to read about something other than werewolves, fairies, and vampires for once; Wendy is a Trylle or troll. There wasn't a ton of high school angst in this book, Wendy is off to the Trylles pretty quickly, so I enjoyed that.
Wendy is a complicated character who is dealing with a lot of emotional trauma since her mother tried to kill her and she has so much trouble fitting in with other people. I liked how independent she was and how willing she was to accept the big changes that happened in her life.
Finn was a wonderful and mysterious male lead. It bothered me some that his relationship was so on and off again with Wendy and that his personality changed so much. Despite that I still look forward to learning more about him in future books.
The book was engaging and well written; basically a fun light read. The ending is a total cliffhanger though and that was pretty irritating. Luckily the next book is already out, so you if you like this book, be ready to read the next book ASAP.
Overall this was a fun and engaging read. I loved the creativity of having trolls as the main paranormal element. The characters were all well done and fun to read about. I recommend this book for people who enjoy young adult paranormal books. Just beware that it ends on a cliffhanger without much resolution. I will definitely be reading the next book in the series, Torn.
Helpful Score: 1
I won this from Library Thing and I'm so glad I did. This was a great story with great characters. I was pleasantly surprised that it was about Trolls. It seems everything is about vampires, werewolves, etc. I thought this book flowed nicely and quickly, I couldn't put it down. I look forward to reading the next one in the series and reading more about Rhys, Tove, Willa, Elora and the rest, along with the Vittra and how Wendy deals with being a Troll.
Helpful Score: 1
I was so disappointed with this book, anti-hero crap, skipped a lot while reading, was this for a 12 year old, or an 11 year old? The writing is just awful, like a ninth grader had to write a fantasy for English class or such. Weak magic, weak characters, what a sham, it could have been so good. It is like a script made into a bad b rate movie, sorry, nothing good to,say about this book.
Helpful Score: 1
So far this year I have been on a YA hiatus. But,I really wanted to read this book. It was good,I read it in a few hours.However,I will wait awhile before I read the others.
Helpful Score: 1
For someone familiar with Stephenie Myer's Twilight stories from seeing the films, SWITCHED read too much like a Twilight saga knock-off for me to enjoy it.
Though not the best, the writing shows promise, so I'm open to more from Amanda Hocking, but this had way too many scenes that were ripped right from the Twilight story: boy visits girl through her bedroom window; damsel in distress; car ride running away from her family/home because the bad guys are trying to get her; trolls have different abilities; not to mention it's just trolls instead of vampires.
I don't think the story was original enough to stand on its own merit.
I also got bored with the juvenile pussy-footing around each other for 300 pages. The young adult, inexperienced emotional angst gets old for me. It really made me crave to read about adult relationships, but I'm sure this is great for adolescents, teens and young adults.
SWITCHED was very predictable; nothing new here. I give it a C+.
Though not the best, the writing shows promise, so I'm open to more from Amanda Hocking, but this had way too many scenes that were ripped right from the Twilight story: boy visits girl through her bedroom window; damsel in distress; car ride running away from her family/home because the bad guys are trying to get her; trolls have different abilities; not to mention it's just trolls instead of vampires.
I don't think the story was original enough to stand on its own merit.
I also got bored with the juvenile pussy-footing around each other for 300 pages. The young adult, inexperienced emotional angst gets old for me. It really made me crave to read about adult relationships, but I'm sure this is great for adolescents, teens and young adults.
SWITCHED was very predictable; nothing new here. I give it a C+.