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    <name><![CDATA[Christy]]></name>
    <location><![CDATA[Diamond Bar, CA]]></location>        
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  <created_at type="datetime">2009-10-30T11:37:13-07:00</created_at>
  <id type="integer">1519483</id>
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  <updated_at type="datetime">2009-10-30T11:37:13-07:00</updated_at>
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  <read_at>Mon Nov 02 00:00:00 -0800 2009</read_at>
  <date_added>Fri Oct 30 11:36:47 -0700 2009</date_added>
  <date_updated>Tue Nov 03 15:08:20 -0800 2009</date_updated>
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    <body><![CDATA[This novel is HARLEQUIN TEEN's first release.  I can't say I fell in love with this book, the story, or the characters right away.  For me, the book kicked off kind of slow.  It wasn't so slow that I put the book down and waited a long time to pick it up again.  It just didn't start off with a BANG, and I guess, I was kind of expecting it.<br/><br/>I found the premise interesting enough to continue reading the book, and ultimately, I enjoyed it as a whole.  The main character, Kaylee, is living with her annoying/petty cousin, pretty good-natured uncle and a rather odd aunt.  Her best friend flits in and out of the pages and doesn't seem to play as strong a role as her love interest Nash (which, I guess, I should have expected).<br/><br/>She's been having so-called &quot;panic attacks&quot; her whole life and it becomes clear really quickly that there's something MORE than just a &quot;panic attack&quot;.  I liked how all three principal characters: the heroine, the best friend, the love interest are introduced early in the book.<br/><br/>I guess what I was looking for was escalating danger, a sense of urgency.  I didn't feel much of that going through much of the novel until I neared the climax of the book.  Only then did I seem to care more intensely about the characters and what was happening to them.  Up until then, I was basically kind of so-so in my commitment to the characters.  The explanations for what's happening, the backstory, and the looming danger that comes later in the novel aren't particularly surprising, and in fact, I found much of it to be rather predictable.<br/><br/>For example: I knew from the moment Tod appeared that he was Nash's brother.  I knew the heroine's mother had been the exchange rate in exchange for Kaylee's life once I understood what the &quot;exchange rate&quot; was and that it was the primary reason her father had been so distant.  None of that was surprising.  I knew eventually her cousin would be endangered and I knew her cousin would blame her for her own mother's death.<br/><br/>I did not anticipate Kaylee's aunt to have been the one dealing with the Netherworld, but I wasn't surprised.  In fact, I thought it was almost too tidy and convenient.  And I thought her reason for betraying everyone the way she did was superficial, almost unbelievable, and it was the easy answer (in my opinion).<br/><br/>Still -- once I knew that she was the one responsible, I knew she'd offer up her own life in exchange for her daughters.<br/><br/>What redeemed the book in my estimation is that the ending picked up.  I anticipated the climax, looked forward to it, and found myself anxious to reach the resolution.  While I &quot;cruised&quot; through much of the novel instead of &quot;tore through it voraciously,&quot; I liked how the author raises questions by the novel's end to keep me intrigued in the second release (coming 2010).  I know it doesn't sound like I liked the book, but that's not really the case.  What it comes down to is that I liked/enjoyed it, but I didn't LOVE it.  Will I read the sequel?  Yes.  Because I believe Rachel Vincent can build on the foundation she's laid out in this novel.  Her writing is strong, her voice is appropriate for YA, and I believe there's more in store for Kaylee &amp; Nash -- and I'm interested enough to keep going.]]></body>
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