I’ve rarely heard a better premise than Pride and Prejudice retold with dragons. So I guess it’s not that shocking that Heartstone by Elle Katharine White couldn’t quite live up to hopes. I enjoyed it–someone else might love it–but I didn’t quite love the book as much as I loved the concept.
Heartstone centers around Aliza Bentaine and her sisters, living in a faux-England where magical creatures abound, some friendly, many not. A band of Riders comes to their small village to fight the horde of gryphons plaguing the area, and among them are the charming Brysney, who swiftly falls for Aliza’s sister Anjey, and the arrogant Daired and his dragon. And we all kind of know where this is going, right?
That knowing-where-it’s-going may be why I didn’t love this book as much as I hoped to. Every character and most plot elements exist in a one-to-one relation to Austen’s original book. There’s some fun in seeing how White re-imagined Austen’s plotline in this new, monster-ridden world…but it was never quite innovative enough to really capture me. I mean, it is clever that Anjey gets swiped by a gryphon rather than catching a cold. But it still seemed like we lost too much without gaining enough to compensate. Continue reading “Book Review: Heartstone”

I tend to work too hard. I’m very bad at slowing down and resting, so as part of my spiritual reading for the year, Sabbath by Wayne Muller seemed like a natural choice.
I’m a big believer in re-reading books, and I don’t think there’s any book I’ve read more times than I Want To Go Home by Gordon Korman. My guess is I’ve read it fifteen times–I lost count at twelve. Most of those times were also before the age of twelve, but I’ve reread it in recent years too, and even after all those times, it still makes me laugh.