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Terry J. Benton-Walker

Autore di Blood Debts

3+ opere 219 membri 6 recensioni

Serie

Opere di Terry J. Benton-Walker

Blood Debts (2023) 195 copie
Blood Justice (2024) 12 copie

Opere correlate

Cool. Awkward. Black. (2023) — Collaboratore — 47 copie

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Recensioni

Wow. I am still digesting just how incredible this story was. I adored the magic woven in with history. The New Orleans setting made this feel so beautifully eerie. Our two main characters risk everything to try to solve what happened to their family 30 years ago. Clem and Cris are an absolutely brilliant pair to follow. I cannot wait to get my a copy of the sequel coming out soon!
 
Segnalato
Nlwilson607 | 5 altre recensioni | Jan 24, 2024 |
I enjoyed listening to this book and I am really excited to read the next book in the series when it is released. I like that Cris and Clem are able to get the family back together to save their mom. I am hopeful that the family will be better at working together in future books and stop letting secrets keep them apart.

Narrators Torian Brackett, Bahni Turpin, Zeno Robinson, Joniece Abbott-Pratt all did a great job bringing this book to life and I hope they narrate the remaining books planned for this book series.… (altro)
 
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Shauna_Morrison | 5 altre recensioni | Apr 16, 2023 |
I love the idea, concept, and setting but couldn't fully immerse myself into the story. Overall, a good read. If you're a fan of YA novels settings with voodoo and hexes. It started off really fun and exciting but definitely slowed down.
 
Segnalato
nicole.rivera | 5 altre recensioni | Mar 31, 2023 |
Blood Debts by Terry J. Benton-Walker is a tricky novel to review. On the one hand, it is a story about intergenerational magic, revenge, and power that is dark, dangerous, and seductive. On the other hand, the execution of the story could be more masterful than the plot suggests. There is much to love and, unfortunately, a lot that would make a reader set it aside unfinished. What you think about the book depends on your patience and willingness to ignore some unfortunate prose for a great plot. Myself, I struggled until the story engrossed me enough to be able to ignore its faults.

To say that Mr. Benton-Walker’s writing style is simplistic is to understate the issue. The problem with Blood Debts is that it reads like a young teenager, still in the throes of puberty young, wrote it. No matter their age, every character sounds like a whiny teenager complaining about not getting their way. While this makes sense for Clement and Cristina, who actually are teenagers struggling to find their identities, school bullies, boyfriends, mean girls, and other high school drama, it makes less sense for the adults in their lives. Even the oldest character sounds a bit like Regina George, crowing at her power over the entire school, or in this case, the council. In addition, each sentence is as basic as you can get. While it makes for easy reading, it does not make for the best descriptions. Mr. Benton-Walker’s metaphors and similes are too prosaic and less poetic. It makes Blood Debts feel clinical, dry, and dull when the plot is anything but that.

Where Mr. Benton-Walker excels is his story. There is something magical about any story set in New Orleans, which he uses to his advantage. In Blood Debts, he takes NOLA back from Anne Rice’s vampires and brings the focus back to the true magical heart of the area, its long history of magic in the hands of its Black citizens. In this case, it is the intergenerational magic given to formerly enslaved people by their gods as a way to break free from their oppressors. With its roots in Hoodoo, Voodoo, Haitian Vodou, and European witchcraft, the magic the Trudeau family practices is unlike what we usually expect when we hear the word “witch.” Theirs is darker, more dangerous, and more prone to cause harm to the person casting the spell as much as to the intended recipient.

The other impressive aspect of Blood Debts is that Mr. Benton-Walker highlights his characters’ failings and uses them as character development tools for them to learn and grow. In Clement’s case, he must overcome his severe anxiety and the trauma he feels upon the death of his father and his mother’s failing health. While it happens more often, a novel in which a character’s mental health is not just a convenient plot device but rather an integral part of the character itself is still rare. For all his writing faults, Mr. Benton-Walker makes Clement a likable character because of his mental illness and not despite it. Through Clement, we understand what it feels like to suffer severe anxiety, and we rejoice when he stops letting it hinder his ability to obtain his goals.

I like Blood Debts by Terry J. Benton-Walker. The story is dark and bloody, and revenge stories never get old. Where I struggled, and where I see many people struggling, is with Mr. Benton-Walker’s writing style. It does not match the nuanced and complex story he builds. Every voice is too immature, and each sentence reads like a middle-grade English textbook. Given that, I am still deciding whether to continue the series. I want to discover what happens to Clement and Cristina, but I wonder if I should put myself through the writing issues again.
… (altro)
½
1 vota
Segnalato
jmchshannon | 5 altre recensioni | Mar 18, 2023 |

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Statistiche

Opere
3
Opere correlate
1
Utenti
219
Popolarità
#102,099
Voto
3.9
Recensioni
6
ISBN
14

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