Immagine dell'autore.

Chandra Prasad

Autore di Damselfly

7+ opere 284 membri 18 recensioni

Sull'Autore

Chandra Prasad has written on career issues in The Wall Street Journal's Career Journal, IMDiversity.com, and JobCircle.com, among others

Opere di Chandra Prasad

Opere correlate

New Haven Noir (2017) — Collaboratore — 45 copie

Etichette

Informazioni generali

Data di nascita
20th Century
Sesso
female
Istruzione
Yale University

Utenti

Recensioni

CW: Girl's mental health deteriorates on the island and she jumps off a cliff thinking that she can fly
 
Segnalato
Mrs_Tapsell_Bookzone | 9 altre recensioni | Feb 14, 2023 |
This is the 4th "stranded teenagers must survive inhospitable locale" story Ive read this year...a weird pattern to have... anyway this book is sorta medium as far as actual enjoyment goes, but it did draw me in and i appreciated the diverse characters and the authors vivid descriptions.

However there were several gross tropes that I wish had been avoided, and I found what happened to the mentally ill character who is trapped without her medication to be very upsetting. It wasn't badly written so much as personally disturbing.… (altro)
 
Segnalato
mutantpudding | 9 altre recensioni | Dec 26, 2021 |
Rating is 3 1/2 stars. Mercury Boys is the story of Saskia who has moved from Arizona to Connecticut with her father because of her mother's affair and her parents subsequent separation. She and her father have been traumatized by her mother's behavior and are trying to recover and start anew. Saskia befriends Lila, a classmate who works in a university library which contains early photographs called daguerreotypes. Saskia accidentally discovers that if she touches mercury, she can travel back in time to meet the man in the picture.
This information is shared with some other girls and a secret society is formed with the girls choosing a daguerreotype illicitly from Lila's library.
The original concept, creativity and writing is excellent in Mercury Boys. The time travel and historical elements are fascinating and could have been further explored. The focus seemed to be more on the toxic friendships and bullying within the group of girls. I did not like any of the characters with the exception of Lila who demonstrated some responsibility and paid a price for caving to pressure from the other girls. Overall, there was a disjointed feel to the story and the reader is left wanting more. However, I will definitely look for future books from this author as she is a talented writer. #BooksForwardFriends
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
PennyOlson | 2 altre recensioni | Nov 7, 2021 |
Saskia Brown has just moved from Arizona to the small town of Coventon after her parents have divorced. Saskia is feeling majorly blah over the whole ordeal and hasn't found where she fits in. Saskia's one friend so far is another outsider, Lila. When Saskia is assigned to research Robert Cornelious for one of her classes, she finally feels excited about something. Saskia encourages Lila to let her borrow the original daguerreotype of Robert Cornelious from Lila's job at the college library. While at the library, Lila shows Saskia the tools used to make daguerreotypes and Saskia touches some mercury. Later that evening, Saskia dreams of Robert in his shop, talks with him and learns things she possibly couldn't have known. Saskia shares her dream experience with Lila and a few other girls at school- Paige, Sarah Beth and Adrienne. They each steal a daguerreotype and some Mercury, dreaming and interacting with their boyfriends in the past. However, as the girls dream, the Mercury Boys club becomes more intense and the rules make it difficult for the girls to have lives outside of the club. Is it even real or just a fever dream?

Mercury Boys is a completely unique young adult book. I was intrigued by the idea of being able to dream and interact with people in the past by touching their daguerreotype and mercury. I also liked learning about Robert Cornelious, a real historical figure who is noted to have taken the first selfie. Saskia's character pulled me into this idea with a man from the past helping her deal better with her situation in the present. Lila was the most interesting character for me and the only one that seemed to think about her actions and not get pulled into the other girl's antics. I did enjoy reading about the girl's dreams in the past and how they adapted to life in different eras. Adrienne's Mercury Boy in the Civil War era was the most interesting to me. I do wish that the story focused more on just Lila and Saskia. Paige and Sara Beth reminded me why teenaged girls are literally the worst as they use the Mercury Boys Club for their own purposes. This did add an increased element of suspense and danger, but I do feel like enough tension could have been created between Saskia and Lila and the daguerreotypes they chose. Overall, a diverse young adult read that blends time travel and romance as well as explores race, friendship, sexuality and revenge.

This book was received for free in return for an honest review.
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
Mishker | 2 altre recensioni | Aug 27, 2021 |

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Statistiche

Opere
7
Opere correlate
1
Utenti
284
Popolarità
#82,067
Voto
½ 3.6
Recensioni
18
ISBN
17

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