Tag Archives: Girl Power

Review: Haven by Katherine Bogle

Haven by Katherine BogleHaven
Katherine Bogle
Friesen Press

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Goodreads

Haven unexpectedly ascends to the throne of her kingdom after her family members are killed by a ruthless queen. As neighboring kingdoms fall to the evil queen Kadia’s attacks, Haven realizes she must rally her few remaining allies and help her people escape the coming destruction. But Kadia wants more than just the land and power. She has her sights set on Haven herself, and the power of the mysterious gift Haven possesses. When Haven learns that others have inexplicable abilities, she realizes she’ll have to find them, for only together can they stop Kadia.

Haven definitely had some great Girl Power moments. I loved that her personal guards were fierce women, and that later, she earns the allegiance of other fierce female warriors. I love that she took her ability to heal, which doesn’t seem much like a warrior-gift, and turned that into a huge asset for herself as a fighter. She wasn’t afraid to step out and face her enemies head-on. I had to admire that about her.

I struggled a bit with some of the plot elements. Sometimes Haven would make these decisions that left me scratching my head or feeling frustrated because they didn’t seem to make a lot of logical sense, or the reactions of her companions didn’t seem to make a lot of sense. At one point she learns a critical ally has been working with the evil queen. Instead of outing him, she keeps his betrayal a secret because she feels afraid the other allies will kill him if they find out.

I kept thinking about the giant risk to security and her people that he continued to pose as someone who’d already betrayed them once. She didn’t seem at all concerned about the possibility that he might betray her again, or honestly all that affected by his betrayal which cost many lives and gave her enemy control of a lot of additional resources. At one point she vehemently opposes sending her own troops to fight Kadia, and soon after, she becomes upset that a neighboring king refuses to send his troops to her aid. I totally get that circumstances had changed, but I wanted her to at least stop and reflect, like, oh, that’s how it feels to wear this shoe, and I didn’t feel like I got to have that moment.

Ultimately, her love for her people definitely made her a character I could sympathize with. I totally rooted for her to take down Kadia, and I loved that she found an unexpected ally– I thought the way the final battle went down was really engaging and cool.

I think readers who enjoyed The Key by Jennifer Anne Davis would really like Haven. It’s got a lot of great girl power moments and a big fantasy setting, and an ultimately enjoyable romantic arc.

Cultural Elements
Feels like a pretty Western European-type cast of characters. Culturally it felt pretty homogenous across various kingdoms.

Profanity/Crude Language Content
None.

Romance/Sexual Content – Trigger Warning
A man professes his love and forces kisses on the girl he loves. An evil queen commands a man to rape a captor. He pins her down, she struggles. It’s pretty intense. Later, a male soldier is caught beginning to assault a female soldier. The attacker states that this is the way things are done (ie, the way prisoners are treated). Others free the woman and other prisoners, but obviously lots of damage has already been done.

Brief kisses between a (willing) man and woman.

Even though the descriptions of the assaults were brief and included intent to rape without actually showing rape, I struggled with them. I think it was just the fact that it came up more than once—which I get from a plot perspective. The first attack gives the character reason to be that much more upset by the second situation.

Also, part of the healing afterward includes sharing the experience with a twelve year old girl who has special abilities to bring mental healing. As the parent of a kid about that age, I had a really tough time with that idea. I wished that character had been older. Not a lot of story time was devoted to that process, though.

Spiritual Content
The evil queen Kadia uses shadows to fight her enemies. She can also sense others with gifts like Haven’s ability to heal. Kadia can also paint the future, and at one point has guards strip a captor so she can pain the girl’s future on her body. It’s traumatic to the captor.

Violent Content
An assassin attacks Haven. She learns to fight, and at one point she injures herself in practice combat. She fights and slays enemies. Descriptions are brief.

Drug Content
None.

Note: I received a free copy of this book in exchange for my honest review.

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Review: Jova by Chris Ferguson

Jova
Chris Ferguson
Bravestar Studios
Published December 2, 2013

Amazon | Goodreads

On the night of her senior prom, Jova’s whole world shifts into nightmare. Zombies lunge onto the dance floor, attacking all within their reach. Jova and several other girls escape the mayhem and hole up in the school, struggling to survive each new day. Hunted by cannibalistic men and plague-ridden zombies, the girls defend themselves with hand-made weapons and fierce determination. When the school is compromised, Jova and her friends are forced to flee into the wilds of a destroyed world where even the water is poisonous. Survival depends on choosing the right allies. The future depends on destroying their enemies.

Reading this novel is sort of like walking through a mine field. Random characters and unexpected plot twists burst into the story. Sometimes they connect with the larger plot and other times they pop in and fade out, leaving the reader to do a little head scratching. Some plot elements lack support either from the story world or want of explained logic. The girls barricade themselves inside their old school, but there doesn’t seem to be any food or water sources available in the area. At one point they decide that the way to secure the future is to have babies. It’s difficult to see this as a reasonable idea while they are without shelter and provisions, not to mention that men are extremely dangerous enemies.

What Ferguson does well is focus not only on the threat from the zombies, but explore the other groups who might rise to power in the midst of a zombie apocalypse. Cannibals (though considering the zombie situation this seems dangerous) and drug lords seek food sources and slaves, adding to Jova’s list of bad guys to be destroyed. Girl-power juices run high. These girls are armed and ready to kill.

Language Content
Heavy profanity, moderate frequency.

Sexual Content
Though many of the girls wear purity rings and vow to preserve their virginity until marriage, the loneliness wears on them. Several of the girls begin relationships with one another. Details are limited, but some crude comments and sexual descriptions are included.

As the girls fear more and more for survival, they decide that the best way to secure a future is to find men with whom they can become pregnant (sperm donors, not fathers to help raise their children), by force if necessary. Again, details are limited, but some brief descriptions are included.

Spiritual Content
The girls spend time in prayer and chapel services during their time in the school. They discover a cave with Satanist worship symbols and indications of human sacrifice. One girl crosses out the bad symbols and draws symbols for good spells over them. Later, Jova cries out to God to answer for why terrible things have happened to her and her friends. The sky crackles with thunder in an intense moment in which Jova confronts God with her faith and disappointments. While she receives a response, it is less a Moses-on-the-mountain moment and more a miracle moved on and not mentioned again.

Violence
The girls tackle zombies and vile men called hunters, who feast on human flesh and repeatedly try to kill them. There’s a fair amount of gore and some icky zombie descriptions. A naked man allies himself with the girls and convinces them to eat human flesh.

Drug Content
A man turns his friends over to an enemy in exchange for a large amount of heroin.

Note: I received a free copy of this book in exchange for my honest review.

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