Kat Kennedy's Reviews > Exiled
Exiled (The Protector, #1)
by
by
Kat Kennedy's review
bookshelves: fun-fantasy, kat-s-book-reviews, sci-fi-alicious, to-ya-or-not-to-ya, urban-fantasy-woot
Jun 15, 2012
bookshelves: fun-fantasy, kat-s-book-reviews, sci-fi-alicious, to-ya-or-not-to-ya, urban-fantasy-woot
I put off reading this book for a long time and I’m not sure why. I asked Matt if there was any sexy times in it, and he said not really. That may have had something to do with it. But if he’d told me that there was so much chemistry between Chase and Rayna, I might have checked it out faster. Because it kind of had the potential to stroll into bow chica wow wow territory, and probably would have more if they hadn’t all been so busy fighting to survive. Also, Merrick, what are you doing wasting all that potential sexual chemistry?! And have you ever considered writing romances?
Exiled is like a diamond in the rough. I see so much of Merrick’s potential as an author. I think given time, attention, and hardwork – his books are going to be pretty damn great. Exiled itself was a difficult book to me to rate. The raw material, itself, was pretty excellent. There was certainly plenty to appreciate about the novel and I had a great deal of enjoyment while reading it. This was Merrick’s first novel, though, so there are always going to be things that an author can learn and improve on. When I said diamond in the rough, I meant it. I got the sense throughout reading it, that it really needed an experienced editor to cut and polish it to help Merrick bring out the best parts, and chip off the parts that were cumbersome or unnecessary.
In case you can’t tell – that’s Aladdin and that’s someone explaining the process of how they perfected his look. Isn’t this, like, the most appropriate GIF for a review ever?!
The intro needed to be a little smoother, and the back end of the story contained some unnecessary story telling that I could see was probably setting up for the next novel, but that really punched the pacing in the gut and detracted from the overall plot.
The characters were a big positive for this book. Chase was endearing in that way that little brothers are. Overly-confident and just adorable enough to pull it off. Rayna was a great counter-balance, providing maturity and a gravity that Chase could aspire to. Marcus played the ever-patient and ever-ignored father figure while Chase’s mum gave the novel a sweet, grounding, human touch. Then, of course, there’s Vincent if you want a mature romantic lead.
And whilst I am eager to follow up on the lives and adventures of Chase and crew, I can’t help but want to take a red pen to this book. I enjoyed it so much but feel like its potential was cut short, like a world-class athlete with no one to train it. Merrick made a couple of astounding female characters, which I’d like to see him do more of. The novel does feel a little unbalanced and overpopulated with powerful men in leadership/destiny roles. I feel like they’re especially necessary to balance out the damsel in distress-heavy plot toward the second half of the book.
You’re probably going to like this book if you’re into a younger version of The Dresden Files with a main protagonist who is almost as exasperating. It’s certainly not a perfect novel, but also not without merit.
Ultimately, I want to see more from Merrick. This was a really hard book to rate. I feel like it deserved more stars based on my enjoyment, but the issues with the plotting and pacing tripped me up. I think he has the signs of an excellent story teller, though, and I’m eager to read the next in the series, Shift.
This review can also be found on my blog, Cuddlebuggery Book Blog.
Exiled is like a diamond in the rough. I see so much of Merrick’s potential as an author. I think given time, attention, and hardwork – his books are going to be pretty damn great. Exiled itself was a difficult book to me to rate. The raw material, itself, was pretty excellent. There was certainly plenty to appreciate about the novel and I had a great deal of enjoyment while reading it. This was Merrick’s first novel, though, so there are always going to be things that an author can learn and improve on. When I said diamond in the rough, I meant it. I got the sense throughout reading it, that it really needed an experienced editor to cut and polish it to help Merrick bring out the best parts, and chip off the parts that were cumbersome or unnecessary.
In case you can’t tell – that’s Aladdin and that’s someone explaining the process of how they perfected his look. Isn’t this, like, the most appropriate GIF for a review ever?!
The intro needed to be a little smoother, and the back end of the story contained some unnecessary story telling that I could see was probably setting up for the next novel, but that really punched the pacing in the gut and detracted from the overall plot.
The characters were a big positive for this book. Chase was endearing in that way that little brothers are. Overly-confident and just adorable enough to pull it off. Rayna was a great counter-balance, providing maturity and a gravity that Chase could aspire to. Marcus played the ever-patient and ever-ignored father figure while Chase’s mum gave the novel a sweet, grounding, human touch. Then, of course, there’s Vincent if you want a mature romantic lead.
And whilst I am eager to follow up on the lives and adventures of Chase and crew, I can’t help but want to take a red pen to this book. I enjoyed it so much but feel like its potential was cut short, like a world-class athlete with no one to train it. Merrick made a couple of astounding female characters, which I’d like to see him do more of. The novel does feel a little unbalanced and overpopulated with powerful men in leadership/destiny roles. I feel like they’re especially necessary to balance out the damsel in distress-heavy plot toward the second half of the book.
You’re probably going to like this book if you’re into a younger version of The Dresden Files with a main protagonist who is almost as exasperating. It’s certainly not a perfect novel, but also not without merit.
Ultimately, I want to see more from Merrick. This was a really hard book to rate. I feel like it deserved more stars based on my enjoyment, but the issues with the plotting and pacing tripped me up. I think he has the signs of an excellent story teller, though, and I’m eager to read the next in the series, Shift.
This review can also be found on my blog, Cuddlebuggery Book Blog.
Sign into Goodreads to see if any of your friends have read
Exiled.
Sign In »
Reading Progress
June 15, 2012
–
Started Reading
June 15, 2012
– Shelved
March 12, 2013
–
81.0%
"Oh no! Some one just told Chase to do something. He is now bound to do the opposite."
March 12, 2013
–
Finished Reading
March 14, 2013
– Shelved as:
fun-fantasy
March 14, 2013
– Shelved as:
kat-s-book-reviews
March 14, 2013
– Shelved as:
sci-fi-alicious
March 14, 2013
– Shelved as:
to-ya-or-not-to-ya
March 14, 2013
– Shelved as:
urban-fantasy-woot
Comments Showing 1-11 of 11 (11 new)
date
newest »
message 1:
by
Tatiana
(new)
Jun 15, 2012 07:15AM
Kat, are you in a middle of some kind of self-pub reading project?
reply
|
flag
Kind of. I met a lot of lovely authors in a chat and decided to read their books. Plus I get a lot of self pubbed requests through the blog - so I have to slog may way through those eventually.
You are very generous, as we don't feel obligated to read those requests. Hope you find some good ones.
We don't either - certainly not all of them. But we try to give a few a chance and we spotlight them on our blog now to support self pubbed authors where we can.
Kat wrote: "We don't either - certainly not all of them. But we try to give a few a chance and we spotlight them on our blog now to support self pubbed authors where we can."
*cough* Red by Kait Nolan *cough*
Just saying.
*cough* Red by Kait Nolan *cough*
Just saying.