RATING GUIDE:
5 – A keeper!
4 – Very good
3 – Passable
2 – I’d rather read
a telephone book
1 – An absolute bomb.
Read at your own risk!
Sally
Green’s “Half Bad” is the story of Nathan.
The offspring of a forbidden union between a White Witch and a Dark
Witch, Nathan is a Half-Code and is one of a kind. But being special is not exactly appreciated in the world of
White Witches, where Nathan grows up.
Despite his healing powers, his artistic abilities, his physical
strength and compelling appearance, Nathan is feared, discrimated against and
HATED. Though he is raised by a family
of White Witches, Nathan is treated like a freak by many of the White Witches
(who are supposedly good and kind), bullied at home and even in school. His only friend is Annalise, a White Witch
and the love of his life.
Every
Witch is supposed to receive his “gifts” (special abilities) when he or she
turns seventeen. But Nathan is a
Half-Code. No one wants him to receive
his “gifts”. If Nathan doesn’t receive
his gifts by the time he reaches his seventeenth birthday, he will die.
“Half
Bad” makes use of elements that are already pretty boring and tiring to read
about about: the world of witches, the
forbidden love affair. Part of me
wanted to groan upon realizing that this was going to yet another book about
that world, those types of characters … I mean, aren’t the readers fed up with
that yet?
Thankfully,
Sally Green’s take on witches and doomed love affairs is surprisingly
fresh. If you’re not sidetracked by
some of the British phrases and words in this book, you will find yourself
reading about the very scary life of a young man whose only fault is being the
child of a union that is frowned upon by his society.
“Half
Bad” is very dark and very disturbing.
The cruelty and evil just leap off the pages of this book, grab your
heart and pull it right out of your chest.
I really don’t know how this could even be considered a book for young
adults, because of the graphic ways violence was depicted in this book. The imagery is not as gross as in Cassandra
Clare’s Mortal Instruments series, but it feels very raw and real. Not like a horror movie, where you can still
detach from it. The violence and evil
in this book feels like something you are surrounded with on a daily
basis. Like something you see on the
news everyday, or something you’ve actually encountered in real life. Definitely a different form of “scary”.
Reading
this book is like being a spectator at a crime scene or a place of
accident. You can’t help but check it
out, even though it’s very dark and disturbing.
All in
all, “Half Bad” is a compelling read, a page-turner. However, I don’t think this is a book I would like very young
readers to get hold of, given the violence it contains.
RATING: 4
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