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Graveminder (Paperback)
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Short Description for GraveminderWhen Rebekkah returns to her small-town home for her beloved Grandmother's funeral, little does she suspect that she is about to inherit a darkly dangerous family duty on behalf of Claysville's most demanding residents -- the dead.
Full description- Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers Ltd
- Published: 07 July 2011
- Format: Paperback 400 pages
- See: Full bibliographic data
- Categories: Fantasy
- ISBN 13: 9780007349272 ISBN 10: 0007349270
- Sales rank: 78,037
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Reviews for Graveminder
I love Melissa Marr, but I'm gutted that I didn't like this one...
I was so excited when I found out that Melissa Marr was going to write a book aimed at adults. I really enjoyed her Wicked Lovely series and hoped that her venture into adult territory might leave me reeling as much as Stephenie Meyer's The Host did. When I found out that Emma Galvin (the narrator I raved about in my review of Divergent) was to be the narrator, my expectations grew higher and higher.
I wish I could be as full of praise as I expected to be. Maybe some people will say that my expectations were too high to ever be met, but I disagree. I don't think expectations can ever be too high.
I have this little book that I write in while I'm reading books that I'm going to review. The first three comments about Graveminder were:
"This is taking its time... no idea what's going on..."
"It's chapter 13 and I just don't care about any of them..."
"Chapter 14 - Something interesting. Finally!"
Yup. Fourteen chapters before I engaged with the book on any level. Not so long ago I took part in WriteOnCon. During this week I picked up a pretty decent piece of writing advice from an author I can't remember. She said that no matter how long the book is, the conflict and any necessary (but of course, minimal) exposition should be down within the first thirty pages. There were conflicts from the get go with Graveminder. There was death, insecurity, lost love, enigma, a strange town with secrets... But I just didn't care. I thought Rebekkah, the main character, was a whiny, angst-ridden pain whose head was up her own... well, you get the picture. Byron was (of course) a romantic. But he was also kind of pathetic too. And he had a few proclivities which were decidedly stalker-esque. Okay, so he believes he and Rebekkah are destined to be together, but she's been saying no for years. Marr seems to think it romantic that he just doesn't stop. I found it creepy.
I also disliked the way the characters in the book used sex as some kind of escape-route when any sort of difficult conversation about "feelings" came up. I found this to be the opposite of what I expected from a book aimed at older readers. I found myself silently screaming at the characters to just grow-the-hell-up! (Except I wasn't thinking "hell"... keeping things kiddy-friendly!)
I did eventually become a bit more engaged in Graveminder. However, for me it was a thin text. The story was under-paced, the characters under-developed and the messages were...well, I don't think there were any. I'm not saying every book should have some grand allegorical agenda, but I do think that whenever you finish a book, you should be subtly changed in some way. All good stories should affect us somehow, otherwise what's the point?
I'm sad that I feel so negatively about Graveminder. I wanted to love it, but I ended up not even really liking it.
Two stars. Sigh. I honestly hated doing that. But it's my honest opinion. Ho hum... by Laura Williams

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