Hey there everybody! Welcome to the tour for Farsighted and Open Heart by Emlyn Chand! This is going to be part of a special two part post on My Life is a Notebook! For more goodies, check out the tour schedule HERE. Today, we’re giving you our review for Farsighted! There’s also a GREAT giveaway for a KINDLE or a NOOK. That’s right! You heard me! Let’s get this party started!
*This review was written by guest reviewer Em from Easy Reading and Damn Hard Writing!*
Maturity Level: Recommended for 13+. Some gore, violence, and kissing, but little to no sexual content.
I’ve been reading a lot of self-pubs on my Kindle app recently, and I have to say that so far, I’ve been pleasantly surprised by the selections that I’ve made. Sure, there were a couple of duds, books that I could only stand about a chapter of— the stereotypical “bad” self-pubs, complete with bad formatting, an apparent lack of any sort of editor, and a definite lack of any real sales potential.
Then, there are books like Angelfall and Farsighted—books that you could totally see showing up on a bookstore shelf and actually being better than 75% of their genre. These are books that have been self-published because that is part of the author’s artistic vision (see this post by Chand) rather than being self-pubbed because there is absolutely NO CHANCE of a major press EVER accepting them. The latter is what self publishing has become (and also, what people tend to think when they sit down to read an indie); the former is what self-publishing was to begin with and what it should continue to be.
That said, on with the review!
Alex Kosmitoras is an abnormal guy in a depressingly normal situation: his parents are struggling financially, and there’s a bully who seems to have it out for him no matter what. On top of that, he’s blind—and, apparently, able to “see” the future. Simmi is the new girl from India, who is not only the friendliest, most accepting person Alex has ever met, but also has powers of her own. Alex is starting to think that this is actually going to be okay—that he has a shot of being friends with Simmi (and maybe more)—when he starts having visions of Simmi dying in various terrible ways and vows to stop it.
Overall, I really enjoyed this book. It paints a lovely tableau of multiculturalism against a small-town background; as someone who lives in a truly tiny town, I can appreciate this. Chand also manages to twine the paranormal element neatly into Alex’s everyday issues with school, parents, etc while drawing on mythological elements that made the 13-year-old-me-who-read-Edith-Wharton’s-Mythology-obsessively-for-about-a-year incredibly happy. There were points where the pacing seemed a little slow, but there were also times when I literally couldn’t put it down. It’s definitely a book that I’d recommend to people who are tired of the vampire/werewolves/angels that tend to overpopulate YA paranormals.
Pros
- Alex’s POV. I have a weakness for blind protagonists, especially those that are still major badasses. Which Alex definitely is.
- Simmi. I kind of fell a bit in love with her right alongside Alex, which made her a wonderful romantic lead for the book.
- Shapri. I might have fallen in love with Simmi, but I would definitely be more like Shapri. I liked how Chand handled her reluctance to admit to her gifts, and I loved that she was not “the bad guy” in Simmi and Alex’s relationship just because she had a bit of a crush on Alex. Nice.
- The runes and how they connect to the story. I’m actually incredibly interested in runes/tarot, so I loved reading the description of each rune and then figuring out how it connected to the chapter I was reading.
- Caffeine-assisted visions! I love explorations of how drugs/chemicals would affect theoretical psychic powers.
- The multicultural viewpoint. ❤
Cons
- Some of the transitions were a little choppy.
- Occasionally, Alex fails to take action that moves the plot along and waits for other people to move it along instead. It seems just a little OOC, since he spends the majority of the book being a badass, but it wasn’t enough to disrupt the book entirely, so it’s all good.
Star Rating on Goodreads/Final Grade: 3.75 stars, rounded up for GR. A-. Would reread, will definitely read other books in series.
AND NOW FOR THE GIVEAWAY! You could win a Kindle or a Nook HERE!
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I love it when characters don’t overreact. So what? She has a crush. I think it’s great that it’s not this huge source of tension. Great review!
Thank you for the wonderful review, Em and Gretchen. I wonder if you’ll still be a little in love with Simmi after reading Open Heart–that book tends to turn people very strongly for or against her! And, oh my, let me apologize for taking so long to get over here to thank you–I’ve been working feverishly on finishing up book #3 in the series–Shapri’s book, Pitch 😀
Em
I love the covers for these! I definitely plan on picking up the whole series. It sounds right up my alley. 🙂 Thanks!
-Amber