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momwithareadingproblem 's review for:

Splintered by A.G. Howard
4.0

My Initial Reaction:



I think this gif covers everything I felt reading Splintered by A.G. Howard. I'm not even really sure how to begin! The concept of the story, a re-telling of Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, intrigued me, yet I put off reading the book until just this week. I'm sorry to say that I'm glad I did. While there were aspects that I loved about the book. there were others that I just couldn't get past. Let me explain.

Alyssa is a young woman, haunted by the fact that she thinks she is going crazy. She hears bugs and flowers talk and so to make them shut up she "humanely" kills them and uses them in her art work...it gets worse. She's in love with her older best friend Jeb who happens to be dating her nemesis Taelor, and the mean girl claws come out. I found Alyssa a bit on the shallow side, always thinking of herself and rather than thinking about the situation she finds herself in she focuses on the crazy teenage hormones. Because you know, isn't that what all teens do when faced in a life or death situation, focus on kissing the object of their affection? I'm sorry there was just no getting around the fact that Alyssa annoyed me, but only a little ;)

Then the love triangle between Jeb and Alyssa and Morpheus....oh Morpheus. I like you :D He is a netherling in this world that Howard creates and a moth...he happens to represent the caterpillar from Carroll's tale and I love him. He brings the story drama, conflict, and a little hotness and drops hints about what will happen along the way as Alyssa travels through Wonderland. He was once Alyssa's best friend and now she has to decide whether she trusts him or not.

Now for the aspects I loved....I loved the world Howard created. She took Wonderland and made it dark and twisted. I know Wonderland was already dark and twisted from Carroll's perspective, but Howard takes it even further and brings the world to life through her words and Alyssa's descriptions. I loved the imagery that came with the description of the netherlings and Wonderland itself. I felt like I was there and that is a feat that most authors fail at.

Overall I struggled between giving the book 3 or 4 stars because I found the book utterly predictable, but decided that since the ending was enough to make me want to read the rest of the series that it deserves 4 stars. If you enjoy urban fantasy, the Wonderland stories, and young adult fiction I highly recommend you take a look at this book!