Vox Machina: Kith & Kin | Book Review

Title: Vox Machina: Kith & Kin
Author: Marieke Nijkamp
Publisher: Del Rey
Publish Date: November 30, 2021
Genre: Fantasy, Adventure
Pages: 368
Format: Hardcover

Following another book from one of my favorite shows, Critical Role, we follow the twins from campaign one, Vex and Vax, on a journey before their time with Vox Machina. This story takes place over their lifetime, jumping from the present day to moments in the past where events would reflect each other in ways that made you understand why they were happening or give more insight into how things came to be the way they are.

As I stated in my The Nine Eyes of Lucien review, I love to read about character backstories, especially of ones that I care about. As of writing this review, I haven’t finished campaign one yet, but I know the twins and that they’re a chaotic duo who are thick as thieves and would do anything to protect the other. Which, we love to see such a strong family dynamic, but it’s also a dynamic that can and will be used against them time and time again throughout their lives.

In this book, though, we switch between alternating points of view, following either Vex’ahlia through her actions and thoughts, or from Vax’ildan’s thoughts and actions, and I think that it was a delicate balance of the two that was woven well into the story. Though, I also feel like we definitely saw more of Vex’s point of view than that of her brother, but in ways it made sense, especially for the scenes that were playing out before us.

The parts of the book that takes place in the present follows them over just a short series of a couple of weeks, where Vex finds herself in trouble and being targeted by someone who was paid by a noble to have her caught and brought to him, but Vax is never far behind his sister and ends up apprehending the person following her – which causes him to be caught himself and get himself into a situation that he doesn’t have much choice of getting out of if it means protecting his sister.

The parts that take part in the past flow over a time period of about five or six years, following the twins from the time they were about ten years old until they were sixteen and showed the cruelness that can come from growing up unwanted by a singular parent – and their entire community around them – while also showing the softer moments of learning about the self and discovering that there’s more to the world that what’s been shown to them so far.

I found the pacing of the book to be stunted in ways. I found myself not completely drawn into the story, but I chock that up to not being as attached to these characters as I am The Mighty Nein characters. However, there were moments where the plot was fast paced and full of action, bringing you into the moments and wanting to see how it played out, and moments that were slower and calmer that allowed you to be able to soak in the moment in question.

Vex is a strong willed woman who is always seeking approval from those around her, and always has her walls up as a result because there is more than one occasion where she was put down by those she tried to make proud. I liked that we got to see her in the early stages of becoming a ranger (D&D class) and how she learned how to track, hide objects, and befriend Trinket – her bear companion.

Vax is an impulsive man who acts on a whim and tries to blend in with the shadows, always going against the grain of what’s expected of him. He’s cunning and smart, though he puts himself down in ways that compare him to his sister, whom he holds in such high regard.

The contrast between the two is apparent in the campaign setting as well as the book, and I highly appreciate that. They bounce off one another effortlessly, and they have a bond that almost transcends time itself. It’s one of my favorite parts of the book, even when the story itself wasn’t engaging me as much as I had wanted it to. There were moments I was full in on, and others I found myself pushing through to get to the next chapter.

Overall, though, I did enjoy the book, though less that I was imagining. I recommend this book if you’re a fan of Vox Machina or Critical Role, and I also recommend it to those who don’t know what the show is about but are looking for an adventure with siblings and high stakes involved.

TBR Takedown 3.5 Wrap Up

TBR Takedown 3.5 is over and I had a lot of fun during the weekend! I found that even though I didn’t have a lot of time on my hands, I did enjoy what I did read and I had fun doing it.

TBR Takedown took place from April 8-10 and had four challenges:

  1. Standalone – a book that’s not part of a series
  2. Most recent haul – your most recent purchase from your most recent haul
  3. Catch up in a series – an opportunity to catch up on that series you’ve been putting off
  4. TBR shelf over a year (or the longest) – you know the ones

Here are the results:

Overall I’d say that’s an accomplishment considering I usually struggle to finish books during readathons.

Here are some shortened thoughts on the books I read and the challenges I completed for this readathon:

Standalone & Most Recent Haul

I found that This is Where It Ends was a very fast-paced, intense read with four characters that each played a major part in the plot of the story. Though there were some problems within the book, I thought that the overall story was well done and that it did what it set out to do: create a heart pumping, fast paced narrative of school shootings in the U.S.

Catch Up in a Series & Been On the Shelf 5ever

Though I didn’t get too far into the book, I have enjoyed what I’ve read so far of Splintered. I’ve recently gotten into an Alice in Wonderland retelling kick, so this is feeding that need just right. I’m finding the main character is growing on me and I’m really interested to see how things unfold in the rest of the book. Plus, the font color throughout the whole book is purple! Extra points!

So yeah! Even though I didn’t finish one book, I finished the other, and I’d say that this was a successful readathon.

Did you participate in TBR Takedown 3.5? What books did you read and how many challenges did you complete? Let me know!

This Is Where It Ends Book Review

thisiswhereitendsTitle: This Is Where It Ends
Author: Marieke Nijkamp
Publisher: Sourcebooks Fire
Publication Date: January 5, 2016
Genre: Young Adult – Fiction, Realistic Fiction, Contemporary
Pages: 282
Format: Purchased Hardcover

10:00 a.m.
The principal of Opportunity, Alabama’s high school finishes her speech, welcoming the entire student body to a new semester and encouraging them to excel and achieve.

10:02 a.m.
The students get up to leave the auditorium for their next class.

10:03
The auditorium doors won’t open.

10:05
Someone starts shooting.

Told over the span of 54 harrowing minutes from four different perspectives, terror reigns as one student’s calculated revenge turns into the ultimate game of survival.

This story is on a sensitive topic of school shootings, so please take that into consideration before reading it.

I knew as soon as I picked this book up that it would be a controversial one. I knew that people were going to die in it. I knew I’d be sad. But wow, I didn’t expect to be blown away.

The story follows four individuals who are all linked through one person in some way: Tomas, Sylv, Autumn, and Claire. Each chapter has each person’s point of view during that set time of what is taking place, so each section of story is happening at the same time as another within that time frame, which I thought was actually pretty cool.

Normally I would talk about each character individually, but this book didn’t really allow for a lot of growth or anything like that in the characters because everything did happen within an hour’s time. But I will say that I believe each character learned something about themselves during that time and that, though terrible as their experience was, if we were to see them a length of time from now that they would have learned and grown from that tragedy.

It was a fast paced story that took place over the course of 54 minutes, which is incredible to think about, because while the characters talked about what they were doing and how they wanted to get through it, there were also flashbacks that they would have as they remembered memories that were joyful to them, or sad, or significant. Many of these memories traced back to the shooter, but some of them were memories for the sake of remembering. I think that including these flashbacks was important because I’m sure that for many in life or death situations, these kinds of things are going to come up in your mind.

I did have a few problems with the book, though, such as in some ways I’m not entirely sure the gravity of the situations was truly reached from certain characters’ perspectives, and that there were a few lines that I don’t think would actually have happened in real life that were in there, but then again, people react to situations differently, so maybe those lines are possible (like Tomas flirting with the cheerleader…sort of).

I also felt that, at the end, I was sad for many reasons but one of them being what happened with the shooter. I just wish more had been explored into his own psychology and that maybe we could have gotten a perspective from him. I think that definitely would have made the story even more interesting and gripping than it already was.

Other than that, I felt completely gripped by the story and couldn’t put it down; I needed to know what happened next. Each perspective lead to something hidden and meaningful and I felt so much sadness and shock over the situation that I was reading about. I know these things happen in real life, and I really wish they didn’t, and I was glad to read about a book that dealt with the issue.

I gave this book 4/5 stars and recommend it.