Autumn Leaves Angel Eyes - ebook
You know what, I'm willing to chalk this fucking disturbing plotline up to a case of bad causality, in the sense of "Milton wrote Paradise Lost. He wrote Paradise Regained. My sister was born. I lost my faith. I'm not saying self-publishing should be banned, because I'm actually very much in favour of new ways for people getting out the stories they feel the need to tell, but this wasn't the only reason Branded could have benefited from editing.
More on that later. The bottom line here is that you don't exploit a trauma such as domestic abuse to justify why a character has money, and in extension, how the MC can provide without a decent income. Again it wasn't yet stated that Jessica made her money by housesitting. The only thing such a connection makes me think is "how convenient" and that is the absolute last opinion I want to have when it comes to abuse.
The rest of it was just plain annoying. I have never read Twilight, but seen and read enough to more or less come to the conclusion that Jessica is a Bella Swan rewrite. Also, absolutely nothing happens, except for pretty creepy and disturbing stuff that I'm sure was not meant to be read that way. It had potential with the "living on borrowed time" arc, but the only thing that was used for was to say who was to blame for Jessica's nightmares. Surprisingly, it was everyone but her. I'm not saying this needed a thorough philosophical examination of what time means to the human being to have merit, but this was just ridiculous.
This girl is one big chunk of interior monologue and it never ends. She has no sympathy whatsoever. Take Emily for example. She considers Jessica to be her friend and confides in her. So guess what Jessica's reaction is when Emily tells her that her stepfather used to abuse her and that that is why she has run away from home? Jessica actually gets angry because Emily doesn't want to tell her how she "made the dreams stop". It's also so fucking annoying that Emily's "condemnation" was supposed to be a suspenseful revelation, while it was so very obvious what the one thing that guarantees you a front row seat to eternal condemnation is.
I don't even know my Bible that well and it was still easy to guess. There's not even an instinct that tells Jessica to for one moment think of someone besides herself. This also shows in her dealing with Sally. So Alex creepily shows up and follows Jessica around, because apparently the twenty-something gorgeous guy doesn't have a social life.
Jessica has a movie night with Sally, which she conveniently forgot because damn Alex and his delicious exterior. He then tags along and both of them think it will be no problem for an unfamiliar man to show up on the doorstep of a person who is so traumatised she can't even do her own shopping. No probs, because blonde-and-blue-eyed Alex is such a good guy that Sally instantly trusts him and her status as the local guy-o-meter will be used when the second love interest shows up.
Indeed, it's fucking genius to put an abused woman in that role. The love interests are not all that great either. It's obvious Alex is supposed to be every good girl's wet dream, but I'm sorry, the moment a boy I barely know bursts into the bathroom when I'm showering, only to ask if I'd like to have dinner with him that evening, I'd pack up my stuff after said shower and run. Cole is even worse, and his relevance to the story is so nonsensical that the only things you need to know is that he admits that he's been in love with Jessica since the first moment he saw her.
I'm a bit fuzzy on the details, but it was young enough to earn you a one-way prison ticket. So yes, in addition to being physically too perfect for this world and constantly having to remind everyone he "speaks in a British accent" and always staring at Jessica, he is a legitimate pedophile. Not gonna lie, that's kind of a turn-on for me. There is absolutely no reason for Jessica to be living in that house after the owners have died. I also find it strange that no one bothered to inform her they are dead, and that Alex thought it was okay to burst in there in the middle of the night and be like "lol yeah, they're dead, but they left me a shitload of money and I'll pay you and we can both live here because I'm the prettiest boy you've ever seen so my plan can't possibly be creepy and I can't be a psychopath.
And that element is - shocking - problematic. I can genuinely respect that. However, when Alex gives her an expensive bracelet or buys her a fucking wedding ring, this is seen as normal behaviour for a new couple. Hey, I know my brain works in weird and mysterious ways, but I've always thought marriage to be a pretty serious ordeal and frankly, if you don't feel you're ready for sex, I don't know how much diamonds will help your personal comfort with the issue.
Finally, I don't like Jessica's relationships with women. First of all, the girl barely gets out and the only time she uses the internet is to look up the people she had to play proxy for the past night. Nevertheless, she regularly mentions that she hears from "women" that boys like this, or don't do that or want you to whatever. I have a hard time identifying who exactly these women are, because Sally Thomas will definitely tell her to just stay the hell away from men. Also, Jessica ran away from home because of her mother, she has no friends and I find it hard to believe she'd just speak to random women she encounters in the grocery store.
Somewhere in the story she decides to take a yoga class and she feels it is necessary to repeatedly tell the reader that it's her big outing to society and why that is so. Then she gets mad at Emily for allegedly not wanting to help her, when the girl obviously has a hard time telling Jessica what she "needs" to know in the first place and I completely understand Emily for wanting to suppress such a trauma, certainly when you know you have eternity to pay for it. Jessica hates her mother because she thought her daughter was crazy and hysterical, which, in a realistic setting, doesn't seem that weird.
I don't know Jessica, but if you so desperately wanted to prove to your mother that something is going on, why not show her your scars? You can't use the excuse that you don't want people to think that you're "in some kind of extreme body art", because I think that as a minor you still need parental permission for that, and let me just tell you, with your outlook on life, you need all the help you can get. Anyway, who needs that when you have a father who is so awesome that he contacts you five years after you've run away from home, telling you that he's always been on your side, while he conveniently dismisses the fact that he never stood up for you or tried to reason with that dictator of a mother of yours.
The fact that he tells you just to ignore your mother is even better, because there's nothing more I want from my father than such a show of respect for the women in my family. Oh, he wants you to write him letters and keep in touch? Do it, he obviously deserved it after years of doing nothing and taking the cheap route in blaming your mother for it. Such a nice guy. He would make a perfect family picture with that admiring pedophile you've got living a few doors down. I read reviews of the next books and it seems that it gets even worse. And apparently Cole will be redeemed, because if there's one thing we need it's that the creepy and psychotic bad guy will be shown to be inherently good.
Plus that we get more angst and melodrama and from what I assume, the language will still be riddled with factual errors, typos and unfinished sentences and generally make no sense whatsoever. I mean, when you have a first-person narrator, you can't just go around writing that she "didn't notice the opened window" or something, because the fact that she didn't notice it when it happened, and doesn't have her attention drawn to it at a later moment, means that she can't possibly have any recollection of it.
So how is she still able to talk about it? Because Jessica just fails at life big time, that's why. Oh and I wish I had enjoyed the privilege of buying this for free, but because I'm an evil European Branded -standards , this was not the case, and that makes one more reason why I feel justified writing this angry rant.
Needless to say, I can't recommend this to anyone, but luckily, most of it is so mind-numbing that I won't be scarred for life by this. View all 53 comments. Dec 01, Thea rated it did not like it.
Angel Eyes
Jessica Bailey is tormented. Every time she falls asleep, her nightmare begins. The first chapter got me into reading the book. It started where most books end… on judgment. However, after a couple of chapters, the story goes downhill. The author tends to overelaborate on everything, leaving nothing to the imagination. There are a few pages full of just descriptions of surroundings, and feelings. I gets boring fast when every detail is explained and explored.
The book fee Jessica Bailey is tormented. The book feels like a very long prologue. That everything could have been explained in words or less.
The events are uneventful, the villain is easily defeated and love conquers all yet again. But attraction is where it starts, not where it should end. For someone who is too cautious and too shy, she admits to falling in love with a guy she barely knew. Trusting him with her secrets as when he did not do anything to warrant the confidence. This goes to Alex as well. The characters fall in love, in a snap of a finger. May 06, Jaye rated it it was ok Shelves: I loved Jessica's character. The premise intrigued me. The writing was decent.
I did not like Alex, at all. He was too chipper. At least, he is in the beginning. He and Jessica fall in together way too quickly for my piece of mind. I mean, Jessica hasn't known him a day and already she's okay with him walking in on her in the shower. Not only that, but he thinks its okay to invade her privacy this way. She barely knows him. For all she knows, he could be a crazy rapist. Not to mention, a stalker.
He can't seem to leave Jessica alone. Within 24 hours of meeting her, Alex wants Jessica to come into town with him; he barges into the bathroom while she's taking a shower; he cooks dinner for her; and he follows her to Sal's. I mean, what gives? All of this was done with a puppy-dog manner that was completely unappealing. This is the point where I stopped reading. Alex is what ruined this for me. Whenever he was present I couldn't constrain my eye-roll. This severely hindered my reading experience. Also, I sort of cheated and read the descriptions for the next books in the series without finishing this one.
Alex turns out to be the major love interest; the proverbial one. He didn't make a good impression on me, and I'm not willing to commit the time and money to see if he grows on me. Apr 27, Myvampfiction rated it really liked it. She can usually reach almost hours with no sleep before her body starts caving in on her. The reason she doesn't sleep is because she has night terrors, extreme night terrors.
In her dreams, she finds herself locked in a room, awaiting trial. An angel she calls Adam, with gray eyes which is apparently indicative of whether or not they are fallen or not? Gray means he's neutral territory , retrieves her from her cell and takes her to face a jury of ten; five condemned angels, and five exalted angels decide her fate. If she passes, she is thrown upwards into the heavens, and if she fails a hot bar of metal shaped like an X is pressed into the nape of her neck, branding her before she is hurled down to the pits of hell by the condemned.
She's never tried as Jessica Bailey though, it's always someone else's name that is called out. Sometimes she's tried as a man, sometimes as a woman. Sometimes she's young and sometimes she's old. Every once in a while the good list far outweighs the list of bad things the person has done and sometimes she is lifted to the heavens, but most of the times she's thrown down. Every time, however, she feels the excruciating agony of wings bursting forth from her back, no matter if she's being sent to heaven or hell.
Funny thing is, the nightmares aren't just nightmares. Every time she wakes up, Jessica finds a fresh brand on the back of her neck and an outline of wings tracing her shoulder blades and down her side, raised ever so slightly from the rest of her skin. Not surprisingly, because of these nightmares, Jessica has an intense fear of angels. She hates them, despises them with a passion that most people reserve for murderers and child abusers at one point she has a melt down over someone making snow angels.
I did kind of laugh there. I love snow angels. At 20, Jessica savors her alone time. She's awkward around others and doesn't want anyone living near her, for fear that they'll hear her screaming at night. She socializes with only one person: Sal, her reclusive neighbor who is barely able to live on her own after suffering extensive injuries from an abusive husband years prior. So when the owner of the house she cares for randomly shows up in the middle of the night, she is less than pleased not but unhappy enough to overlook the fact that her "boss" is a hottie.
One thing leads to another, and Jessica is forced to deal with the company of Alex, her young employer who enjoys having her around.
She stays in her apartment, but as time progresses the two begin to spend more and more time together. It's a rather cute relationship development, especially considering it's near impossible for her to hide her nightmares from him with only thin walls separating her basement apartment from the rest of the house.
Once he knows the truth, she lets it all come tumbling out and surprisingly, Alex never questions her claims of the trails. In the meantime, a new neighbor has moved into the house next to Sal, which has disrupted the woman's way of living. At the same time, in an attempt to find some form of normalcy to balance her relationship with Alex, Jessica has begun attending yoga classes in town which leads her to become friends with Emily, and introduces her to Cole, who is Sal's new neighbor. Strangely enough, everything seems to tie together very neatly.
There are literally only 5 characters. Jessica, Sal, Cole, Alex and Emily. The way these 5 characters wrap up into one another is a little too neat of a package for my liking. It seems a little too ideal, however, I still enjoyed each of the characters. Cole is seemingly obsessed with Jessica, and shows up at all the right times to help her in times of need when Alex is not around. Emily and Jessica find a common connection that I was never anticipating, and Emily holds the answer to ending Jessica's nightmares but will she tell her?
And then there is Cole, who both Jessica and Emily find vaguely familiar but neither can figure out why. And then Sal, who's so disrupted by Cole's presence that she attempts suicide, is a dark shadow of worry in Jessica's mind. In the meantime, while Jessica's previously quiet life is becoming more fulfilled with the presence of others, her nightmares are growing worse, her scars burning longer, and strange, perfect feathers are appearing in unexplained places, such as Sal's hospital bed and the edge of Jessica's windowsill.
The way this story unfolds is very enjoyable. The author writes very well, there are minor errors in the print, mainly having to do with tense changes which really annoy me, so perhaps that's why I always zone in on tense errors but for the post part, the plot carried me past that. I enjoyed the resolution to the story, I thoroughly enjoyed the twist on angelic lore and the way Taylor depicts angels as nothing purely innocent or purely evil.
I also found it fascinating the way she handles the judgment of sins against humans. It's a war between good and evil until the very last second before an individual is casts up to heaven or down to hell. The character development is believable, and it's easy to understand why Jessica ran away from home and why she chooses to live in solitude.
The changes she makes in herself after meeting Alex are also believable, because of the way the author presents them to the reader. Over all, though I probably won't be going out to add this book to my physical bookshelf, I'll enjoy it on my Kindle and will be looking to add the second book in the series to my Kindle soon as well. These are reflective strictly of my opinion of the novels I've read and reviewed, and are not necessarily reflective of the other staff members of MVF. Dec 14, Elle Beauregard rated it liked it.
The story and the characters definitely kept me reading. I purchased this book on a whim--I love to read the work of local authors and jumped at the chance to help support a local up-and-coming when I saw this book at a bookstore near my office, in Seattle. I read every day on my way to and from work on public transit, and sometimes, while reading this book, I'd almost forget where I was! Once, I almost missed my stop! The story is compelling, the scenery and set-building very full without dragg The story and the characters definitely kept me reading.
The story is compelling, the scenery and set-building very full without dragging down the pace of the story. There were a few issues with word choice and repetition of descriptions that lent itself to the writing feeling just a little bit amateur, but the fact that those issues didn't detract from the story on the whole is testament to great world building and wonderful character development. I wanted to know more about Alex Why is he so quick to fall in love with Jessica? Why was he so willing to offer up his own salvation? I am also hoping that the next book helps make the ending of Branded feel less clipped short.
View all 4 comments. Jul 13, Etough rated it liked it. So I did enjoy the story in this book, but I am not sure I liked how it was executed. The idea was fantastic and very original. I am not sure if this was the writer's first book, but the flow of the book was off. There was so much build up and not enough character development to fill the pages. While I liked there characters in the book okay I didn't feel like I knew enough about them to love them.
There was so much room to get you emotionally involved with the characters but since you didn't So I did enjoy the story in this book, but I am not sure I liked how it was executed. There was so much room to get you emotionally involved with the characters but since you didn't really know much about them it kept them as strangers. With the character development being a little lacking in this book the love story also fell slightly flat. It just wasn't believeable enough for me. I also had a big problem with the fact that the characters said "ya" all the time. For some reason this bothered me to no end.
I would actually start to cringe when I read it. That being said, the last 40 or so pages of the book actually almost completely make up for the fact that alot of the book was lacking. The villian in the book really begins to blossum more as does the main character. The emotions that are written towards the end of the book are portrayed so much better than in the beginning. Your connection to the characters begins to develop much more. So because of this I am hopeful that in the next book that strong connection continues and the writer continues to improve and have acutally found myself excited to see where the story goes.
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here. Come mai, vi chiederete voi. E ha l'aspetto di un bambino. E poi che succede? Arriva Alex, nipote dei datori di lavoro di Jessica, e si innamora di lei. Jessica logicamente si innamora di lui, e tutti gli ostacoli al loro amore Imperdonabile mancanza di tatto, non trovate?
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I knew that face wel. It was the same face that had branded me hundreds, perhaps thousands of times. E poi la prova che Keary Taylor non solo non ha mai riletto quello che ha scritto, ma che non ha mai neanche provato ad immaginarlo. I couldn't help but stare at the way Cole walked. I had never seen anyone move so gracefully, almost as if he were walking on a sheet of glass and was being very gentle to not crack it.
Quella similitune esprime l'esatto opposto di quello che vorrebbe esprimere, e non esiste politically correct che possa farmi dire che un autore che non se ne accorge merita di scrivere. O di essere chiamato autore. Keary Taylor non dovrebbe pubblicare, nemmeno gratis. May 19, Ciara rated it did not like it Shelves: I'm not sure what to think of this book. The writing was slow paced and the ending was too fast.
Somehow, I had no feelings or sympathy for Jessica. The romance was way too rushed and totally umrealistic. Alex was perfect, too perfect. He's loving, caring, rich amd a fantastic cook. He knows Jessica for about four days and gives her his dead grandmother's diamond bracelet. I also think that God saw the good in Tristan. He never wanted to become the monster that he was. He fought free from it and chose not to harm people as a vampire. All he wanted was to be with Ana. God gifted them each other. Tristan and Ana's love was rare, their souls were tired and weary..
I really think it was B. I wish that there could have been 1 more page of dialogue between Ana and Tristan! I can picture them kissing and walking off into the sunset knowing that they would have an eternity of love together! I wish that the ending was more emotionally comforting. She didn't get to say bye to some many people! Sep 22, Jodie rated it liked it. Ughh, I enjoyed this trilogy, I really did, but this ending, wtf? So much unsaid, so much I don't know. This book was last of the trilogy and so much happened.
Ana had to fulfill her purpose and one of her 2 loves was going to die because of it. It was action packed and I so wanted her to succeed and she eventually did. She was manipulated and blackmailed and overall held the weight of the world on her shoulders. The end of the vampires came about so easy, I thought there might have been a littl Ughh, I enjoyed this trilogy, I really did, but this ending, wtf?
The end of the vampires came about so easy, I thought there might have been a little more to it, and even thought perhaps she would of thought of Tristan before she said those words. She didn't and then it was over. No more Tristan, no more Darren. If the ending was different I would have given this series a big fat 5 stars but seeing as though I have no idea what happened on the beach near the end, how Tristan came back, why Taylor ended up with Darren, what happened to Leia, and to see that she had to live out all those years again being alone watching everything over again, I can't possibly go past 3 shining stars.
So disappointed that she didn't really get her happily ever after even after living over half a dozen different lives: Why not hundreds of years earlier? I just don't get it. View all 4 comments. Sep 01, Danielle rated it it was ok. I have mixed feelings about this book and I'm not sure how to describe them. For one the ending was for lack of better words weird, which ultimately set of the vibe of the whole book.
For another I was a bit disappointed by the war scene, the whole book built up to that one moment, made such a big deal about it, and it was described in one page; there was no action and the "big bad wolf" was killed too easily for someone with so much power so it felt like all that hype was for nothing. It is a sh I have mixed feelings about this book and I'm not sure how to describe them. It is a shame because I enjoyed the first two books, but since the third and final book did not captivate me and left me feeling more confused than having a sense of closure as a final book should I would not reccommend the series.
I say this because I feel that the ending is everything and in my opionion it is important to have closure to the 'adventure' and not left with questions unanswered. Jul 08, Josephine rated it did not like it. This is the third book in a supposed trilogy. The second "book" - Brown Eyes - is really a short story to bridge the first and third book, not another "book" in a trilogy. After reading the first book, I was hooked; it had so much potential for a great series. The third book just fell flat.
Characters and events seemed to be thrown together haphazardly and hastily. So much was left unexplained. The spelling and grammar mistakes were unbelievable, another unfortunate side effect of self-publishin This is the third book in a supposed trilogy. The spelling and grammar mistakes were unbelievable, another unfortunate side effect of self-publishing these days, it seems.
Needless to say, this was a very disappointing read. Aug 22, Mya rated it liked it. I loved the first 2 books, but for me, this one was just "ok". It all seemed so rushed and jumped all over the place. To be honest, I'm not even sure what was going on at the end. Just a little disapponted. Aug 19, Molly rated it liked it. I liked the first two. I just think it could have been so much better. It didn't leave me feeling satisfied. Sep 30, Julie rated it really liked it. Brandon Alston, Quinteria Ramey Genre: August out now Summary: It was short and sweet and kept me hanging on.
Ana was an archangel, was as Title: Ana was an archangel, was as in past tense. She fell… thus never being allowed into heaven again because of her love for a vampire. She could not choose between love and destiny. This choice means the lives and deaths of all of her people. In this final book Ana finally makes the choice. It is a huge sacrifice of courage and all of those she loves.
My personal opinion of this series is yes, read it. The only disappointments I can call out is they are too short being novellas and I was not crazy about the ending of the final book. I felt there was a big build up of a climax and it ended way too quickly. I understand why and how it was done this was but with a huge war brewing and everyone about to be wiped out of existence it seemed a bit premature. I enjoyed it immensely in the end and still recommend it.
Jul 24, Paty rated it it was amazing. What a great ending to the series! The whole time I never expected her to have the ability to go back in time. I thought everything was just so perfect. How she stopped her son, how she got a second chance, etc. My heart was about to break when I read how she went to go find Tristan and he was already dead.
Her bravery to move on amazed me though. Th What a great ending to the series! There is no more. Then Tristan appears as an angel and says " I promised you that I would always find you, didn't I? Aug 27, Sarah Dieng rated it it was amazing. This was a wonderful ending to the series. It had it's sad moments for Ana, but Tristan found her again in the end. Aug 28, Kristyna rated it liked it. I would give this a 2. Disappointing last novel to a decent trilogy. It felt like a quick and messy job of rushing one tying up all the loose ends. Mar 16, Holly rated it it was ok.
It was good until the end. I hated the ending, absolutely hated it, so much so I don't even want to go into details. Aug 20, M rated it really liked it. Wasn't exactly how i thought it would end but i did enjoy it!! Feb 10, Aly rated it it was amazing.
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Great end to series! Jan 07, Jalisah Rahman rated it it was ok. It makes me very sad to have to give this book two stars, and I think that is because I am a dangerously sentimental person. I purchased this series back in the spring of and devoured it within days. Now, at this time I was what most would call a 'hormonal twelve year old' and therefore, all it took was one description of Tristan's 'stunning green eyes' for me to fall utterly and irrevocably in love with the story. I found myself recommending the books to strangers on the bus, my teachers i It makes me very sad to have to give this book two stars, and I think that is because I am a dangerously sentimental person.
I found myself recommending the books to strangers on the bus, my teachers in school, and sometimes I even discussed the plot with my five year old sister. I remember shouting in frustration as Anna never seemed capable of choosing Tristan over Darren, as I really did not see the competition.
Tristan has green eyes Over the past four years, as yes it does shock me to admit that I'm growing old, this book has always held a special place in my heart. Being the first ever set of books I purchased on my beloved Kindle, I found it difficult to shake off the impression it made on me. But like I said before, I was twelve!
Now, a few days ago, I decided to reread the series and see if my emotions still hold dear. And two pages into the book, I looked up in utter befuddlement. The writing is childish and immature, the characters have no personalities, they talk unrealistically, a fifteen year old, irritating child somehow rules an entire haven of witches despite the fact that she is clearly emotionally unstable.
A child who did not react much after her mother was dragged off by vampires. I do not understand how that is in any way plausible? She's irritating, boring and she's always thinking about herself. She complains about how everything is her fault and how no one seems to like her. Her relationship with Darren escalated at a ridiculous rate and personally, sorry twelve year old me! I found Tristan creepy. Why does he think that its okay to walk into the bedroom of a fifteen year old girl and watch her sleep?
And if he 'cared' so much about her, why didn't he just leave her alone or better yet, go and finish of Daemon and therefore make her life all the more easier? He had no passion and just kept repeating the same things over and over. One minute him and Anna are in love and the next they're arguing. Then , Anna's grandmother, the queen of the haven. By the end of Angel Eyes, I was ready to kill her. I do not recommend this book unless you are twelve years old, in which case, ignore all of the above and Aug 16, Kimm Reilly rated it it was ok.
Princess, witch, Heir, Angel? Things have been moving quickly for poor Ana who's life continues to be turned up side down.
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Ever since discovering her heritage, and her purpose, Ana's done nothing but make the wrong decisions. After all she's still even if she has memories of the last 7 lifetimes- lifetimes where she's failed to do the one thing she never quite can; fix her mistake and eradicate the vampires. Including Tristian, a vampire she's loved sin Princess, witch, Heir, Angel? Red Clay Freddie Hubbard. River Quay Pat Metheny.
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