Ratings13
Average rating3.1
Though she tries returning to the life she knew before the accident, Pierce can't help but feel at once a part of this world, and apart from it. Yet she's never alone . . . because someone is always watching her. Escape from the realm of the dead is impossible when someone there wants you back.
But now she's moved to a new town. Maybe at her new school, she can start fresh. Maybe she can stop feeling so afraid.
Only she can't. Because even here, he finds her. That's how desperately he wants her back. She knows he's no guardian angel, and his dark world isn't exactly heaven, yet she can't stay away . . . especially since he always appears when she least expects it, but exactly when she needs him most.
But if she lets herself fall any further, she may just find herself back in the one place she most fears: the Underworld
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1 primary bookAbandon is a 1-book series first released in 2011 with contributions by Meg Cabot.
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2/5⭐⭐
No hay muchas veces en las que no me guste un libro, sobretodo si es un retelling del mito de Persephone y Hades, pero esta vez así ha sido, lo cual ha sido una decepción enorme ya que tenía mucho hype con este libro. Y es que la historia en sí me ha encantado, el planteamiento es genial y la idea maravillosa. Ahora bien, lo que no me ha gustado es el libro en sí. No me ha gustado como está escrito, quizá sea demasiado YA, pero eso nunca ha sido un problema....
Bueno, empecemos desde el principio.
La protagonista, Pierce, se muda a Isla de Huesos con su madre para comenzar de cero, ya que tras su muerte, (sí, sí, la muerte de Pierce) su visita al inframundo y su resurrección, pues todo el mundo la ha tomado por loca. Pero Pierce no está loca, realmente fue al Inframundo, donde se encontró de nuevo con John, el chico que había conocido a los 7 años en el cementerio la primera vez que había ido a la Isla.
Hasta aquí, todo correcto, ahora bien, por favor, que alguien me explique por qué Jhon, cuándo y cómo, se enamora de Pierce. Tras conocerla 5 minutos a los 7 años? Tras los 5 minutos en el Inframundo? Pues oye, yo no lo se, y tú? Pues tampoco creo que lo sepas, porque el asunto es, que este libro de backround, 0 patatero...
Porque sí, nos cuenta la historia de la familia de Pierce, los incidentes que han ocurrido después de su muerte (que están muy bien hilados,por cierto), que si esto, que si lo otro, pero no nos cuenta absolutamente nada en realidad, o a este libro le han arrancado páginas o yo no me he enterado de nada.
Y ahí es donde yo veo el problema, como ya he dicho la idea para la historia es genial pero le falta sustancia, y le falta algo muy importante que es: LA ATRACCIÓN, tampoco te estoy pidiendo tensión sexual, pero atracción entre los protagonistas...pues hombre...un momento de “y ella le miró a los ojos y al ver el brillo en su mirada su corazón se saltó un latido y las mariposas de su estomago bailaron un vals”, algo que me diga porqué se enamoran...porque vale sí, están predestinados o algo por el estilo,pues mu bien mi niño, pero necesito algo más. Está muy bien que me cuentes cosas, querida, pero no pases por encima por lo importante, lo que le da sustancia a la trama, mucho blablabla pero poco salseo en realidad.
Pues eso, que me estoy planteando quitarle una estrella, si no fuera por la historia, los diálogos entre Pierce y Jhon que son de ese tipo que me encanta y el final, pues lo haría.
Para saber más, tendréis que leeros el libro y así luego lo comentamos porque de verdad creo que me he perdido algo. No me extraña que no siguieran publicando la saga en español.
Me siento: frustrada
I will be frank here and say I did not enjoy Abandon by Meg Cabot. This novel gave off the impression of being a retelling or spin on the Persephone/Hades myth (and it sort of is) but it definitely was not what I was expecting and lacked the romantic chemistry and intensity I thought this kind of story would give. In short, I found the main character to be irritating and thoughtless, the male love-interest barely there, and the writing style lacking in coherency.
Pierce, our main character, died at the age of fifteen, a year before the novel begins and ever since her near death experience, life for her has been difficult. She does poorly in school, is anti-social, and lands herself in trouble she can clearly avoid. It also doesn't help that her almost permanently dying led to her parents' divorce and an incident at Pierce's old school leads to her being kicked out. Now Pierce is living in Isla Huesos (her mother's childhood home) and attending a new school and trying to make new friends but Isla Huesos was really where all of Pierce's problems began. Because here, years ago, in a cemetery when she was five year's old is where she met John. John who brought a dead bird back to life to appease a little girl, John who she met by a lake-shore in the Underworld when she died the year before, and John who she tricked and escaped from so she could come back to life. Now that sounds like the premise of story that should have you glued to the pages as it fills you to the brim with a heart-stopping scenes and out of this world story telling but in all honesty this story was a disappointing narrative.
Pierce has a tendency for getting herself into trouble whether it be by accidentally tripping on her scarf and falling into a pool or not quickly leaving a shop when the owner starts taking an unwanted interest in her necklace. She also has a tendency for picking on the male lead, John. I can't say too much without giving away spoilers but John does everything he can to protect Pierce and she constantly blames him for the outcome of what was initially her fault or something that wasn't his fault at all. She's not very nice to him to be honest and because of this I can't harp on him for his grumpy, mopy attitude whenever he's in a scene with her because I spent most of the book cursing her from my bed. Not to say that John makes up for Pierce's misgivings, he's not always very clear when he talks to her leaving her to jump to conclusions about his intentions and near the end of the book where he was having more of an actual presence he was becoming too controlling for my tastes.
Another thing that made it hard for me to read Abandon was the jarring transitions from present day to flash backs, it happens consistently throughout the book and without warning which would always pull me out of a scene as I tried to find my bearings and understand what was going on.
I will admit that Abandon has an interesting concept, retellings always need to have a unique spin and I think this one was distinctive enough to stand out but it just never had what it needed to take off.