Ratings53
Average rating3.7
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3 primary books5 released booksThe Half Bad Trilogy is a 5-book series with 3 primary works first released in 2014 with contributions by Sally Green and Reni Indardini.
Reviews with the most likes.
I loved every page of this. And the ending—SO PERFECT. Cannot wait to read the next book.
REVIEW:
Okay, so I'll start by saying I haven't read a book about witches that I really loved since Harry Potter. Not that there aren't any out there (there are), but one hadn't really caught my interest until Half Bad.
Well. I was on the fifth page when I realized this was very likely going to be a new favorite. And I was right.
First and foremost: THE VOICE. If you're a YA writer looking for a great example of powerful, immediate, raw voice, pick up this book immediately. Nathan's voice is so real and intense and I honestly could not have loved it any more.
Secondly: the second-person POV. There are indeed sections of second person POV, including the opening, which I was pretty surprised to read. But holy wow, it worked so well! Ms. Green broke the rules on this one, and it really really worked.
Now the characters and the plot. Half Bad has you question right from the start who the good and bad guys are. There isn't a clear-cut this person is good, this person is bad element, which I absolutely adore because gray characters, to me, are so much more realistic and interesting than morally 100% good/evil characters.
What made all of these even better was the pacing—even in the flashback sections that show us how Nathan ends up caged—are full of tension and conflict and events that had me racing through the book to find out what happens.
Overall, I absolutely loved Half Bad. It's now one of my favorites and I can't read to get my hands on the sequel, Half Wild. If you like dark, intense YA Fantasy, I couldn't recommend this one any more.
!!!! This was so good! Hard to put down. Glad I bought Half Wild and had it in my hands immediately after finishing Half Bad.
Picked this up because a book about witches from a male POV is a rare find and relevant to my interests. It does have a lot of Harry Potter parallels as mentioned in many reviews but it's unique enough that you can easily forget about that and is less similar the farther you read.
In this world, there are white and black witches with a lot of violence between them with the whites being the governing side and blacks mostly being independent and solitary. Upon turning 17, both types are bestowed 3 gifts and blood from a relative in order for their specific gift to appear, though they exhibit certain magical abilities before that (namely faster healing). The main character is half black and half white and is heavily discriminated against because of it to the point of outright abuse. As his 17th birthday approaches, he is ripped from his grandmother and half siblings, experimented upon by whites, isolated from society - but eventually is able to escape and goes to seek out one that can give him his gifts for fear that he'll slowly die without the ritual completed. There are a lot of different rules the witches have to live by both governed by The Whites and by magic itself (example: Nathan can't sleep inside without weird headaches because of his Black heritage and can also sense/feel electronic pulses from cell phones and TVs for some reason).
The biggest issue I had with the book is that it switches between 1st to 2nd person POV between chapters though it's all from Nathan's POV. Also some of the rules mentioned above don't make a lot of sense. In this world, being born into magic seems like an awful violence-filled short life.