Release Date: June 25, 2013
Publisher: Harlequin Teen
Age Group: Young Adult
Format: E-galley
Source: Publisher
Series: Paper Gods #1
Pages: 377
Buy: Amazon / Barnes & Noble / IndieBound
Description: Goodreads
I looked down at the paper, still touching the tip of my shoe. I reached for it, flipping the page over to look.
Scrawls of ink outlined a drawing of a girl lying on a bench.
A sick feeling started to twist in my stomach, like motion sickness.
And then the girl in the drawing turned her head, and her inky eyes glared straight into mine.
On the heels of a family tragedy, the last thing Katie Greene wants to do is move halfway across the world. Stuck with her aunt in Shizuoka, Japan, Katie feels lost. Alone. She doesn’t know the language, she can barely hold a pair of chopsticks, and she can’t seem to get the hang of taking her shoes off whenever she enters a building.
Then there’s gorgeous but aloof Tomohiro, star of the school’s kendo team. How did he really get the scar on his arm? Katie isn’t prepared for the answer. But when she sees the things he draws start moving, there’s no denying the truth: Tomo has a connection to the ancient gods of Japan, and being near Katie is causing his abilities to spiral out of control. If the wrong people notice, they'll both be targets.
Katie never wanted to move to Japan—now she may not make it out of the country alive.
I’m coming down from one of the most epic book hangovers of
my entire life, which means that I’ve been waiting for the proverbial other
shoe (or, in this case, the other book) to drop. I knew that, even if it was an altogether
entertaining book, if it didn’t obliterate my feels, it would seem much worse
to me by comparison. Sadly, this is the
case with Amanda Sun’s Ink, the first
in the Paper Gods series. It had all the
pieces of something I would enjoy, but somehow those pieces didn’t fall
together.
In Ink, Katie
Greene has left New York following her mother’s death to live with her aunt in
Shizuoka, Japan. She doesn’t know the
language, she’s unfamiliar with the culture, and she doesn’t know her aunt well
enough to feel at home. One day at
school, she witnesses a very, very bad break-up that sticks with her because a-
the boy doing the breaking says terribly mean things but looks as though the
words hurt him and b- pictures from the boy’s sketchbook fall into Katie’s line
of sight, and those pictures move. She gets a ton of shade thrown her way by
this mysterious and dangerous boy named Yuu Tomohiro about how pictures don’t move, but she refuses to
back down. Her new friends tell her to
back off, but she can’t help herself.
She discovers Tomo’s secret—he’s part-god, a Kami whose drawings come to
life with frightening results—and his drawings and the “ink” respond to
her.
So here’s the thing—there’s a lot going on in Ink.
At any point, it may be a supernatural romance, a thriller, or a
fish-out-of-water tale. The problem was
that I never felt these separate aspects coalesced like they should. The focus wouldn’t stay on one topic long
enough for me to feel sated in what I’d read before it would leap to something
else. By the end I felt things start to
gel, the book was nearly over. I knew
what I was supposed to feel—that was evident from what was happening on the
page-- but I didn’t feel the characters had earned it. It’s a shame, because there are some really
well-written, lovely descriptions of Japan that showed so much potential.
Then, there’s Katie and Tomo. First, there’s an unnecessary love triangle
that felt more forced than anything.
Secondly, I understood why Katie would be interested in following Tomo
around after the break-up incident, but after finding out the tales of horror
from his past and learning about the people he associates with (like, Yakuza
gang members!), I wish she’d have taken more time to consider that he might
actually be dangerous. She just wouldn’t let up. This doesn’t happen to me often, but I think
this is one of those times when I am not Y enough to fully immerse myself in
this YA. Katie kept making so many
irresponsible choices with no regard for anyone around her, which shouldn’t
make or break a character, but I didn’t feel bonded with Katie.
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