Follow Friday is now acknowledging and promoting the following of blogs through their RSS feeds! Because this site is proudly powered by WordPress, there’s no GFC (Google Friend Connect) option. BUT, you can follow TGR through my feed by clicking HERE or over to the right, in my sidebar. You can also subscribe through email!
_____________________________________________________
Anna and the French Kiss. Or Daughter of Smoke and Bone. In the case of Anna, I just don’t think any actors could take the place of Anna and Etienne; I don’t think it would work, and I don’t think they could capture all of their essence. In the case of Smoke and Bone, there’s just so much awesome that I think a lot of it would be left out in a movie.
_____________________________________________________
This week at The Grammarian’s Reviews
Vote for TGR at the Independent Book Blogger Awards – help me get to BEA!
“Good” versus “Bad” reading and writing
{new feature!} Whip it Up Mondays
You know that story we all know and love? Of course you do. And if you don’t, that means you haven’t yet read Anna and the French Kiss.
So this beloved story has a newly released scene, thanks to the wonderful Stephanie Perkins. Also, there will be another new scene next month, too. How awesome is that? (I’ll tell you: REALLY RIDICULOUSLY AWESOME!)
Trust me: you want to go read it. It’s nerdy. It’s cute. It’s so Anna and Étienne.
You can find the scene here.
As winter melts into spring, will a year of romantic near – misses end with the French kiss Anna – and readers – have long awaited?
The story’s progression immediately caught me by surprise; it doesn’t transpire in a short amount of time. Instead, it paces itself over roughly a year of time. Sounds crazy slow, but it isn’t. It actually works like a big puzzle in which you can’t wait to find the next piece to plug into place. It’s this pacing that gives the plot sustenance. Without it, and in a much shorter timespan, the plot would come off cliche.
But the characters are supporting that long timeframe. Without them, the story would drag. The relations between Anna and her friends just work, to put it simply; their actions aren’t forced or unflattering or awkward – although they are a tad predictable. They merely mesh together, and they’re all imperfect. In fact, they seem real. What they say to one another is not unlike what you’d hear you or your friends saying (except maybe minus the French and British slang).
So essentially Anna and the French Kiss provides both good story and believability. And a charming love interest: Etienne St. Clair. (Warning: You won’t be able to keep yourself from swooning just from seeing his name. He’s that special.) What’s best about him is that he’s so unlike other male characters. He’s not simply the Knight in Shining Armor or the Bad Boy or anything inbetween. He’s a collaboration – really well-rounded.
My advice? Don’t knock it for the romance-y premise. At all. Go read it!