Reviews

Ashes to Ashes by Melissa Walker

_alwaysrealokay's review

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4.0

to be honest, it started a little bit slow for me. I wanted to put it down but I had this constant nagging in the back of my mind. Anyway, I enjoyed it very much. ashes to ashes took a turn I didn't exprct toward the end. the book my curiosity about what happen when you someone go in a coma increase. the book felt real to me. the message behind this book is to be grayeful for all the mundanes stuffs that occur to us and to appreciate life for it is a fragile thing.

sc104906's review

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3.0

Ever wonder how the dead cope with being dead. Callie is learning how to help her friends and family to move on. In turn, Callie is learning how to move on to Solus. This was an interesting concept, but an okay book that was slow at times.

chrissymcbooknerd's review

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5.0

I don't feel like I should really give a young adult novel about ghosts five stars, right? I mean, it's another paranormal book with another love triangle and a protagonist that's a little slow and a lot irritating at times.

But... it was such an enjoyable story!

Basically, the novel focuses on Callie, a teenager who dies one night (in her brand new car... go figure!) on the way to her boyfriend's house. (This isn't a spoiler! I promise!) She wakes up to a strange, glowy existence only to discover that she is a ghost -- and she will not move on to the afterlife until she is able to help her dearest love ones find peace with her death.

Callie has a Guide, Thatcher, who assures her that he will help her through the process of seeking acceptance for herself and her family... but Callie meets a group of rebels who make her wonder if Thatcher might be hiding the true extent of her powers and abilities in Prism. So, when Callie is given an opportunity to reconnect with her boyfriend --- maybe even to join him back on Earth -- she jumps at the possibility. But, is there any truth in Thatcher's warnings that she may be making the biggest mistake of her (after)life?

Maybe it's because I've been in a reading slump, or because this is my first book about ghosts... or maybe it's just a genuinely entertaining piece of fiction, but I really loved ASHES TO ASHES. I mean, yes, there were times when I wondered how Callie could POSSIBLY be so unaware of what was happening all around her, but even these annoying little character quirks really weren't enough to detract from the story for me.

I enjoyed Thatcher's character and liked that the author provided a bit more character development and background than I usually expect in this type of story. Callie's friends and boyfriend before death were fairly multidimensional characters too -- I especially enjoyed her quirky best friend and her obsession with all things paranormal. Sure, she was a bit over the top at points, but who didn't know at least one kid in school who acted like this?

And.. that ending! I just really was NOT expecting that ending! And then I find out that I have to WAIT, because this is part of a series?!

If you like cute paranormal fiction with a little tinge of romance and intrigue, go ahead and give ASHES TO ASHES a read. Just know that you'll be waiting a little while for the story to continue...

(4.5 stars)

midnightbookgirl's review

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3.0

A good ghost story, full review to come.

labraden's review

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3.0

Ashes to Ashes begins with an interesting premise. Callie lost her mother when she was six. Since then, she has had a less than open relationship with her father, but enjoys a loving best friend, Carson, and a boyfriend, Nick, that she is in love with. Her father buys her a new car which she wrecks in an attempt to find a thrill that is missing in her life. In the wreck, she dies and goes to a place called the Prism where the dead go to help their loved ones deal with the death by "haunting" them. Many of the ghosts in the Prism want to use Callie's energy to find a way to take possession of the bodies of the living to come back to life. Thatcher, Callie's spirit guide, tries to protect her from those who would use her for nefarious reasons.
I found this book frustrating. So many topics are raised in this book, but almost none are addressed, even by the end of the book. Apparently there is a sequel, but that isn't clear until the last page of the book, leaving the reader frustrated by the lack of progress the book makes.

alatedbibliophile's review

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5.0

Oh. My. Gosh.
I don't even know what to say about this book, other than it was by far one of the best books I have ever read. I won it through GoodReads and it is an ARC and boy, am I glad that I signed up to win! I was ready to pick it back up and read it again after I finished it. I'm still breathless from reading this fantastic, unique, phenomenal novel. I am dying to read the next book in this series!

krystala's review

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3.0

This was definitely an interesting read. The concept of the prism and Solus was different for sure. The idea that ghosts have to have their former loved ones move on from their death was different as well and was a beautiful way to have ghosts and living together and such. The book did a good job of describing what was going on and making it a pretty special experience. The plot was interesting enough though it lulled at times. I do think having the villains of the story being as enticing as they were was a pretty good idea. Callie was drawn to them because she died so young and they were able to do things she still wanted to do. But she came to her senses and realized what they were doing was wrong. Taking over people and allowing their souls to just disappear? Definitely wrong. Overall, not a bad read. I will probably continue the series.

emilygrn's review

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3.0

Decent enough...lots of holes missing a lot in the plot line and it kind of lacks a little depth, but I will admit the ending was not what I expected, especially the last line.

graceharvill's review

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4.0

3.75/5

Great story! A little slow, but otherwise it was fantastic.

hollymbryan's review

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4.0

3.5 stars (I always round up when I can't give a half star, thus the 4-star rating)

I have been really eager to read this book since I heard about it. It sounded like it would be similar to Gabrielle Zevin's ELSEWHERE, which I read at the beginning of 2013 and really enjoyed. I was lucky enough to win an ARC of this book from Shana at A Book Vacation -- so thank you, Shana, for giving me the chance to read it!

I was intrigued by the idea behind ASHES TO ASHES -- our main character, Callie, dies young in a tragic accident and finds herself in "the Prism," a sort of limbo, in-between place. She's no longer on Earth, clearly, but she's not in Heaven either (or, as it's called in the book, "Solus"). She is met upon her arrival in the Prism by Thatcher, who will be her Ghost Guide. It is Thatcher who is supposed to assist Callie in "haunting" her loved ones so that they will accept her death and she can move on to the next dimension, Solus. Of course Callie at first does not believe she is dead, then she becomes angry and feels intense pain at the idea that her loved ones will move on without her. Callie is no stranger to pain and grief, as we learn that her mother passed away 10 years ago, when Callie was just six. Thatcher uses that experience to try and help Callie understand the purpose of ghosts - the newly-deceased - landing in the Prism before moving to Solus; they are there to haunt their loved ones, but haunting is not what we have typically believed it to be, with poltergeists playing pranks and rattling chains and such. Rather, haunting is the process by which the ghosts will help their loved ones make peace with their deaths and accept that they are gone; then their loved ones can move past their grief and the ghosts can move past the Prism and into Solus. Thatcher explains that Callie's mother had done just this thing for Callie and her father. He says, "It doesn't mean that you forgot her. It just means that you had healed enough and accepted her death so that she could move on." (p.53 of ARC)

From this point on, we go with Callie on her journey of haunting her loved ones and trying to make sense of what happened her. We quickly learn from her interactions with other Ghost Guides and then with other ghosts that Callie is somehow different; she continues to feel very strong emotions in the Prism, which is something that very rarely happens (the Prism is designed to anesthetize them so that they may be in a calm state to effectuate their haunting). We also meet, along with Callie, a group of other ghosts (Reena, Leo, Norris, and Delia) who know Thatcher but are antagonistic to him and very different from him; they exist in the Prism, but they are neither newly-deceased ghosts nor Guides, and they look different from the rest of the ghosts. The bulk of the story is about Callie trying to reconcile her love and longing for her earthly boyfriend, Nick, and her developing feelings for Thatcher, as well as the mystery surrounding both her difference and the difference behind the other group of ghosts.

The writing in ASHES TO ASHES is very good, the plot is pretty fast-paced, and I definitely raced through the book (whenever I could sneak away from cleaning in preparation for our holiday visit from the in-laws!). I was eager to find out more about Callie's situation and what Thatcher seemed to know about it that he wasn't telling her, why Thatcher was "stuck" being a Guide in the Prism and unable to move on to Solus, how Callie would help her loved ones heal, and just what was up with Reena and her group (the rebel ghosts, as it were). Ms. Walker definitely had me hooked and I think she knows how to tell a very good story. There was a lot of teasing, I guess you could say, that kept me furiously turning those pages! She did a great job with that.

However, I felt I could only give a 3.5-star rating because there was just *something* that was missing, for me. I'm not sure if it was that I didn't connect on a deeper level with the characters - I mean, I liked Callie, but didn't necessarily identify with her or adore her - or what, exactly, but there was some elusive thing that I maybe expected but didn't get. I also had a difficult time getting my head around Callie and Thatcher's developing relationship. Now, I understand it was not the same as an earthly relationship, and I DO think that Ms. Walker did a good job of trying to explain that. Callie acknowledges that what she might feel for Thatcher is completely different from what she felt for Nick when she was alive. If one's soul/ghost can "fall in love" with another after our earthly body has ceased to exist, I think Ms. Walker came as close as I can imagine to describing what that kind of love would look like. However, there was maybe just one time too many when Callie mentioned wanting to kiss Thatcher that it just kept throwing me off. It's hard to explain, but... I'm just not sure how I felt about their relationship. Also, Thatcher was (understandably) so distant and cold for most of the book that I had a difficult time connecting with him. That had to be very hard for Ms. Walker to handle, though, because it IS perfectly understandable that he would be like that, and I think writing him any other way wouldn't have been true to the character. So I don't know how she could have done any better! But I just wasn't 100% connected with him.

Overall, I want to emphasize that a 3.5-star rating from me is good!! (I very rarely give a 5-star rating.) I really did like this book a lot and would recommend it to anyone who loves paranormal reads, romance, or generally just enjoys YA fiction. I would say you should go into it with an open mind - this is not a religious book and it might not jibe with your religious beliefs about what happens to people when they die. At the same time, I find it very comforting to think that our soul or ghost would have as its purpose the easing of our loved ones' pain and grief upon our death. I really liked that aspect of the book; in fact, I liked the whole mythology behind the story and I think it's very creative. I would just urge readers to be open to what happens in the book to increase the likelihood that they'll enjoy it. Finally, I will say that I will ABSOLUTELY be reading book 2 when it releases!! And that you should be prepared to be saying the same thing once you read this ending!

Thank you again to Shana for giving me the chance to read the book! I really enjoyed it and am so glad I was able to read it just before it released. Thank you also to Ms. Walker for writing such a thoughtful, creative book and for encouraging young readers to think about death and grief in such thoughtful ways.