Reviews

Jivaja by Venessa M. Giunta

kari_marie's review

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3.0

Thank you to NetGalley and Fictionvale Publishing, LLC for a free copy. This is an honest review.

Jivaja is a story about Mecca. Mecca has a special gift that she hates. It allows her to manipulate energy, as in souls. This gift saves her life but puts her in the cross hairs of the Visci. The Visci are in the beginnings of a civil war and Mecca just became the greatest weapon.

This was an interesting world. I liked the gift, even if it made Mecca a special snowflake. This could be a little slow paced at times. If spoilers are not your thing, stop reading now. Mecca makes a lot of questionable decisions so she was not my favorite. Her father is a jerk in so many ways. The visci are vampires as much as they try to seem like they are not. Sarah is awesome. I like her and would prefer to keep her around. This book had a very prequel feel to me. We learned more about her father than Mecca. There is some romance set up with two potentials. I don't like either one currently. One is evil and the other is selfish. The more I think about this book the more I struggle with it. The saving grace was the last 20%.

Netgalley: 3 stars because the writing was fine but it was not fast paced and the characters made some questionable choices.
Goodreads: 2.5 stars because I did not like it but I am hoping the author will grow. I wanted to like it. It will be rounded to 3 stars for convenience of NetGalley to Goodreads posting.

cherime's review

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5.0

Excellent read which I had a hard time putting down. Fascinating plot with a couple of wicked twists. Great characters.

bookishharlot's review

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4.0

Jivaja is an imaginative tale that takes the old elements of storytelling along with the author's own out of the box innovative ideas to create a very much welcomed story spin on vampires. And, speaking of vampires let us take a stroll down on memory lane of the blood-sucking creatures of the night...the upgraded version. The Visci are a group of civilized creatures that have seized control of government around the states and whom Mecca should not have gotten involved with but unfortunately, her lineage in companion with the Visci she accidentally kills has made her the most wanted person on all the Visci's list. The Visci feed off human blood for sustenance but unlike their old ancestors, vampires, they are not dead and neither are they human. 

Jivaja is the type of book that deserves more exciting. More hype. More people talking about it because it is just that amazing. From begging, middle and end, I was entranced in the Atlanta fantasy setting of an oncoming civil war and bloodsucking monsters that are not vampires. And, of course, I am all for a person of color being the main character in a young adult fantasy novel I mean...*points at self* yes, please. Brimming with mystery, I was kept at the edge of my seat.

Even with its flaws of the slow pacing, the deviating focus from Mecca to the father, and some questionable decision made by the characters; Jivaja is still a good book and I recommend all to give it a read. 
description
Mecca is a character that can be debated to be very typical like with her damsel in distress act she pulled and being very obnoxious with her thoughts mistaking it for confidence. However, she has her qualities like 
David turned out to be much more intriguing than I gave him credit for in the begging. He really showed to be a man of courage and sensitivity who also has a dark side when you press him enough. I liked David but I wished the author would focus less on him and more on Mecca. 
Claude was a character who I instantly fell for from the begging. Maybe because I'm a basic bitch who likes basic shit like good looking villains that may be the potential love interest. He is evil, like evil-evil, not the evil with a soft heart. Nope, he is a total bastard and I stan.
description
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majesdane's review

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3.0

I received an arc from NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.

This was a solid 3 stars from me. It's technically fine, it just didn't really work for me. I found the pacing to be a bit slow, and some of Mecca's decisions were kind of ... questionable. I really didn't like David, Mecca's father, at all, and half of the book is told from his point of view (which was a bold choice by Giunta; I applaud risk-taking by authors trying to do something different). I thought the Soul Cavern and Mecca's powers was interestingly done, though.

I think there's good ideas here, they're just lacking in a more solid execution.
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