Reviews

The Lost City of Faar, by D.J. MacHale

quynhu_d's review against another edition

Go to review page

adventurous fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix

3.75

dwheeler88's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

The 2nd book has the same writing style and general plot as the first. The first 70 pages or so were pretty slow, but then the action we saw in the first book comes back.

Bobby meets a new traveler, and we don't see much of Loor. The writing is still very teenager-ish (I know, duh) but what bothered me a little more is that Bobby isn't getting much smarter. He knows Saint Dane can shape-shift...

Also, the thing with Andy Mitchell was dumb.

morgs98's review against another edition

Go to review page

Surprisingly, I really love this series. It was popular when we were in like 4th grade, and I just started. It's great.

dannb's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

Great family audio reads... (reader is voice of Bob the Builder...go figure. Fun alternate world adventures.

dcarson802's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

Great read! Full of action and a beautiful world is described. Worth reading.

sjkohn's review against another edition

Go to review page

adventurous emotional fast-paced

4.0

brennieree33's review

Go to review page

3.0

I did really like this book. Cloral had a really fun atmosphere and this was a world that I liked exploring more than Denduron. Spader is a really fun character, and the things that happened in this book just tugged at your heartstrings. I would have given this book 4 stars if not for a few things in the spoiler section. So let's get to that.

TW: Death, guns, sharks.

Spoiler
-Okay, Press dying really hurt. And I love the dynamic of Spader and Bobby having to reconcile with each other. I just wish we'd gotten a little bit more of that, maybe with a little more time of Bobby being mad before he forgives Spader.
-Okay, so the whole bank idea was really smart, but how did Bobby know that they would get his journals from First Earth before his next journal? With the whole time thing, I don't know whether to call that plan genius or pure stupidity. But it did work for him, so whatever.
-I really hated the intro into the book. Yes, I know that it's a sequel so you have to reintroduce the readers into the world of the Travelers. But it makes no sense in the context of the journals. For all Bobby knows, his friends are getting his journals right after another, so why would he have to remind them of Saint Dane, the star symbol, things that happened on Denduron, etc? It would have made more sense for the book to start with Mark and Courtney getting the journals or talking about what happened in the last book amongst themselves, because their story is written in a more traditional narrated format.
-I've noticed that many authors have specific words they use all the time. Brandon Sanderson's is "maladroit," Natasha Ngan's is "sluiced," and DJ MacHale's is "lavatory." Like, just call it a bathroom haha. It didn't even bother me so much as stick out because I thought it was funny that he wouldn't just call it a bathroom.
-Okay, the whole Mitchell plotline makes no sense. Sure, you want to create tension with the Second Earth plot, because nothing is really happening there. But what the author did to create tension was stupid AF. This whole could have been resolved in two seconds in two entirely different ways. First, just get Courtney involved from the start, as Mitchell is afraid of her. Or, just have Mark tell Mitchell how stupid he would look if he told anyone about it. And then the author tried to trick us at the end with the whole reveal that they'd typed up the journals and given them to the police already, but, as the Second Earth plotline is written in 3rd person omniscient, this doesn't work. Mark specifically thinks that he won't tell Courtney about Mitchell until they get to the police station, but by this point she's already supposed to know. That doesn't in this point of view and it really freaking bothers me when authors do this. I took a whole off of this book for the mental gymnastics of this alone. It's dumb and it doesn't work. This was literally stuck in only to make this part of the plot remotely interesting and he screwed it up. AHHHHHHHHH. I'm just very angry about this for some reason and I don't know why haha.

kristenbooks's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

First read: 7th grade (late 2006)
Re-read: July, 9, 2014

I love the setting of this book. Cloral is definitely my favorite territory from the series. This is also one of the major turning points in the series, causing Bobby to have to be more independent and actually figure things out. This book is a really quick read and even though the plot isn't very intricate, there are so many fun adventures.

8.5/10 (4/5)

romamoody's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

Unlike the first book, this one takes the reader to a world very different from our own. With just enough similarity to make the character interactions believable and highly entertaining. Although the ending was quite predictable, it was still a great read and worth the reread as an adult.

nithou's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

Ce tome ci m'a pris un peu plus de temps que le précédent mais je l'ai presque autant apprécié, encore énormément de questions restent en suspens, on a vraiment envie de continuer la série pour comprendre l'ensemble de l'univers de Pendragon. Le monde de Coral était juste splendide et faisait rêver, j'ai encore des images plein la tête et aimerait tellement pouvoir le visiter. Une bonne série young adult en somme qui fait plaisir à lire 🙏🏻