Sweet Evil by Wendy Higgins
Genre: Young Adult Paranormal
Series: Book 1 of The Sweet Trilogy
Publisher: HarperTeen (May 1, 2012)
Author Information: Website | Twitter
Mogsy's Rating: 2 of 5 stars
I wish I could say this book just wasn't for me because I'm not into YA paranormal romance, but that wouldn't be true. In fact, I quite enjoy this genre. Nothing beats a good love story for giving me all the warm and fuzzy feels, and the best ones do just that. On the flip side, however, there are books like Sweet Evil that somehow manage to diminish the mood by pushing all the wrong buttons. There were a couple things about it that I found off-putting, though I'm aware it's a matter of personal taste and that others might not feel the same way.
Unfortunately, the characters Anna and Kai too closely resemble a couple of my biggest pet peeves. Pet peeve the first: a weepy, insecure female protagonist. I have no problems with Anna being the living embodiment of goodness (in fact, I admire her all the more for it) but naivete and innocence does not have to translate to neediness, ceaseless pining, crying or completely falling to pieces over a guy. Especially when the guy in question has done so little to deserve such obsession. So many times I just wanted to shake her and ask her where she has misplaced her self-respect.
Genre: Young Adult Paranormal
Series: Book 1 of The Sweet Trilogy
Publisher: HarperTeen (May 1, 2012)
Author Information: Website | Twitter
Mogsy's Rating: 2 of 5 stars
I wish I could say this book just wasn't for me because I'm not into YA paranormal romance, but that wouldn't be true. In fact, I quite enjoy this genre. Nothing beats a good love story for giving me all the warm and fuzzy feels, and the best ones do just that. On the flip side, however, there are books like Sweet Evil that somehow manage to diminish the mood by pushing all the wrong buttons. There were a couple things about it that I found off-putting, though I'm aware it's a matter of personal taste and that others might not feel the same way.
Unfortunately, the characters Anna and Kai too closely resemble a couple of my biggest pet peeves. Pet peeve the first: a weepy, insecure female protagonist. I have no problems with Anna being the living embodiment of goodness (in fact, I admire her all the more for it) but naivete and innocence does not have to translate to neediness, ceaseless pining, crying or completely falling to pieces over a guy. Especially when the guy in question has done so little to deserve such obsession. So many times I just wanted to shake her and ask her where she has misplaced her self-respect.
Which brings me to pet peeve the second: male love interests that
are pure scum, just wrapped in a pretty package. Take away Kaidan's good
looks and hot accent and all you'll have left is arrogance and
patronizing smugness. I'm not even taking
into account his (literal!) life's work to sleep with as many women as
possible. Seeing as he is the half-human son of the Demon of Lust, I'll
just let that one slide as an ingrained part of his nature. Still, regardless of whether he can help it or not, most sane people tend to
find that sort of behavior repellent. So what does that say about Anna, who falls head over heels for this guy anyway?
All right, with that out of the way, now I can tell you about the things in the book that DID work for me. Sweet Evil
offers an interesting take on angels and demons and how they interact
with us mere mortals here on earth. It's a deliciously
sordid affair involving the demons of sins/vices taking over the bodies of
men in order to have children with human women, resulting in the half-demon sons
and daughters called Nephilim. The intricate system and
hierarchy of fallen angels described in this book shows that much care and effort
was put into world building, proving Sweet Evil is not just about the romance, and that there is actually quite a lot of substance behind the story as well.
In spite of this, the plot flounders in many places for being too
convenient and coincidental for my tastes, as in it's very obviously
done for the sole purpose of forcing the characters right where the
author wants them to be. Otherwise, you know there would be no story.
For example, Anna's demon father who has been behind bars for the last
sixteen years suddenly has a parole hearing coming up, well-timed to be
just right after Anna meets him for the first time. And then, of course, there is Anna's mom Patti. What mother in her
right mind would allow her teenage daughter to go on a road trip alone with a
seventeen-year-old boy (son of the Demon of Lust, no less), just the two
of them driving across the country and staying in hotels by themselves, to visit
a total stranger in a penitentiary? That's just a little too hard to
swallow.
I will give the story this, though: at no point did I want to stop
reading. That I was going to see this whole thing through was always a
foregone conclusion, despite the character flaws and the hitches and
holes in the plot. I was entertained, even if I felt little sympathy for
either Anna or Kaidan. Like I said, I had some pretty idiosyncratic
reasons for why this book ultimately didn't work for me, but I can also
see how other readers with a penchant for the young adult genre and
paranormal romances may find plenty to like.


All very good observations! I couldn't swallow the road trip either and the whole falling for the bad boy thing. There was nothing there bah! I dont remeber things asw elll anymore but I think only liked one character who was the possible other love interest who of course has no chance right?
ReplyDeleteYep, the good girls always fall for the bad boys. The one other possible love interest (perhaps the beginning of a love triangle?) who of course is an actual decent human being only gets a bit of screen time :\
DeleteWell, can't say I told you so because I didn't. But if you had read me the blurb first I would have. =)
ReplyDelete