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Michelle Muto

Author of The Book of Lost Souls

6 Works 214 Members 22 Reviews 2 Favorited

About the Author

Includes the name: Michelle Muto

Series

Works by Michelle Muto

The Book of Lost Souls (2011) 77 copies, 7 reviews
The Haunting Season (2013) 67 copies, 7 reviews
Don't Fear the Reaper (Netherworld, #1) (2011) 39 copies, 3 reviews
Of Shadow and Stone (2015) 29 copies, 5 reviews
Nature's Fifth Season (2015) 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Gender
female

Members

Reviews

22 reviews
I really enjoyed this book! I feel kind of bad that this book sat on my virtual shelves for years before I finally got around to picking it up. I am so glad that I finally bumped it up to the top of my tbr pile. I found the concept to be really interesting and the story was rather exciting. This book is a stand-alone but I really feel like it would be been a great series starter.

I liked the whole idea of the castle of Shadow Wood which is a sanctuary for those from the Netherworld. Declan is show more Lord of the Netherworld and created the gargoyles and is now looking for a new sentinel to take control of them. He has two candidates in mind. Kate is an actress at the top of her career but when she goes to sleep she is transported to Shadow Wood. Ian is a popular author who is about to learn that all of the stories Declan has told him are more real than he ever imagined.

I did have fun reading this book and was always eager to pick it back up after a day at work but I do think that the story tried to do too much and lacked focus. Not only is there a whole castle full of supernatural beings and the gargoyles to learn about, but Kate also has a crazy ex-boyfriend and a stalker that must be dealt with. On top of all that, there is a bit of a budding romance to keep things extra interesting. I really liked the characters and wanted to see things work out for them. Even though the story was very exciting there were times that I just wanted to get back to the things going on with the gargoyles and the castle.

I do think that a lot of other readers will enjoy this one. There was quite a bit of action that kept the story moving and a few surprises along the way. I would definitely read more of this author’s work in the future.

I received a digital review copy of this book from Skyscape via NetGalley.
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Do you like your horror with ghosts, demons, paranormal powers, and creepy graveyards? Than this may be the one for you. A group of teens is thrown into a supposedly haunted house. All of the teens have powers and they have one month together to test out the house and see if it is really haunted. There is more than they bargained for going on in this house. Are the things they see and feel bad or good? Are they being helped or hindered? Is the house more than it seems? Will they be able to show more make it a month and come out alive?
This is a perfect story for those that love horror and the new adult genre. There are some scenes that may be too much for younger teens. The story is filled with action and suspense. Just when you think you have figured out what is going on and who is to blame, BAM, you are surprised with new suspects. The storyline held my interest throughout and moved at break neck speed. The teen characters were written well and all had their own angst.
This is my first read by Michelle Muto. I would like to read more. Her ghosts are particularly spooky and she is a whiz at building atmosphere. This is the perfect read for a winter night. Excellent with a cup of hot cocoa and a blanket. You might want to turn on a few extra lights
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In One Word ~ Stunning

I have been trying to start this review for an hour. I have typed and erased my opening at least ten times now. I just don't think I can explain what this book did to me. I don't know what I expected from Don't Fear the Reaper. I do know that I was really excited when author Michelle Muto sent me the book. I had read another of her books, The Book of Lost Souls, and adored it. So I went into reading this one with no trepidation, an awesome feeling.

I knew I was in for show more an emotional journey within the first few lines of Don't Fear the Reaper. The main character, Keely, emotionally devastated after the murder of her twin, commits suicide while in the midst of desperate grief. After months of torture, praying for a sign that her sister is safe on the other side, a sign that never comes, Keely just wants peace. She wants to be reunited with Jordan. At first, Keely doesn't realize her attempt was successful. And she's relieved. But then she is greeted not by Jordan, but by Banning and Daniel, a Reaper and a Demon. Keely learns that to decide her fate, she must pass a "test" with guidance from Banning and Daniel, all while searching for her sister.

I found Don't Fear the Reaper to be one of the most unique books I have ever read. To be honest, I haven't read much involving suicide and certainly nothing from the perspective of a "successful" suicide. I have to give the author kudos on the first chapter. It is dark and overwhelming. I re-read it a few minutes ago, just to be sure that my feelings were accurate. It literally took my breath away again. I know I said it is dark and overwhelming, but it is also, and I know this may sound weird, peaceful and delicate. She handled it with respect, without judgment towards Keely.

That respect towards Keely is what makes Don't Fear the Reaper so unique. Although Keely regrets the inevitable pain her parents will endure, and hates that she has done this to them, I never felt anger or judgment towards her. Muto gave such a detailed background and relayed Keely's anguish so well, that you understand why she felt she had no other choice. I just wanted to hold her hand and take the painful journey with her.

But Keely does have someone to take the journey with her, Banning and Daniel. As a Reaper and Demon, they should be used to this routine. But something about Keely makes them throw everything they should do out the window and put their eternal fates on the line to help her. As much as I loved Keely, I think I loved Banning and Daniel equally. They also have tragic pasts that drew and attached me to them.

Don't Fear the Reaper is a story about the love of two sisters. Love that would cause each one to make radical, ultimate sacrifices if it meant the slightest chance at peace for the other. It is about taking chances. In the case of Banning and Daniel, it's taking a chance on someone who may not seem likely to succeed, but who is worthy of the risk. It is about letting go.

I feel truly honored that Michelle Muto asked me to read Don't Fear the Reaper. This book was a privilege to read. And I look forward to reading it again in the future. This book will haunt me for a long, long time.

Favorite Quotes:

"The mystery that was Banning reminded me of an old book tucked into the farthest crevices of a library shelf; dusty and forgotten, his painful memories cast in ink and meant for no one else to see,but committed to fragile paper nonetheless."

"I'd lost sight of heaven, God, and everything good, but not
Jordan. Some things transcended both life and death. Some things
never died."

*I received a copy of Don't Fear the Reaper from the author, in exchange for an honest review.*
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(There's only one way for me to read this title and that's by singing the song by Blue Oyster Cult.)

This is a story about what happens when we die.

The fact that there are so many things created about this subject only tell us how important it is for people to imagine the life after this one. The most important work on this subject was written many centuries ago and it's The Epic of Gilgamesh .

Keely's story starts the night she kills herself. There's no explanation for what she does in the show more beginning, only later you find out about a big tragedy in her life. After she dies she wakes up in the company of some strange people, telling her she's going to hell. Only then we start to discover how the other life works, what is allowed for those who exist in it and what can never be.

There is something very traditional in the way writers describe the afterlife and it's probably the Christian influence, mixed with all the media created on the subject. This is why it was really important what this book brings to the table - the story about a specific set of rules that exist in the other world, keeping order. There is a need to keep some connection to the world of living and it must be under control.

We all dream of loved ones after they die. And when we die, we dream of the living.

The narrator is a teenage girl who is deeply troubled. The result is a dark humor that somehow exist in every conversation she has. At times her thoughts may seem really shallow and somehow irritating but she is...a girl who had a life tough enough to decide to kill herself. The writing is the strongest in the dialogues when she argues her way in the afterlife, discovering about the death as much as she discovers about life.

There are a lot of triggering subjects in this book, the most important being suicide, pedophilia and child murder. What starts as the book about angels, demons and reapers is actually a deeply saddening story about the life of a girl in a modern world where everything is out in the open but everything is different than it seems too.

In the beginning you may have a clear idea of where Keely belongs, heaven or hell, everything she does may contribute to that, but the more you find out the more you get to like and understand her. In the end you're faced with many questions about belonging - where is our place in the end? Who gets to decide what we deserve?

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I received this book on NetGalley and I gave it my honest review. Thanks for sharing!
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Statistics

Works
6
Members
214
Popularity
#104,032
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
22
ISBNs
10
Favorited
2

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