{Review Redux} SISTERS RED by Jackson Pearce

Welcome to A Week of Little Red in celebration of our favorite scarlet-caped heroine...
not to mention the launch of Marissa Meyer's SCARLET!
Check out my daily schedule of events!
Grab some promotional buttons for your blog
and stop back all week long for fun guest posts, exciting author visits, giveaways, reviews,
and blog tour stops for SCARLET!

This review was first posted on Sept. 8, 2012.  It is being re-posted now in honor of 
A Week of Little Red.  This is one of my favorite stories to use elements from fairy tales 
while still being its own unique version of the tale.

In fact, I love this one so much that today, I'm giving away a copy.
Enter to win!

O P E N I N G   H O O K:

STRANGERS NEVER WALK DOWN THIS ROAD, the sisters thought in unison as the man trudged toward them.  Certainly not strangers in business suits--there was just no reason for them to be out here in the middle of nowhere.  Yet here one was, clouds of dirt rising around his feet with each step before settling into the cuffs of his impeccably pressed slacks.  The older sister raised an eyebrow and stepped up to the white fence, while the younger sister finished a cherry Popsicle already half melted from the afternoon sun.
(Page 1, US hardcover first edition)


If you're looking for a good, engrossing novel with the perfect amounts of terror, whimsy, and adrenaline, Jackson Pearce's SISTERS RED might be just the book for you.  The first in her line of loose fairy tale novels, it can be read on its own (I actually read it third), but it does set up the world in which SWEETLY and FATHOMLESS take place.  It introduces the diabolical Fenris, her own version of a werewolf, and shows readers that fairy tales are still cool and interesting--especially when the story doesn't go exactly where you'd expect it to.

One of the strongest elements in SISTERS RED is the way that sisters Scarlett and Rosie March interact with one another.  Told in alternating POVs, both characters bring their own unique voices to the story.  Oftentimes, it's hard to tell who is speaking when there's a POV shift in a novel because many authors can't handle a difference in voice well.  Pearce has no trouble building up two unique personalities and finding ways to make them conflict with and embrace one another.  After a horrifying incident occurs during their childhood, the sisters learn to support and rely on themselves, taking vengence out on the Fenris and preventing the deaths of many innocent victims.  While Scarlett embraces this darkness, wanting the Fenris to pay for all that she has suffered, Rosie is softer, and makes room for other things in her life...even a little romance. 

Both girls are kick-ass, strong female heroines, though at times, this also makes for passages a little too violent for my personal tastes (then again, I'm squeamish at the sight of a papercut, so take that with a grain of salt...).  I loved seeing their personalities and felt they were both well-developed characters.  Granted, because of the way I read, I am seldom surprised by pop twists, and SISTERS RED was no exception.  It didn't bother me, though, because the writing was so strong that I had a lot of trouble putting this one down.  I also read it directly after FATHOMLESS (despite the fact that, at the time, I was in the middle of Splash into Summer and reading "only" mermaid-related books), then picked up SWEETLY to re-read.  While the books can be read out of order, and indeed were in my case, I think it's possible that readers may get more out of the books if they read them in order due to the way Pearce world-builds and adapts the stories without repeating things we should already know. 

Pearce is such a talented writer, and finds so many new ways to tell a traditional fairy tale.  There are even traces of other tales, which may or may not have been intended.  One of my favorite twists was the way the famous red Little Red Riding Hood cloak was actually an intentional lure designed to bring out the Fenris for a hunt.  These little touches add so much character, and Pearce has them in all of her books.  My only complaint after finishing SISTERS RED?  No more new fairy tale novels left in my reading queue!

Want more Jackson Pearce? Check out my review of SWEETLY or my summer teaser for FATHOMLESS.  Look for the next book, COLD SPELL, this fall (Featuring one of my favorite fairy tales, the SNOW QUEEN)!


Get an extended sneak peek at SISTERS RED 
by reading the first 40 pages online right now for FREE!
~*~
C O V E R   D E S I G N:


LOVE.  Extreme and utter love.  This cover is a brilliant illusion, because if you look at it one way, you see two sisters.  If you look at it another, you see a Fenris.  No matter how you look, everyone's lives intertwine, just like what unfolds on the pages lying within. 

I'm a bit disappointed that FATHOMLESS won't get this incredible treatment because I was looking forward to seeing what illusion we'd see this time, but I think the new covers will also entice a new audience and make even more readers fall in love with Jackson Pearce, so there is that.
  ~*~
O F F I C I A L   I N F O:

Title:  SISTERS RED
Author: Jackson Pearce
Release Date: Out June 7, 2010
Publisher: Little, Brown Books for Young Readers
Received: Purchased
SUMMARY:

Scarlett March lives to hunt the Fenris--the werewolves that took her eye when she was defending her sister Rosie from a brutal attack. Armed with a razor-sharp hatchet and blood-red cloak, Scarlett is an expert at luring and slaying the wolves. She's determined to protect other young girls from a grisly death, and her raging heart will not rest until every single wolf is dead.

Rosie March once felt her bond with her sister was unbreakable. Owing Scarlett her life, Rosie hunts ferociously alongside her. But even as more girls' bodies pile up in the city and the Fenris seem to be gaining power, Rosie dreams of a life beyond the wolves. She finds herself drawn to Silas, a young woodsman who is deadly with an ax and Scarlett's only friend--but does loving him mean betraying her sister and all that they've worked for?

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