Imagen del autor

Jodi McIsaac

Autor de Through the Door

9+ Obras 342 Miembros 33 Reseñas

Series

Obras de Jodi McIsaac

Through the Door (2012) 187 copias
A Cure for Madness (2016) 50 copias
Into the Fire (2013) 37 copias
Among the Unseen (2014) 33 copias
Bury the Living (2016) 22 copias
Beyond the Pale (2014) 5 copias
Summon the Queen (2017) 5 copias
Phantasma: Stories (2015) 2 copias

Obras relacionadas

2014 Campbellian Anthology (2014) — Contribuidor — 23 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Nombre canónico
McIsaac, Jodi
Género
female
Biografía breve
Jodi McIsaac grew up in New Brunswick, on Canada’s east coast. After abandoning her Olympic speed skating dream, she wrote speeches for a premier, volunteered in a refugee camp, waited tables in Belfast, and earned a couple of university degrees. She now runs a boutique copywriting agency in Vancouver, B.C., where she lives with her husband and two feisty daughters.

Miembros

Reseñas


It's been seven years since the love of Cedar McLeod’s life left with no forwarding address. All she has left of him are heart-wrenching memories of happier times and a beautiful six-year-old daughter, Eden. Then, one day, Eden opens her bedroom door and unwittingly creates a portal that leads to anywhere she imagines.

But they’re not the only ones who know of Eden’s gift, and soon the child mysteriously vanishes.

Desperate for answers, Cedar digs into the past and finds herself thrust into a magical world of Celtic myths, fantastical creatures, and bloody rivalries. Teaming up with the unlikeliest of allies, Cedar must bridge the gap between two worlds and hold tight to the love in her heart…or lose everything to an ancient evil.


Given to me in ebook format via www.netgalley.com

The first in the Thin Veil Series.
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Denunciada
nordie | 12 reseñas más. | Oct 14, 2023 |
I received [b: A Cure for Madness|26209461|A Cure for Madness|Jodi McIsaac|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1443468245s/26209461.jpg|46189005] by [a: Jodi McIsaac|5826477|Jodi McIsaac|https://d.gr-assets.com/authors/1431014820p2/5826477.jpg] from NetGalley. In exchange for the Kindle e-book, here is my honest review:

The minute I started to read, stopping was like trying to fight the power of a straight-line wind. I was powerless to resist.

At first, I called it a Pre-Dystopian-ish-Possible-Y/A book. The elements sit nearby in a petri dish of possibility. A unique work emerges.

[b: A Cure for Madness|26209461|A Cure for Madness|Jodi McIsaac|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1443468245s/26209461.jpg|46189005], addresses topics that affect us today. The use of fiction, imagination, make the truth easier to take.

The writing is good, and whew, talk about suspense.

"A Cure..." seems like a few of my favorite authors got together and had a writing party. They wanted to see who could raise the reader's pulse rate the highest.

The characters are well developed. My feelings about each one evolved throughout the novel.

Content: I would recommend this to a Mature Y/A reader and above.
Sex: There is one sex scene that is a little graphic, and references to rape. 18
Language: There is great cussing, plenty of f-bombs.
Violence: Yes. - But it is done in the framework of a story that is believable.

I look forward to reading more work by [a: Jodi McIsaac|5826477|Jodi McIsaac|https://d.gr-assets.com/authors/1431014820p2/5826477.jpg]
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Denunciada
ourBooksLuvUs | 6 reseñas más. | Aug 20, 2023 |
Esta reseña ha sido escrita para Sorteo de miembros LibraryThing.
Cedar McLeod is a single mother to a 6 year old daughter, Eden. Her life is pretty ordinary, but that's about to change. "One day, a fight between the two leads to the stunning discovery that Eden can open portals to anywhere she imagines." Cedar has no idea how this happened, but she's going to do everything in her power to find out. Unfortunately, there are those that will use little Eden to further their own ends, and Cedar has to discover the truth before Eden disappears forever.

This was a very quick read. I loved the premise and enjoyed the book. The characters were interesting and the story progressed at a nice pace. I look forward to continuing the series in the next book.

4/5 stars.
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Denunciada
jwitt33 | 12 reseñas más. | Nov 11, 2022 |

A Cure For Madness' is a hard to label book because it refuses to follow along the well-worn path of thrillers about pandemics. There is a pandemic and a very scary one at that: extremely contagious, incurable and vaccine-proof, it destroys the minds of the infected but doesn't kill them. There are also threatening government authority figures who appear to have something to hide and who are ruthless in the pursuit of the mentally ill brother of our heroine, Clare Campbell. Yet the primary focus isn't on the end of the world as we know it or even on the salient efforts of scientists to save everyone, it's on the moral dilemma faced by Clare Campbell, who is presented with a choice of protecting her brother or saving the world.

What I liked most about the book was that it didn't try to make things easy for Clare or for the reader. The bad guys were trying to do the right thing. The good guys were unstable, anti-social and sometimes violent. None of the choices was good. No magic bullets were available.

In addition to the usual challenges of trying to decide whether the greatest good of the greatest number over-rides personal and familial loyalty, 'A Cure For Madness' added in significant personal challenges for Clare. Her older brother, Wes, the man she has to decide whether to save, suffers from schizophrenia. Jodi McIsaac takes an unflinching look at what that means: the delusions, the paranoia, the sudden violence and then the reversion to 'normal' and all the associated apologies. I like that Wes comes across as a person and not just as the disease that sometimes drives his actions. Given that a form of schizophrenia now seems to have become highly contagious, seeing Wes as a person provides a context for what is happening to everyone else.

Claire isn't one of those kick-ass heroines with experience of working in war zones and a handy PhD in epidemiology. She's a woman who, as a teen, suffered a severe trauma in her home town and left it determined never to come back. She's intelligent and well-travelled but she's spent more than a decade running away from her hometown and her mentally ill big brother. This background means is bright enough to work out what's going on, attached enough / guilty enough about her big brother to feel both obligated and resentful at being obligated and her experience has taught her that running away doesn't banish the problem you ran from.

I loved the rigorous way challenges in this book were set up and I was impressed and surprised by the solution that Claire finally arrived at.

There were some things in the book that didn't work so well for me. I thought the pace was a little uneven. The romance/sex scene seemed not to fit easily into the flow of the story or the development of the characters.

But I found most of the book very engaging albeit in quite a grim way.

I can see that some people might find the ending, especially the last chapter, a little difficult. Personally, i liked it It needs to be read with care. Like the rest of the book, it's told from Clare's point of view but, in this chapter at least, Clare is not necessarily a reliable narrator.
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½
 
Denunciada
MikeFinnFiction | 6 reseñas más. | Apr 25, 2022 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
9
También por
1
Miembros
342
Popularidad
#69,721
Valoración
½ 3.5
Reseñas
33
ISBNs
26

Tablas y Gráficos