There are some people in the world to whom music is as vital as oxygen. To those--me, and certainly Emma Trevayne, the author of Coda--music has the ability to heighten emotions, to heal, to soothe, to enrige, and excite. To us, music is as potent as any drug, and almost as addicting. To Anthem, and...
I DNFed this, since I wasn't able to get much further in than page 50. I'm sure it might have gotten better by the end, but I couldn't stand trying to understand what was going on in the first chapters. There was massive info-dumping to a point that I was confused as hell. I didn't particularly like...
I got this book directly from Trevayne at ALA. The premise is beautiful, and I love the concept. Trevayne writes wonderful dialogue, and I believe in her music so much. I love that this is appears to be a stand-alone novel. Where it fell down for me was the world-building. I needed more explanation,...
Ever since he was a young boy, music has coursed through the veins of eighteen-year-old Anthem. The Corp has certainly seen to that. By encoding music with addictive and mind-altering elements, the Corp holds control over all citizens, particularly conduits like Anthem, whose life energy feeds the m...
I'll tell you all the same thing I told Emma after reading this...You had my heart in your hands and my jaw in your lapAnd it's the absolute truth. These characters had me. The. Whole. Time.
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